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Larry Drew is jobless after year one of a three-year contract. Larry Drew is jobless after year one of a three-year contract. (USATSI)


More Offseason Analysis: Coaching changes, news | Free Agency | Draft


Update: It's official, with Bucks general manager John Hammond commenting in a statement:



"Despite the challenging season, Larry always handled himself and represented the Bucks in a first-class manner. Larry did the best he could in a difficult situation, especially given all of our injuries. I want to thank Larry for all of his efforts, and we wish him the best of luck in his future endeavors."



Aaaand the Nets have chimed in with an official statement, too:



Brooklyn Nets General Manager Billy King announced today that the organization has permitted Jason Kidd to pursue a coaching opportunity with the Milwaukee Bucks. In exchange for allowing Kidd to depart, the Nets will receive two second round draft picks (2015 & 2019) from Milwaukee. A search for a new head coach will begin immediately.



Billy King will meet the media at 10 a.m. ET on Tuesday. That won't be awkward or anything.


---


The Milwaukee Bucks have a new coach after trading multiple second-round picks to the Brooklyn Nets for Jason Kidd. Kidd will take over the Bucks' sidelines after a failed attempt at a power play for personnel control with the Nets in addition to his coaching duties. While the move by Kidd wasn't favorable with the Nets' brass, he managed to avoid punishment and still retain a coaching position by finding his way to the Bucks. There is just one more loose end that needs to be tied up in the ordeal.


The Bucks have to fire their current coach Larry Drew. According to Brian Windhorst of ESPN.com, Drew has been formally fired after a meeting this morning and the sidelines are all Kidd's now.



Drew took over as the Bucks' coach before the 2013-14 season when he was hired following Jim Boylan's interim coaching stint in the 2012-13 season. Boylan replaced Scott Skiles after Skiles was fired following a 16-16 start. Drew signed a three-year deal to coach the Bucks and lasted just one season. Milwaukee had the worst record in the league at 15-67.





Basketball Hot News


Pistons, Mavs, Lakers and Heat looking hard at restricted free agent Isaiah Thomas


Sacramento Kings starting point guard Isaiah Thomas has beaten the odds for his entire basketball career and now he’s set to get his first big payday.


The Kings recently extended a qualifying offer to Thomas making him a restricted free agent, and league sources tell PBT that as many as five teams have expressed interest in making an offer to steal away the point guard.


The Pistons, Heat, Lakers, Mavs and Suns have all expressed interest, with the Pistons showing the most interest to date and numbers starting in the three-year, $24 million range. Talks with teams in playoff contention have started in the $6-7 million per-year range.


Thomas averaged 20.3 points and 6.3 assists per game last season while hitting 45.3 percent of his shots. He ranked second for the Kings in win shares with 7.7, just behind DeMarcus Cousins at 7.9 and ahead of Rudy Gay at 4.5, with the rest of the team far behind the trio.


Last season, Thomas also became the 29th player in league history to have averaged 20 points and six assists in a year with a 20.0 Player Efficiency Rating (PER). The Kings were 3.9 points per possession better defensively with Thomas on the floor last season.




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Joe Namath didn't sing Geno Smith's praises. Joe Namath says 'nothing to me is outstanding' about Geno Smith. (USATSI)


More NFL offseason: League minicamp dates | Latest news, notes


Joe Namath is a harsh critic of his New York Jets and a harsh critic of quarterbacks. So you know he's got plenty to say about Geno Smith heading into the quarterback's second year.


Speaking with Peter Schwartz of WFAN.com, Namath called Geno "pretty good" but said "nothing to me is outstanding."


"I don't see anything outstanding about him. He's not an outstanding passer. He's not an outstanding runner. He's good, but nothing jumps out at me with intangibles that I'm not aware of because I'm not there on an everyday [basis]," Namath said. "I haven't seen anything really extra special from Geno, and that's not to be negative at all. The guy performed really darn well on a professional level against guys that were so much better than he's ever played against. The upside of Geno is going to be strong. The upside is grasping his offense versus the defenses he sees.


"Just looking at him physically, what's outstanding about his running ability? What's outstanding about his passing ability? Nothing to me is outstanding about it, but it's pretty good."


In reality, "pretty good" is a fair assessment of Smith through his first season. He wasn't outstanding as a rookie.


But who would be in that situation? Geno dealt with a high-pressure situation (starting for the Jets) and handled the scrutiny of stealing time from Mark Sanchez well. He didn't get much help at receiver or tight end, or even in the running game.


At times he made bad throws. But at other times he shone. It's far too early to make a concrete assessment on him as a future quarterback (although competing against Michael Vick won't help his immediate prospects), which is kind of what Namath did, just without the eloquence needed to avoid headlines and sound bytes pointing to his distaste for Geno.



NFL Hot News


Browns TE Jordan Cameron 'was impossible to cover in the spring'



Kevin Jones of the Cleveland Browns' official website presented his list last week of the five players who benefited the most from the team's offseason practices. The man at the top of that list -- or at least presented that way online -- is tight end Jordan Cameron.Jones wrote that Cameron "was impossible to cover in the spring" and "has shown improved footwork and explosion in the open field once he has the football."



Cameron is absolutely critical to the Browns' offense this season. With Josh Gordon likely out for most if not all of 2014, Cameron will probably enter the season as Cleveland's de facto No. 1 receiver. But can he repeat or improve upon the 80-917-7 line he posted last year?Offensive coordinator Kyle Shanahan has overseen some very good tight ends in his young coaching career -- Owen Daniels and Jordan Reed stand out. Cameron might be the best one he has ever coached, and Shanahan is going to have to figure out ways to get him open in the face of increased defensive attention. There's no doubt that Cameron will be a marked man by defensive coordinators, especially if Miles Austin can't stay healthy. Also, the Browns led the league with 681 pass attempts last year. They won't come anywhere close to that title in their new run-heavy scheme, so there will be substantially fewer passes in the air for Cameron to catch.You have to believe in Cameron's talent and athleticism. But I fear a regression of sorts after his breakout season. He is currently being drafted in the fifth round on average, but I'd rather wait and take my chances with someone such as Dennis Pitta, Greg Olsen, or Zach Ertz a handful of rounds later.
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Capital Premier League side Island Bay United turned over four-time ASB Chatham Cup champions Miramar Rangers yesterday. Photo / File.

Capital Premier League side Island Bay United turned over four-time ASB Chatham Cup champions Miramar Rangers on Saturday as seven of the eight quarter-final berths were decided in the New Zealand national knockout cup competition.

Playing under lights at Wakefield Park on Saturday night, Island Bay - who sit seventh in the Capital Premier League competition, a division below Central League leaders Miramar - recovered from going a goal behind to earn a 3-2 victory.

Henry Fa'arodo put the visitors ahead after 13 minutes but Island Bay fought back to hold an unlikely 2-1 halftime lead thanks to goals from Facundo Barbero and Callum Holmes.

Miramar's Patrick Fleming restored parity at 2-2 in the 59th minute but the home side hit the front for good when Luciano Colucci struck 19 minutes from time to seal a massive upset win in front of the raucous Island Bay supporters.

On Sunday, Napier City Rovers' run continued as the visitors earned a comparatively simple 4-2 win over Tawa AFC at Redwood Park.

After enduring two extra time thrillers in earlier rounds, Napier progressed with three first half goals from Chris Greatholder, Andy Bevin and Miles John while a second half penalty from Angus Kilkolly completed the scoring.

In Auckland, five times winners Central United FC again did it the hard way before booking their quarter-final berth.

After earning their fourth round place with a fightback from 3-0 down with 10 men against Birkenhead, Central - playing at Kiwitea Street - claimed a 3-1 victory over fellow Northern Premier League outfit Glenfield Rovers, scoring twice late on despite playing the final 30 minutes down a man.

The visitors opened the scoring after just five minutes as Richard Beard gave Glenfield a flying start but Central recovered and restored parity three minutes before halftime through Emiliano Tade.

Junior All Whites defender Adam Mitchell earned an early shower with half an hour to go for a challenge on the edge of the Central penalty area but, despite the numerical disadvantage, the home side edged ahead in the 86th minute as Tade's deflected strike left All Whites goalkeeper Tamati Williams - who had earlier saved a Central spot kick - with no chance.

James Hoyt sealed the result with Central's third of the day four minutes into stoppage time.

On Sunday, Onehunga Sports returned from their trip to Tauranga City United with a 2-0 win, the visitors striking twice in the second half through Josh Ming and Sean Lovemore to advance while Melville United ended the cup run of Waikato Bay of Plenty Federation 1 League side Ngongotaha; Jevon Williams and Leon Newell scoring at Stembridge Road to see off the home side who got back to 1-1 three minutes into the second half through Dayne Willemsen.

Meanwhile, Hamilton Wanderers booked a fourth round trip to Bay Olympic next weekend after recovering from a 1-0 deficit to claim a 3-1 away win over North Shore United at Allen Hill Stadium on Sunday.

Edward Sillars gave the Northern Regional Division 1 side the lead in the rescheduled third round clash but a Mark Jones hat-trick turned things around for the Premier League outfit.

In the Southern Region, defending 2013 ASB Chatham Cup champions Cashmere Technical progressed to the last eight with a 1-0 win over Coastal Spirit at Linfield Park.

The victory was earned from the penalty spot in the 78th minute as Tom Schwarz struck the decisive blow.

Further south, Dunedin Technical - winners in 1999 - sealed their berth with an identical victory; substitute David Hayman settling the tie, also with a 78th minute winner, at the Caledonian Ground.

Source : http://www.nzherald.co.nz/spor...



Today News: Miklasz: Native St. Louisan Flynn is key to US soccer program's rise






Dan Flynn played for a soccer state champion during his high school days at SLUH. The young defender was recruited by St. Louis University and started for the 1973 Billikens team that won the 10th NCAA championship in program history.

So Flynn knows all about the thrill of success on the soccer pitch.

But as the CEO and Secretary General of U.S. Soccer since 2000, Flynn has played a key leadership role in the rise of the men’s national team. More than that, the former Anheuser-Busch executive has been at the forefront of the movement, working at all levels to increase the quality and popularity of American soccer.

Stationed in Brazil for the World Cup since June 8, a busy Flynn paused on Saturday morning to chat for a few minutes. You could say he’s catching his breath after holding it during the USA’s tense matches against Ghana, Portugal and Germany in surviving the imposing “Group of Death.”

As much as Flynn enjoyed winning big games as player, it’s been even more satisfying to see the U.S. advance to the round of 16 in consecutive World Cups for the first time.

“Given the ‘Group of Death’ and the framework that we were operating under, it’s been just an almost indescribable feeling,” Flynn said in a phone conversation. “And I think the biggest part of that has been our fan base. The fans that had traveled to Brazil, and seeing their passion. It’s just been well beyond any level of expectation that I even had as a player. And I never played at a national team level. It’s just been almost indescribable.”

Teams representing 32 nations or republics have participated in the World Cup. The largest delegation of visiting fans comes from the U.S., with Americans providing boisterous and highly visible support for the Team USA.

Moreover, the U.S. also is responsible for the most substantial television-rights fees paid for 2014 World Cup broadcasts. We can interpret both signs of evidence that reaffirm the sport’s growing prestige in the U.S.

Ah, but there’s no time to rest — not for Flynn and U.S. soccer’s administration, and certainly not for coach Jurgen Klinsmann and the USA squad that faces Belgium in a knockout-stage match Tuesday that could catapult it into the World Cup quarterfinals.

“We’ve got to carry on with our business,” Flynn said. “It’s about producing results. The attitude has gotten us to this point, and we’re looking forward to the next game.

“We’re super excited to be here, but I think Jurgen summed it up (after the game against) Germany. He said ‘Look, the tournament is essentially beginning for us.’ It’s not three (matches) and out, or maybe three and just make it to the fourth game. We can go deeper here, and I think he’s changed the mindset. It’s all made it incredibly exciting. It’s a great feeling.”

When the World Cup rolls around every four years, the event usually leads to a flurry of commentaries and analyses on the state of U.S. soccer. The World Cup is portrayed as a flash phenomenon that can boost the sport in the states and magically lift soccer to previously unimagined heights of popularity.

The premise always has been off base and unrealistic. The World Cup doesn’t cast a spell on an entire nation in a way that alters the paradigm and pushes soccer ahead of the NFL or Major League Baseball.

It’s not that simple — or easy.

Soccer is gaining ground, however. It’s the result of hard work and a master plan including a coordinated structure in place that encompasses business, marketing, soccer facilities, instruction and a system of player development. And it helps much to have true soccer believers such as Flynn making sure there’s enough funding to recruit and then develop young players and coaches through standardized soccer academies and national-team youth programs.

The model also includes syncing with Major League Soccer so that athletes and fans know they have a league that provides the opportunity to support soccer, and play soccer, at a respectable professional level.

Until the MLS took shape following the 1994 World Cup staged in the U.S., there was a huge void. Pro outdoor soccer disappeared when the old North American Soccer League went down.

With no professional base, how do you motivate talented young American athletes to stick with soccer instead of switching to other sports? And how can you cultivate fans when there is no professional outlet for their enthusiasm and loyalty?

With the U.S. Soccer Federation and the MLS sharing a future vision and working closely together to develop players and fans, soccer’s U.S. infrastructure has never been stronger. American players not only are thriving professionally in the U.S., but they’re being coveted in increasing numbers by some of the most prestigious soccer leagues in Europe.

Soccer is gaining prominence in America. Any momentum generated by the World Cup is just part of the overall movement now. The World Cup gives American players something to aspire to, but they can have other goals, such as getting paid to play in the MLS or in Europe. And as the players mature and improve, the U.S. national team becomes more of a threat in the World Cup competition.

That’s what we’re seeing now. The brilliant Klinsmann is an icon of German soccer who began spending offseasons in Southern California in 1998, ultimately settling in Huntington Beach.

Hardly a coaching mercenary, Klinsmann has installed a top-down system to establish standards for how the game should be taught, played, and organized at each level. Think of it as the equivalent of baseball Cardinals’ historically successful approach to player instruction and development.

“It started when we hired Jurgen Klinsmann,” Flynn said. “He’s defined how he wants to play, and what our mentality is. That’s taking nothing away from our other (former) coaches, but Jurgen has clearly set the stage. It’s put us in a different zone, in a very positive way. We can’t get ahead of ourselves, but I think the outlook is very bright.”

The U.S. team no longer is an accidental tourist at these World Cups.

Source : http://www.stltoday.com/sports...
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Josh McCown [12] is playing 'on another level' compared to Mike Glennon. (USATSI) Josh McCown [12] is playing 'on another level' compared to Mike Glennon. (USATSI)


New Buccaneers coach Lovie Smith has said since March that Josh McCown is the team's starting quarterback and it doesn't look like anything happened during OTAs and minicamp that might chance Smith's mind.


According to Tampa Bay linebacker Jonathan Casillas, McCown is playing on another level compared to last year's starter Mike Glennon. Casillas, a former Saint, also said McCown reminds him of his old quarterback in New Orleans.


"McCown is just, he's on a another level right now, I believe," Casillas said on The Dave Rothenberg Show. "Don't take anything from Glennon; he's just only in his second year, but McCown looks like he's played a couple of years in this game. It's a strong comparison, but he reminds me of Drew [Brees], not just the way he throws the ball, but his approach to the game."


Apparently, McCown has been impressing everyone in the Tampa Bay locker room.


"The first one in, last one out, he's always around," Casillas said. "He's very communicable, very personable. And you can tell he's a born leader. You know, he's not even trying to do much now, but people are following him, just his approach to the game. Glennon is learning a lot from him. So, if Glennon can beat him out this year, that would be great. Because at the end of the day, if Glennon can beat McCown out, then we're going to get a good quarterback."


McCown also got some praise this week from former teammate Larry Fitzgerald, who echoed what Casillas had to say.


"I love Josh, he's a football junkie," Fitzgerald said on Thursday, via the Tampa Tribune. "You have to force the guy to come off the field in practice and the man's a great leader, the kind of guy you want in your locker room."


It sounds like a lot people like McCown. Buccaneers fans will really like him if he can help lead Tampa Bay to its first playoff appearance since 2007.



NFL Hot News


Is 50 catches, 800 yards a realistic expectation for Giants rookie WR Odell Beckham?



Jordan Raanan of the Newark Star-Ledger posted an article Thursday in which he tries to come up with a realistic statistical expectation for Giants first-round wideout Odell Beckham in his rookie season. He quotes head coach Tom Coughlin, who says all rookies need to contribute right away -- "There's no waiting around in this game today."Raanan presents some of the best and worst seasons by a rookie wide receiver in the past decade as well as what a statistically average rookie season looks like during that time -- 41 catches, 565 yards, four touchdowns.Then, Raanan throws out this possible stat line for Beckham in his final graph."But 50-something catches for 800-plus yards and four or five touchdowns? The Giants would likely sign for that right now from their rookie wide receiver," Raanan wrote.



As I Giants fan, so would I. So would everyone else. Since 2004, only 18 rookie WRs have surpassed 800 yards. Fifteen have come up with 800 yards and at least 50 receptions. Granted, we have had multiple rookies reach those marks in the past few seasons -- Keenan Allen and DeAndre Hopkins last year; T.Y. Hilton, Josh Gordon, and Justin Blackmon in 2012; A.J. Green and Julio Jones in 2011. But it's a fairly rare occurrence. Only two rookies have topped 1,000 yards since 2004, one of whom was Michael Clayton. Remember him? Fifty catches and 800 yards should be seen as the extreme high end of what to expect from Beckham. He'll face competition for targets from a couple other young receivers trying to make a name for themselves in the league: Rueben Randle and Jerrel Jernigan. Beckham is a great dynasty pick but a WR5 in re-draft leagues.
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Dario Saric's draft stock might be slipping. Dario Saric's draft stock might be slipping. (USATSI)


More Offseason Analysis: Coaching changes, news | Free Agency | Draft


Dario Saric isn't coming to the NBA just yet. The Croatian forward, seen as one of the most versatile and skilled players in this year's draft, has agreed to a deal with Anadolu Efes that will "essentially prohibit Saric from playing in the NBA for a minimum of two years," according to ESPN's Chad Ford:



Saric was widely considered a top-10 prospect by the majority of teams in the NBA. He averaged 19.3 points, 9.3 rebounds and 3.8 assists per game for Cibona in the Adriatic League this year.


NBA sources say that Saric's decision to stay in Europe will affect his draft stock. He was getting looks as high as the 76ers at 10, the Nuggets at 11 and the Magic at 12. However, because he's unlikely to come to the NBA for at least two years, those teams are now hesitating to draft him that high.


However, it's possible that Saric won't slide too far. Sources say the Hawks at 15, theCeltics at 17, the Suns at 18 and the Bulls at 19 are all looking at Saric and are more comfortable drafting him and keeping him in Europe for the next two seasons. The Celtics, Suns and Bulls all have multiple picks in this year's draft.



Saric is only 20 years old, and there were rumors that he might pull out of the draft. He decided to stay in, and was invited to the green room, per DraftExpress' Jonathan Givony, but now teams looking at him will have to think long-term.


The three-year deal, which has a player option on the final season, according to ESPN, will be signed in the next 24 hours. This is obviously disappointing for those teams that wanted to bring Saric over now, this news means he could end up being a huge steal.


He's one of the most talented players available, and you'd think a team like Philadelphia would still give him some thought. If the Sixers aren't expecting to be competitive in two years, should this make that much of a difference? Several other teams will surely be weighing the pros and cons of selecting Saric in between now and Thursday.





Basketball Hot News


Enes Kanter to get PRP treatment in knee, will skip FIBA World Cup for Turkey


The second half of last season you started to really get a taste of what Enes Kanter can bring to the table — for the season he averaged 12.3 points and 7.5 rebounds a game, he started to show some efficiency and the ability to hit a midrange left side jumper along the baseline consistently.


He’s starting to show shooting range and as that becomes consistent he becomes a bigger threat.


Kanter came into last season off shoulder surgery and had some knee issues, but he’s getting them taken care of and getting some rest, reports Jody Genessy of the Deseret News.



Kanter’s knee will receive an injection of platelet rich plasma to treat quadriceps tendonitis, a common overuse condition in athletes that causes soreness and inflammation above the kneecap…


However, the 22-year-old Kanter has been advised by his doctor that it would be best for his knee to not participate in this summer’s FIBA Basketball World Cup with his Turkish national team.



Platelet rich plasma thearapy is the blood spinning treatment similar to what Kobe Bryant got done to his knees (Kanter is getting the treatment in Chicago).


Kanter had been in training for the World Cup but may now take it off. The Jazz would like that, they want him healthy at the start of camp.


Maybe new coach Quin Snyder can do something crazy like play Kanter and Derrick Favors and Trey Burke and whoever they draft at No. 5 together and let the young players learn together. You know, develop the talent.




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Peyton Manning would like to play out his current contract. (USATSI) Peyton Manning would like to play out his current contract. (USATSI)


More NFL offseason: League minicamp dates | Latest news, notes


In case there was any doubt -- and, frankly, we don't know why there would be -- 38-year-old Peyton Manning has no intentions of retiring anytime soon.


Coming off the most productive two-year stretch of his Hall of Fame career, the Broncos quarterback says he'll continue to play as long as he's effective.


"I still enjoy the work and preparation," Manning said, via the Associated Press.


The quarterback says he would like to play out his contract, which runs through 2016.


"Sometimes I sort of kick back and I pause and I think what sorts of things would I miss the most if I wasn't playing," he said.


Specifically?


"Being in the huddle," Manning continued. "That's what I missed most when I was injured, I'll say that. I mean, there's no other type of unity or bond that I think any other job can provide. I know there are meetings, there are video conferences. But that huddle, because of where it takes place: it's often on the road, in the middle of the field, in front of 80,000 people, it's unique."


Put another way: Manning loves the camaraderie.


"When you don't play football anymore, you can broadcast, you can coach, you can be in management, whatever, but you are not allowed to go into the huddle anymore," he said. "That huddle is just for players. You can go into the locker room after the game and you can speak to the team, but I think any retired player would probably tell you they miss the huddle."


Retirement talk is nothing new. The question was first posed to Manning following the 2011 season, which he missed after having multiple neck surgeries (but before the Colts released him and he signed with the Broncos). And the topic came up again in the days leading up to Super Bowl XLVIII, a game that saw the Seahawks dominate the Broncos from start to finish.


"When you still enjoy the preparation and the work part of it, I think you ought to be still doing that," Manning said before the game. "I think as soon as I stop enjoying it, if I can't produce, if I can't help a team, that's when I will stop playing."



NFL Hot News


Packers notes: RB Eddie Lacy feeling more comfortable; QB Aaron Rodgers will continue to run



After a slow start to his rookie season due to a concussion, Packers running back Eddie Lacy averaged 23 touches and 104 yards per game from Week 5 on. The 24-year-old is currently a first-round fantasy back because owners are expecting that he will only improve in his second season. Lacy said last week that he certainly feels like he has improved greatly from where he was at the beginning last year and is much more comfortable now in Green Bay's offense"In the beginning, I definitely second-guessed myself a lot," Lacy said via Tyler Dunne of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. "I wanted to be as close to perfect as possible. ... I was overly cautious. As the season went on, things slowed down for me. It got a little bit simpler. I was able to play to my natural ability."Another Packer who is looking to run well in 2014 is quarterback Aaron Rodgers.Yes, you read that correctly. Rodgers is aware that the team's brass would like for him to play it safe with his body and stay in the pocket more often, especially after he missed half of last season due to a broken collarbone. But Rodgers isn't just going to stop scrambling. Rodgers told Dunne that he will "always" want to use his legs to make plays because "it adds an extra dimension to my game."



That injury-shortened season saw Rodgers gain only 120 yards on the ground when he is usually topping 250-350 yards with a handful of scores to go with it. Using that ability definitely raises Rodgers' injury risk, but that ability also helps put him in the upper echelon of fantasy QBs. Rodgers has been durable outside of last season. He is FFToolbox's No. 3 quarterback for good reason.Expect the Packers' offense to be more balanced this season now that they have a real running game, something they've been lacking since the early days of Ryan Grant. Lacy is a bull, incredibly tough to bring down on first contact, but he also has surprisingly soft hands. He caught 35 passes last year, so he's a first-round pick in basically any type of league setting.
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Manchester United are believed to be poised to clinch their first major signing of the summer after reportedly paying the release clause in Ander Herrera's Athletic Bilbao contract.

The former Premier League champions were heavily linked with a move for the 24-year-old last summer, but a transfer failed to materialise.

Reports in recent weeks have claimed that new manager Louis van Gaal is interested in the midfielder, who is said to have a release clause in the region of £32m.

Despite the player's agent claiming that Herrera will stay with the Spanish side, radio station Cadena Ser reports that a fee has been reached between both parties.

Other local radio stations have claimed that an announcement regarding the capture of Herrera could be made early this week.

The release clause is said to expire next Monday.

Source : http://www.sportsmole.co.uk/fo...



Today News: World Cup 2014: Why tiny Belgium beat huge Russia at soccer






To the uninitiated, Russia’s World Cup defeat by Belgium may look absurd. Russia is 13 times more populous than Belgium, its soccer league has vastly greater financial resources and it is coached by the most expensive manager in the tournament, Italian Fabio Capello. The reason Russia lost has less to do with soccer than with free-market economics, of which President Vladimir Putin’s regime has no concept.

Capello, whom Russian billionaire Alisher Usmanov calls the strongest member of the national team—“And he can’t be on the field,” Usmanov adds drily—earns up to $12.2 million a year. The $700,000 salary of his Belgian counterpart, Marc Wilmots, pales in comparison. Russia’s wealthiest club, Zenit St. Petersburg, which is sponsored by the state-controlled natural gas monopoly, Gazprom, is seventh on the global list of teams with the biggest transfer budgets, at $47.6 million this year. Four more Russian clubs spend more than Belgium’s most profligate club, Genk, which has a $6.8 million budget.

Money is important in soccer. There is a well-established relationship between club budgets and their sporting performance. Europe’s wealthiest clubs—Bayern Munich, Manchester United, Barcelona, Real Madrid, Juventus Turin, Paris St. Germain—and leagues have supplied the most players to World Cup teams. The Big Five soccer economies—England, France, Germany, Italy and Spain—accounted for half of the 950 players in the provisional squads announced a month before the World Cup. Russia’s league came sixth, supplying 34 players for the final squads. In fact, two players on Belgium’s World Cup team play in Russia.

How, then, was Belgium able to assemble a higher-ranked international team that beat Russia 1-0 on Sunday? Why did Belgium make a joke of Capello’s solid game plan and withstand relentless Russian pressure in the second half? The answer lies in the way Russian soccer works.

According to venerable Russian coach Valery Gazzayev, 56% of Russian Premier League teams are financed directly by the state, and another 19% are backed by state-controlled companies. The Russian government and its firms pay about $1.1 billion a year to keep the top clubs in business and competing for international talent such as Brazilian star Givanildo Vieira de Souza (known to the world as “Hulk”), who plays for Zenit.

There is a patriotic caveat to Russia’s investment in the nation’s most popular game. Russian teams are allowed to field up to seven foreign players, or “legionnaires,” as they’re called in Russian. The remaining four players must be native-born. Starting in 2015, the foreign player limit will go down to six.

Russian players contend the limit should be even lower. “There are more than 200 legionnaires in the Premier League, on average 13 per club,” five prominent retired footballers wrote to the Russian Football Union in April. “Given that, Russian players spend less and less time on the field and there isn’t among them, for example, a single central defender under the age of 23 who would have regular playing practice in a Premier League team.”

Capello, who has a contract to coach the Russian national team through the 2018 World Cup, also says he needs more (and better) Russian players. Right now, he must choose among only 64 Russians in the top clubs. He has called for expanding the league to 18 teams from 16, reducing the number of foreigners allowed to play and encouraging foreign players to accept Russian citizenship so they can play for the national squad.

Russia is one of only six teams in the current World Cup fielding no foreign-born players. Switzerland and the US, for example, have five each. A more radical solution, however, would also be somewhat counter-intuitive: Cancel the foreign player cap. Belgium doesn’t have one.

Because of the cap, Russian teams pay millions a year to middling local footballers whose places on team rosters are assured by nationality—even if they are not as good as their “legionnaire” clubmates. They have no incentive to play in foreign leagues because they are worth more at home. Capello’s World Cup squad is limited to these privileged but relatively lack-lustre athletes. Russia is one of the few teams in the World Cup fielding only players from local clubs.

In Belgium, by contrast, young players compete fiercely against foreigners for a chance to play for top clubs. Those who break through are soon drafted by Top Five leagues. In fact, most Belgian stars play in England. While home audiences rarely get to see them, they gain experience playing for more competitive clubs, where it’s an honour to get in the starting lineup. As a result, Belgium doesn’t need a naturalization cure for its World Cup team, which has a combined transfer value of $467.9 million, compared with Russia’s $262 million.

Source : http://www.livemint.com/Opinio...
Unknown  /  12:41 AM  /  ,   /  No comments

Only a month on the job and Derek Carr is making his way up the depth chart. (USATSI) Only a month on the job and Derek Carr is making his way up the depth chart. (USATSI)


More NFL offseason: League minicamp dates | Latest news, notes


The Raiders wrapped up mandatory minicamp Thursday, and when the team returns for training camp in late July, rookie second-round pick Derek Carr will be the No. 2 quarterback behind Matt Schaub.


“We're trying to expedite his progression,” coach Dennis Allen said, via CSNBayArea.com. “I like a lot of the things that I've seen out of Derek. He's still got a long way to go, but I like the direction that he's headed.”


Allen's latest remarks coincide with what we've been hearing from the Raiders pretty much since Carr was drafted.


“He's a competitor,” the coach said last week. “He is going to continue to compete. That's really what we want him to do. I am setting any barriers. … I want him to come in here and try to get better every day. If he does that, everything else takes care of itself.”


Offensive coordinator Greg Olson added: “I really, really like him. Everybody knew he was accurate, but he is more accurate than we thought. … We'll have to wait and see how he does against a live rush, but so far his intelligence, accuracy and quickness in getting the ball out has been excellent. ...


“We drafted a pretty good player," Olson continued. "He is very intelligent, and he may not need to redshirt. We like his comfort level. Right away, you can see that this is not too big for him.”


Put another way, second-year quarterback Matt McGloin, who started six games last season, heads into camp as the Raiders' third quarterback. And it's reasonable to think that if Carr continues to progress, it won't be long before veteran Matt Schaub, whom the Raiders traded for before the draft, joins McGloin on the bench.


At the very least, that reality would help explain this:




NFL Hot News


Report: Dolphins RB Knowshon Moreno has 'bad' knee injury



Those details that were absent regarding Knowshon Moreno's physical state yesterday are coming to light now.Pro Football Talk's Mike Florio reported this morning, via a source, that Moreno has a left knee injury that may require arthroscopic surgery, "but it's nothing significant at this point."But Yahoo's Jason Cole has talked to his own source who told him that Moreno's injury is "bad," and calls into question how much he will play this season. Cole tweeted that Moreno "[probably] will play, but the issue is how long."Cole adds that the damage Moreno has suffered happened before he signed with the Dolphins in March.Moreno tore the ACL in his other knee, his right knee, in 2011.



Suddenly, being a tad pudgy is the least of Moreno's worries. If this injury was present when Moreno signed, how was it not caught during a routine physical before pen met paper? If it was, that probably explains why Moreno was given a cheap one-year deal and didn't attract much interest outside of Miami on the open market.A long-term injury to Moreno would give Lamar Miller's fantasy stock a boost and may make Daniel Thomas' roster spot safer. Obviously, you're staying far away from Moreno in drafts until the exact nature of the injury is known. More updates to this story should come soon.
Unknown  /  12:29 AM  /  ,   /  No comments




ROYAL LEOPARD OPT FOR CONFEDERATIONS CUP

Source : http://www.times.co.sz/sports/...



Today News: PRO SOCCER: Rooney tells teammates to remember World Cup pain






RIO DE JANEIRO — As England endures its worst World Cup for more than 50 years, Wayne Rooney wants his teammates to remember the pain of this campaign.

England is already out of contention after losses to Italy and Uruguay, its run lasting less than a week. Not since 1958 had England failed to make it to the second round of a World Cup it qualified for.

This is considered a debacle in a country where expectations, as the game’s inventor and host of the richest league, seemingly surpass its soccer abilities.

With its only title coming at the 1966 World Cup on home soil, is there hope for the English?

“It’s vital we take the pain we are feeling now and remember that and the next tournament we don’t want to feel that again,” Rooney said Saturday.

But addressing the long-term malaise will take longer. A new crop of defenders can’t be produced in two years to complement the young — at times exhilarating — attacking players breaking into the national team.

Football Association chairman Greg Dyke spent months producing a report which outlined ways to ensure Premier League teams are playing more Englishmen, but some of the plans quickly unraveled and he wasn’t made available to the media on Saturday as the scrutiny on the national team intensified.

For now, with another game in Group D still to be played against surprise leader Coast Rica on Tuesday, the squad can’t even escape Brazil. Instead, Rooney, alongside goalkeeper Joe Hart, led the public apologies to the England fans who followed them to south America.

“Obviously we are hurting,” Rooney said. “We are really disappointed to be out of the tournament. I am sure you can imagine it’s quite tough, a long few days for us ... but we have to be strong together as a team. We have to make sure we are positive for the next game.”

For Hart, England’s 2-1 losses in Brazil rank among his worst moments in soccer. England’s early elimination was sealed by Italy losing 1-0 to Costa Rica on Friday.

“It’s a strange empty feeling,” Hart said. “This is ultimately really cruel and gutting for me.”

There doesn’t seem there’ll be any change in the dugout. Roy Hodgson is set to remain in charge, with the FA asking the coach to see out his contract to the 2016 European Championship. Rooney has seen signs of progress under Hodgson, who took charge before Euro 2012, where England lost the quarterfinals in a shootout.

“He has put a great enthusiasm in the team, a great set of young players, exciting players in place,” Rooney said. “Make no doubt about it, Roy is the man to take us forward. We appreciate what he has done for us.

“He has changed the way we have played over the last couple of years and I know the results have been disappointing in the last two games, but as a team we can feel we are getting better. I feel with the young lads in the squad, this will help them.”

Rooney, who scored against Uruguay to finally end his World Cup goal drought, will hope to be back at the World Cup in Russia in 2018.

Source : http://www.gosanangelo.com/new...
Unknown  /  9:45 AM  /  ,   /  No comments




Here we see the victorious Portsmouth League Junior Division 1 champions for the season 1958/59.

The picture of Havant United comes from John Stokes, now of Hamble although he lived at Farlington in his playing days.

John says the team played all their home matches at Hooks Lane recreation ground, Bedhampton, on the No1 pitch, the one nearest the dressing rooms.

This has since been taken over by Havant Rugby Club and where there were once three football pitches there are now none.

Source : http://www.portsmouth.co.uk/no...



Today News: Smith takes over Richlands girls' soccer team






MAYSVILLE | New Richlands High girls’ soccer coach Stan Smith wasn’t feeling the heat on what was otherwise a hot day during summer league soccer game at the OCSA fields.

He appeared calm and collected as he tried to give breaks to his players during the middle of action, despite the Wildcats having a limited number of players to substitute.

“I’m not too nervous,” Smith said. “I’ve been doing this for a while now.”

The 24-year-old Smith was certainly in full coaching mode as he led Richlands during its summer league match this week. While young, he feels he’s ready for the challenge of being a coach, and he is optimistic about the Wildcats.

“I’m very excited about the opportunity,” Smith said. “We want to improve on this past season. Moving up into a new conference, it was tough and it was an adjustment. I have a young team. I’m going to have two seniors this year that I know of and a lot of freshmen coming in. This is the school I went to and I’m just ready to get into it.”

Smith takes over the helm at Richlands after longtime coach P.J. McManus retired at the end of this past season after the Wildcats went 8-13-1 overall, 2-10 in the Coastal Conference and advanced to the NCHSAA playoffs in their first year in 3-A after statewide realignment.

Smith is a 2008 graduate of Richlands, having played soccer his first three years before playing soccer as a senior.

“My dad was a football coach at Richlands and so I just felt like it was a path I was supposed to take,” said Smith, adding he first got into soccer when he was 5 years old. “I had a football injury, I broke some ribs, and it was just time to hang it up and switch back to soccer. I had continued to play soccer with most of the high school boys (outside of high school).”

After graduating, Smith went on to play soccer for four years at Mount Olive College. He just finished his second year as a math teacher at Richlands. Smith also spent the last two years helping boys’ soccer coach Mike Roed and worked this past girls’ season assisting McManus.

“After playing in college, I wasn’t ready to be done with soccer,” Smith said. “I started coaching while I was still in college, helping out with a travel team. I enjoyed it, watching (the players) wanting to learn and wanting to get better and improve.”

Smith feels he’s ready to be head coach, given his experience helping Roed and McManus. However, Smith added that he’s still learning the ways of his new job.

“Any time you are around people like P.J. and coach Roed who have done it for all these years, it helps,” he said. “By no means do I know everything and I’ll be the first to admit that. I’ve always looked for ways to learn. I’m currently coaching out here at OCSA and there’s numerous good coaches as well to work with and learn from. I’m always asking questions.”

Smith has two things in particular he wants to see from his program.

First, he wants to have a junior varsity team. The other is that he wants Richlands to be a possession-oriented team.

“We want to keep the ball because the more we have the ball the less they (opposing teams) do,” Smith said. “I was just telling the girls (during summer league) that we were letting the other team get too many shots. We have to make sure we are stepping to the ball, putting a lot of pressure on and play our game. We want to pass the ball around, find feet and have a lot of movement for each other and just really work for each other.”

MAYSVILLE | New Richlands High girls’ soccer coach Stan Smith wasn’t feeling the heat on what was otherwise a hot day during summer league soccer game at the OCSA fields.

He appeared calm and collected as he tried to give breaks to his players during the middle of action, despite the Wildcats having a limited number of players to substitute.

“I’m not too nervous,” Smith said. “I’ve been doing this for a while now.”

The 24-year-old Smith was certainly in full coaching mode as he led Richlands during its summer league match this week. While young, he feels he’s ready for the challenge of being a coach, and he is optimistic about the Wildcats.

“I’m very excited about the opportunity,” Smith said. “We want to improve on this past season. Moving up into a new conference, it was tough and it was an adjustment. I have a young team. I’m going to have two seniors this year that I know of and a lot of freshmen coming in. This is the school I went to and I’m just ready to get into it.”

Smith takes over the helm at Richlands after longtime coach P.J. McManus retired at the end of this past season after the Wildcats went 8-13-1 overall, 2-10 in the Coastal Conference and advanced to the NCHSAA playoffs in their first year in 3-A after statewide realignment.

Smith is a 2008 graduate of Richlands, having played football his first three years before playing soccer as a senior.

“My dad was a football coach at Richlands and so I just felt like it was a path I was supposed to take,” said Smith, adding he first got into soccer when he was 5 years old. “I had a football injury, I broke some ribs, and it was just time to hang it up and switch back to soccer. I had continued to play soccer with most of the high school boys (outside of high school).”

After graduating, Smith went on to play soccer for four years at Mount Olive College. He just finished his second year as a math teacher at Richlands. Smith also spent the last two years helping boys’ soccer coach Mike Roed and worked this past girls’ season assisting McManus.

“After playing in college, I wasn’t ready to be done with soccer,” Smith said. “I started coaching while I was still in college, helping out with a travel team. I enjoyed it, watching (the players) wanting to learn and wanting to get better and improve.”

Smith feels he’s ready to be head coach, given his experience helping Roed and McManus. However, Smith added that he’s still learning the ways of his new job.

“Any time you are around people like P.J. and coach Roed who have done it for all these years, it helps,” he said. “By no means do I know everything and I’ll be the first to admit that. I’ve always looked for ways to learn. I’m currently coaching out here at OCSA and there’s numerous good coaches as well to work with and learn from. I’m always asking questions.”

Smith has two things in particular he wants to see from his program.

First, he wants to have a junior varsity team. The other is that he wants Richlands to be a possession-oriented team.

“We want to keep the ball because the more we have the ball the less they (opposing teams) do,” Smith said. “I was just telling the girls (during summer league) that we were letting the other team get too many shots. We have to make sure we are stepping to the ball, putting a lot of pressure on and play our game. We want to pass the ball around, find feet and have a lot of movement for each other and just really work for each other.”

Source : http://www.jdnews.com/sports/l...
Unknown  /  4:38 AM  /  ,   /  No comments

Sun Life Stadium will get a makeover between now and 2016. (USATSI) Sun Life Stadium will get a makeover between now and 2016. (USATSI)


More NFL offseason: League minicamp dates | Latest news, notes


Miami-Dade County have approved renovations to Sun Life Stadium, home of the Miami Dolphins, the South Florida Sun-Sentinel's Craig Davis reported Tuesday. This means that South Florida could again find itself hosting a Super Bowl, which last happened in February 2010.


Davis writes: "The commission by a vote of 7-4 gave support to a plan for the county to pay incentives to the Miami Dolphins for hosting major events. In return, Dolphins owner Steve Ross will proceed with a $350 million project to modernize the 27-year-old stadium."


Ross expressed his gratitude in a statement: "I want to thank the Board of County Commissioners and Mayor Gimenez for approving this unique and creative plan to bring Super Bowls and other marquee events to Miami-Dade County.


"We have one of the world's most aspirational cities, and as such, deserve a stadium that will provide significant economic impact to Miami-Dade County. This will not only secure the future of the Dolphins, but will ensure that Miami has one of the world's best venues to host events of this magnitude going forward."


The agreement would commit Miami-Dade to use tourist development money to pay the Dolphins $4 million for each Super Bowl hosted and $3 million for an FBS national title game. Gimenez called the deal "very innovative, it's one of a kind. ... It places the burden on the Dolphins organization to deliver results. No major event, no funds."


And Davis adds: "Under terms of Tuesday's deal, the county isn't obligated to make payments during the first 10 years of the agreement, to avoid sapping a tourist-tax fund that is already stressed. The Dolphins can accrue up to $30 million in fees during the initial phase. But a provision relieves the county of the obligation to pay if the hotel tax isn't generating enough revenue to make payments."


The team should be ready to break ground in July with most of the construction -- which includes upgrading the lights, sound system, seats and other facilities -- expected to take place during the 2015 and 2016 off seasons.


As part of the agreement, Ross and the Dolphins agree not to leave Miami for the next 30 years.



NFL Hot News


Lions TE Eric Ebron thinks he'll win Rookie of the Year, make the Pro Bowl



Lions first-round rookie Eric Ebron might be sharing targets with two other tight ends this season, but he's shooting to be the No. 1 rookie."My goals are set high," Ebron said Sunday. "I've never set goals that were too low or too easy to achieve. I'm going to try to go for rookie of the year. If it happens, it happens. I believe I can do it."Matt (Stafford) believes I can do it, coaches believe I can do it. My coach right now, he's saying, 'Our goal right now is to make it to the Pro Bowl our rookie year.' I was like, 'Well, your goal is my goal, so we're going to try to do it as fast and as quickly and make it be known as fast as we can."Ebron has admitted that learning the Lions' playbook has been quite the task, but he is beginning to feel comfortable in the offense.



Nothing wrong with high expectations. I can't say I share the same level of belief since the Lions will likely rotate three tight ends this season -- Ebron, Brandon Pettigrew, and Joseph Fauria. Ebron might very well be the statistical leader of that group, but I'm probably going to wait a year or two until I truly buy in. He's a future stud who has drawn Jimmy Graham comparisons. Ebron is a priority in dynasty drafts, but I think his weekly re-draft value will be hit-and-miss.
Unknown  /  2:29 AM  /  ,   /  No comments

Kyle Orton still hasn't shown up for Cowboys minicamp. (USATSI) Kyle Orton still hasn't shown up for Cowboys minicamp. (USATSI)


More NFL offseason: League minicamp dates | Latest news, notes


On Monday, Cowboys backup quarterback Kyle Orton, who somehow has become one of the most important players on the Dallas roster this offseason, didn't show up for his pre-minicamp physical, leading to more speculation that Orton was heavily weighing retirement.


Though Cowboys coach Jason Garrett had said previously that he expected Orton to show for the mandatory minicamp this week, Orton has not surfaced yet as of late Tuesday morning for the first day, according to NFL.com.


If he misses the entire minicamp, he's subject to an approximate $70,000 fine, and already, he's potentially forfeited a $75,000 workout bonus for skipping all the Dallas OTAs.


If Orton decides to retire, he'd have to repay the Cowboys $3 million of his $5 million signing bonus, and he would be giving up a $3.25 million base salary. If the Cowboys cut him instead, he wouldn't owe them anything.


So, without Orton in camp and with Tony Romo still rehabbing from back surgery, Brandon Weeden, at this point, is Dallas' No. 1 quarterback.


For now, Orton, if he does want to retire, is in a money standoff with the Cowboys. One that might not end anytime soon.



NFL Hot News


49ers TE Vernon Davis plans to attend mandatory minicamp



49ers tight end Vernon Davis didn't attend the team's voluntary OTAs due to dissatisfaction with his contract. Next week, the 49ers open their mandatory minicamp. That means if you don't show up, it'll cost you. Davis wants to keep his money."You know what? I plan on being there," Davis said during a radio interview Thursday.Davis has two years remaining on the six-year, $42.7 million contract he signed in 2010. There's about $9 million in salary left on it, including $4.7 million for this season.



This is noteworthy because if Davis isn't going to hold out of a minicamp, it pretty much assures he won't hold out of training camp. The 49ers added another solid wideout this offseason in the trade for Stevie Johnson. That could lead to a slight drop in targets for Davis, but he remains an obvious top-five fantasy tight end. He accumulated 850 yards and 13 touchdowns last year. He and Colin Kaepernick displayed a great connection after Davis was a total afterthought for many games in 2012.
Unknown  /  9:25 AM  /  ,   /  No comments

Brian Hoyer, not Johnny Manziel, is 'the guy,' according to Paul Kruger. (USATSI) Brian Hoyer, not Johnny Manziel, is 'the guy,' according to Paul Kruger. (USATSI)


More NFL offseason: League minicamp dates | Latest news, notes


Expect to get a lot this between now and, well, whenever Johnny Manziel is officially named the Browns starter. We saw it with Tim Tebow and Kyle Orton back in 2011, and we suspect everyone will be asked their thoughts on whether veteran Brian Hoyer deserves to start, or if Johnny Football gives the Browns the best chance to win now.


Which brings us to linebacker Paul Kruger, who had the question put to him in a recent interview with WISW-AM.


"In my mind, Hoyer's the guy," Kruger said (via NFL.com). "Hoyer came in, won us four games, unfortunately got hurt. The guy was on fire when he was healthy and he's proven himself at a different level and has worked extremely hard."


For the record, Hoyer started three games before an ACL injury ended his 2013 season but the point remains; he did something that Brandon Weeden could not: give the Browns -- and their fans -- hope that winning was, in fact, possible.


"You let the preseason go, see how they look and then make a decision," Kruger continued. "In my mind, Hoyer has been a good leader for us and somebody who has been able to win us a few games. It's tough to say but I think the preseason will be a big deal for both of them."


It's a fair point. And first-year coach Mike Pettine said last week that Hoyer is "securely ahead" when it comes to earning the job. Of course, Pettine added that Hoyer's lead wasn't "insurmountable." Put another way (in our mind, at least): Manziel isn't the starter now but a lot can change between now and Week 1.


(Worth pointing out: The Browns begin the season with games against the Steelers, Saints and Ravens before a Week 4 bye. If the team limps to an 0-3 start with Hoyer then you know how this will play out.)


Pettine said any quarterback competition won't take place until training camp next month.


"We haven't really been in the mode of thinking, 'He's this far ahead today. How much was the gap closed?''' the coach said last week. "They're still learning the basics of the offense. The rookies haven't been here very long. They're playing catchup from a playbook standpoint. So at this point, we really weren't keeping score. We'll be much more apt to do that once we get to training camp.''


Kruger, meanwhile, echoes what most of his coaches and teammates must already be feeling.


"I'm a little tired of hearing about him," he said. "It hasn't been a distraction, it really hasn't. It brings some excitement."


Right or wrong, this won't let up until Manziel gets on the field.



NFL Hot News


49ers TE Vernon Davis plans to attend mandatory minicamp



49ers tight end Vernon Davis didn't attend the team's voluntary OTAs due to dissatisfaction with his contract. Next week, the 49ers open their mandatory minicamp. That means if you don't show up, it'll cost you. Davis wants to keep his money."You know what? I plan on being there," Davis said during a radio interview Thursday.Davis has two years remaining on the six-year, $42.7 million contract he signed in 2010. There's about $9 million in salary left on it, including $4.7 million for this season.



This is noteworthy because if Davis isn't going to hold out of a minicamp, it pretty much assures he won't hold out of training camp. The 49ers added another solid wideout this offseason in the trade for Stevie Johnson. That could lead to a slight drop in targets for Davis, but he remains an obvious top-five fantasy tight end. He accumulated 850 yards and 13 touchdowns last year. He and Colin Kaepernick displayed a great connection after Davis was a total afterthought for many games in 2012.
Unknown  /  5:32 AM  /  ,   /  No comments

NFL Hot News


49ers TE Vernon Davis plans to attend mandatory minicamp



49ers tight end Vernon Davis didn't attend the team's voluntary OTAs due to dissatisfaction with his contract. Next week, the 49ers open their mandatory minicamp. That means if you don't show up, it'll cost you. Davis wants to keep his money."You know what? I plan on being there," Davis said during a radio interview Thursday.Davis has two years remaining on the six-year, $42.7 million contract he signed in 2010. There's about $9 million in salary left on it, including $4.7 million for this season.



This is noteworthy because if Davis isn't going to hold out of a minicamp, it pretty much assures he won't hold out of training camp. The 49ers added another solid wideout this offseason in the trade for Stevie Johnson. That could lead to a slight drop in targets for Davis, but he remains an obvious top-five fantasy tight end. He accumulated 850 yards and 13 touchdowns last year. He and Colin Kaepernick displayed a great connection after Davis was a total afterthought for many games in 2012.
Unknown  /  4:32 AM  /  ,   /  No comments

Basketball Hot News


Chris Bosh sums up Finals: “(Spurs) played the best basketball I’ve ever seen”
Unknown  /  1:37 AM  /  ,   /  No comments

Former first-rounder Josh Freeman is working to get back into the NFL. (USATSI) Former first-rounder Josh Freeman is working to get back into the NFL. (USATSI)


More NFL offseason: League minicamp dates | Latest news, notes


When the Buccaneers drafted Josh Freeman 17th overall in 2009, then-coach Raheem Morris compared the Kansas St. quarterback to Ben Roethlisberger. But after a strong sophomore season in which Freeman threw 25 touchdowns and six interceptions, his NFL career has been plagued my mediocrity.


Things came to a head last October, when the Bucs released Freeman. He then signed with the Vikings, had one forgettable start against the Giants, and spent the rest of the season on the sidelines.


This offseason, the Vikings let Freeman walk and the Giants signed him to a deal. That lasted a grand total of six weeks, and now Freeman is out of work. But he has a plan. Details via Gil Brandt, NFL.com analyst and former Cowboys vice president of player personnel:



While Gruden and Shea know something about what it takes to be an NFL quarterback, the question with Freeman was less about his physical skills and more about everything else.


In the days leading up to his release from Tampa, he had reportedly been fined twice by the team and the club was looking to suspend him. There were accusations by Freeman's agent that the Bucs leaked confidential information, and Freeman asked to be traded -- and the team was trying to oblige him -- before he was released.


But the problem then -- and now -- remains: What team would want Freeman given all the off-field baggage that follows him?



NFL Hot News


Chiefs WR Dwayne Bowe is in the best shape of his life



Yep, it's about that time of year when stories such as this one bloom."Right now I'm about 210 (pounds), and I'm moving good, and I feel like I'm in the best shape of my life," Chiefs wide receiver Dwayne Bowe told the Kansas City Star on Thursday. "The way [OTAs have] been going, it's only going to get better."Head coach Andy Reid said: "I think Dwayne came back in phenomenal shape, that's one thing. It looks like it out here. He's really moving around well. Look forward to getting to camp where it actually counts, but he's in the right frame of mind."



It's nice to hear after Bowe has shown up to workouts in previous years in some form far away from tip-top. Bowe toned up with the help of a nutritionist and a personal trainer, and he said he's looking forward to being more of a leader on and off the field this year ... it's all very standard fare for mid-June. Bowe frustrated fantasy owners the past couple of seasons after posting some big numbers in 2010 and 2011 and failing to follow up. This year, you can't be frustrated if you draft Bowe. First of all, you're not drafting as anything more than a WR4, and expectations should be tamped down as long as risk-averse Alex Smith is under center. The Chiefs are trying to get him to throw down the field more often, but it's not as if Smith is going to turn into Jay Cutler overnight. I'll be surprised if Bowe reaches 900 yards this season. He turns 30 in August.
Unknown  /  12:34 AM  /  ,   /  No comments


Chris Andersen can be a free agent this offseason. Chris Andersen can be a free agent this offseason. (USATSI)


More Offseason Analysis: Coaching changes, news | Free Agency | Draft


Miami Heat big man Chris Andersen will decline his $1.45 million player option for next season and become a free agent, according to Yahoo Sports' Marc Spears. Miami's supporting cast could look quite different in a few months.



Guard Ray Allen said he still loves playing, but is considering retirement after 18 seasons. Forward Shane Battier is retiring after 13 seasons. Free-agent point guard Mario Chalmers told Yahoo Sports he would like to re-sign with the Heat, but he struggled in the postseason and lost his starting job in Game 5. Forward-center Chris Andersen will opt-out of his contract to become a free agent, a source said. Longtime Heat forward Udonis Haslem has a contract option for next season. Sharp-shooting forward Rashard Lewis is a free agent also, and the Heat will have competition for his services, a source said.



Andersen's decision is essentially a no-brainer financially. He has been an absolute steal since he joined the Heat, finishing around the basket and providing solid pick-and-roll defense and rim protection in addition to his vaunted energy and activity. A key part of Miami's playoff run, he appeared to be much less than fully healthy in the NBA Finals, where he averaged just 2.6 points per game and made 25 percent of his shots.


While Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra has always been a big Anderson fan, his future with the team is uncertain simply because the organization has a lot of other questions to answer. All three of its stars could opt out, and it looks like the roster needs an injection of athleticism and shooting. Andersen could surely still fit in, but there are a lot of moving parts.





Basketball Hot News


Suns will try to reach deal with Eric Bledsoe early in July, not just wait to match offers

Unknown  /  10:53 AM  /  ,   /  No comments



More Offseason Analysis: Coaching changes, news | Free Agency | Draft


While Tim Duncan refused to offer any clues about his future after winning his fifth NBA championship on Sunday, everyone around the San Antonio Spurs seems to expect he will be back.


"Tim and Manu [Ginobili] are going to play until they die, so I think we are in pretty good shape," Spurs owner Peter Holt said, via the San Antonio Express-News' Dan McCarney. "Tim and Manu want to play until they die, somewhat sincerely, actually."


Ginobili had already stated that he'll return, and Tony Parker added that he thinks "everybody's gonna come back."


The 38-year-old Duncan averaged 15.4 points, 10 rebounds and two assists against the Miami Heat in the NBA Finals, shooting 56.9 percent from the field and playing excellent interior defense. He is certainly still effective enough to help San Antonio defend its title.





Basketball Hot News


Ray Allen to mull retirement or returning for one more run at a ring

Unknown  /  4:44 AM  /  ,   /  No comments


Amar'e Stoudemire will be under contract with New York next season. (USATSI) Amar'e Stoudemire will be under contract with the Knicks in 2015. (USATSI)


More Offseason Analysis: Coaching changes, news | Free Agency | Draft


As widely expected, considering the massive payday he's set to receive next year relative to his prospects in free agency, Knicks forward Amar'e Stoudemire is opting in to his deal for 2014-2015, according to CSN Northwest:



As most expected, New York Knicks power forward Amar'e Stoudemire has declined to exercise his early termination option and will return to the Knicks for the 2014-15 season to finish out the final year of his five-year, $100 million deal, a league source informed CSNNW.com.


“He is opting in,” said the source that spoke on condition of anonymity because an official announcement has yet to be made. If he had chose to exercise his ETO, he would have become an unrestricted free agent this summer.



via Source: Stoudemire declines early termination option, will return to Knicks | CSN Northwest.


Stoudemire is owed $23.4 million by the cap-strapped Knicks, who hope to clear space for 2015 to pursue a major free agent, hopefully to pair with Carmelo Anthony if he re-signs this summer. Anthony has planned to opt out of his deal reportedly and become a free agent. Stoduemire signed with the Knicks in 2010 and was thought to be the building block for a championship foundation. But injuries and an inability to mesh with Carmelo Anthony has left him a shell of his former self, unable to stay on the floor for consistent minutes or games.


He was still productive in spurts last season, averaging 11.9 points and 4.9 rebounds while shooting 58 percent from the field in 65 games for New York last season. So one more year of STAT for the Knicks before one of the most disappointing contracts in their team's history, which is saying something, is off the books. And for the former MVP candidate, a year trying to show Phil Jackson he should remain part of the team going forward.


It's possible Stoudemire could be traded, but expiring contracts like his no longer hold the same value under the new CBA. The Knicks would have to pay through the nose in assets to move Stoudemire, something that's unadvisable given their situation and nearly impossible anyway given the draft picks they've already surrendered.





Basketball Hot News


LeBron James with chase down, volleyball spike block on Patty Mills (VIDEO)

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Eric Bledsoe and P.J. Tucker will be restricted free agents in July. Eric Bledsoe and P.J. Tucker will be restricted free agents in July. (USATSI)


More Offseason Analysis: Coaching changes, news | Free Agency | Draft


Phoenix Suns general manager Ryan McDonough said that he plans to try to reach agreements on new contracts for restricted free agents Eric Bledsoe and P.J. Tucker early in July, via the Arizona Republic's Paul Coro.



"We'll try to do that as soon as possible and not let it get to the point where you'd have to get an offer and we'd match it," Suns General Manager Ryan McDonough said.



Tucker said that the Suns have told him they want him back, and it looks likely that they'll both be. McDonough told ESPN's Ramona Shelburne back in December that Phoenix would pay "whatever it takes" to keep Bledsoe. There will surely be other suitors.


When Bledsoe was healthy, he played like an All-Star this season, averaging 17.7 points, 5.5 assists and 4.7 rebounds per game and shooting 48 percent from the field. At just 24 years old, the point guard will undoubtedly wind up with a huge deal, potentially a maximum contract.


The 29-year-old Tucker is in a different position, but the forward has found his niche in the league as a tough defender and a consistent three-point threat. As a minimum-salary player, he is also due for a huge raise.


Phoenix wants to build on its surprisingly successful season, and bringing Bledsoe and Tucker back would be a good start. If another team quickly offers either one of them a huge contract, though, the Suns might have to reevalute things.





Basketball Hot News


Tiago Splitter blocks Dwyane Wade at the rim. Pretty much sums up Game 5 (VIDEO)

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More Offseason Analysis: Coaching changes, news | Free Agency | Draft


Houston Rockets forward Chandler Parsons appeared on ESPN's SportsNation on Friday, and LeBron James was a topic of conversation. The Miami Heat are trailing the San Antonio Spurs 3-1 in the NBA Finals, and James can choose to opt out of his contract and become a free agent in July. There is, of course, much speculation about what he will do.


"I think if they would've won the championship it would've been a different story and they would've came back to do it again," Parsons said, "but he's got so much responsibility -- he's obviously one of the best players, if not the best player -- so I think them losing will make him make a move and opt out, and you'll see him in a different jersey next year."


Parsons was accused of trying to recruit James for the Rockets.


"I just don't think he'll be back on the Heat," Parsons said. "I think he's done all he can do there and I think it's time for him to move on.


"I can't see the Lakers," he continued. "I honestly can't. I could see him maybe going back to Cleveland. I could see that."


Parsons already has a side career in modeling. Perhaps he has a future as a talking head on television, too.


(H/T ProBasketballTalk)





Basketball Hot News


In copy-cat league, could other teams mimic the Spurs’ offense?

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Donald Sterling has changed his mind on the sale. (USATSI) Donald Sterling has changed his mind on the sale. (USATSI)


More: Berger: Shell game | Sterling banned for life | Latest updates | NBA news



As Donald Sterling attempts to continue his lawsuit against the NBA instead of accepting the sale of the Clippers by his wife Shelly Sterling after Sterling was found incompetent by neurologists, SI.com reports that should Sterling continue with his efforts to sue the league, the NBA will move to countersue as part of its legal strategy.



The league will answer Sterling's complaint by August 11, and sources tell SI.com there is a good chance the league will countersue Sterling. The NBA could raise a tortious interference with contractual relations claim, and contend that Sterling has interfered in the business relations of the NBA and one of its franchises by interfering with the sale of the team.



via NBA unfazed by Donald Sterling's lawsuit, could countersue - NBA - Michael McCann - SI.com.


Thursday the AP reported that Sterling has hired four private investigators to "dig up dirt" on David Stern, Adam Silver, and the other NBA owners as part of his lawsuit efforts. The plan, basically, being to risk sufficient enough embarrassment for the league through discovery to force the league to relent or settle.


So now it's a showdown, as both sides wait to see if any of Sterling's efforts will hold up in court even prima facie. But if Sterling continues to go down this road, the NBA is not going to maintain its defensive stance. It's going to go on offense.





Basketball Hot News


Report: Carmelo Anthony leaning towards leaving New York; Chicago, Houston frontrunners


Phil Jackson’s suggestion that Carmelo Anthony take less money to stay in New York so there is flexibility to build a team around him has an obvious counter argument:


If you’re going to take less money to win, why not do that in another city where the parts are already assembled to have a contender? It’s likely why when they met recently Jackson suggests Anthony opt-in for next season, giving Jackson a year to work his plan.


Anthony has said from the start he is opting out and not only that, he’s leaning toward leaving and heading to Chicago or Houston, reports Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo Sports.



As re-signing with the Knicks continues to fade as his priority, Chicago and Houston have emerged as the clear frontrunners to acquire Anthony, league sources told Yahoo Sports.


Anthony’s meeting with Knicks officials on Friday night had little impact on his state of mind, league sources said, because there remain too many uncertainties about how quickly president Phil Jackson can reshape the team into a championship contender.



If winning really is Anthony’s priority (he has said that, but everybody says that) then both of those teams make sense as a fit.


Chicago needs a second reliable shot creator and scoring option next to (a hopefully healthy) Derrick Rose, plus they have a defensive system and a Defensive Player of the Year in Joakim Noah who can help clean up Anthony’s defensive mistakes (he’s worked harder on that end the past couple years, but let’s not pretend ‘Melo is a good defender).


Houston needs a stretch four that will help space the floor, and with Dwight Howard and James Harden the Rockets would have their “big three” put together. They would be contenders, although the West is already full of contenders. The two questions I have about Anthony in Houston: Kevin McHale wants to run and we know how Anthony felt about those Mike D’Antoni offensive principles before, will ‘Melo play in the system? Can Howard, as great a defensive backstop as he is, salvage a defense with Harden and Anthony?


The front offices for both of those teams are working on plans to clear cap space to make Anthony a big, although not max, offer.


There will be other teams trying to get in the mix. Obviously New York is making their pitch. The Lakers are out there, although they are lukewarm on the idea of the Kobe Bryant/Anthony pairing (as they should be).


But it looks more and more like Anthony is ready to move on.


Which really isn’t the worst thing for a Knicks team trying to rebuild.





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Rookie QB Derek Carr has been impressive during OTAs. (USATSI) Rookie QB Derek Carr has been impressive during OTAs. (USATSI)


More NFL offseason: League minicamp dates | Latest news, notes


The Raiders drafted Derek Carr in the second round of May's NFL Draft, but reportedly had no plans to rush him into the lineup. Partly because most rookies -- especially quarterbacks -- need time to adjust to professional football, but also because the Raiders traded for Matt Schaub this offseason and coach Dennis Allen promptly named him the 2014 starter.


Several months later, that remains the case, though Carr has exceeded expectations during OTAs, and is already taking second-team snaps from Matt McGloin.


Oakland offensive coordinator Greg Olson said that Carr has been "better than we thought he would be," adding (via the San Francisco Chronicle's Vic Tafur): “I really, really like him. Everybody knew he was accurate, but he is more accurate than we thought. … We'll have to wait and see how he does against a live rush, but so far his intelligence, accuracy and quickness in getting the ball out has been excellent.”


When it became clear that the Texans were willing to part ways with Schaub, the Raiders moved quickly, acquiring the veteran quarterback in late March. A month later -- and weeks before the draft -- the Raiders traded Terrelle Pryor, who started nine games last season, to the Seahawks for a seventh-round pick.


“When we got Matt Schaub, we needed to do that,” Olson said. “We didn't know who would fall to us in the draft. It was a good decision, a decision we had to make.”


Allen has called Schaub a top-10 quarterback, something no one would have accused him of during a forgettable 2013 season. But Olson knows his job is to get the most out of Schaub, who enters his 11th season.


“They didn't allow him to do much in Houston,” Olson said. “I don't know why. A guy with his experience ought to understand the protections and what a good run is, and what a bad run is. So, give him more rein and let him use what he sees.”


And while Allen isn't interested in talking about the depth chart in June, it's clear that he and Olson really like what they have in Carr.


“He's a competitor,” the coach said last week. “He is going to continue to compete. That's really what we want him to do. I am setting any barriers. … I want him to come in here and try to get better every day. If he does that, everything else takes care of itself.”


Olson added: “We drafted a pretty good player. He is very intelligent, and he may not need to redshirt. We like his comfort level. Right away, you can see that this is not too big for him.”



NFL Hot News


49ers QB Colin Kaepernick cleared following sexual assault investigation



Remember when 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick was the focus of a police investigation? Yeah, well, you can forget it now. Kaepernick and the two other players who were with him in a Miami hotel room with a woman in April, Ricardo Lockette and Quinton Patton, will not have charges brought against them by county prosecutors. The woman alleged that she was a victim of sexual assault while with the players, and a spokesman for the state attorney's office said no evidence was found to support that claim.



So, Kaepernick can move forward with actual football things. He has a ton of quality receivers surrounding him this year, and the team would be smart to utilize him more as a passer. Kaepernick is the 10th QB off of the board, according to current average draft position numbers. I think he can be a top-five fantasy quarterback.
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WICHITA, KS – Playing for a trip to the Champions Professional Indoor Football League title game, the Wichita Wild used late game dramatics to beat the Law 33-31 in Saturday’s playoff.

Source : http://ksn.com/2014/06/14/wild...



Today News: World Cup: US team of 1994 planted seeds for 2014






Their quest for glory starts Monday in northeastern Brazil, in the coastal city of Natal, home to 1 million people obsessed with the "Beautiful Game."

But for numerous members of the U.S. national team, the World Cup dream began 20 years ago, when the planet's biggest sporting event played out -- for the first and only time -- on American soil, captivating a nation that preferred its soccer pigskin-style.

From the brightest stars to the deepest reserves, U.S. players point to the 1994 World Cup, which was played in stadiums across the country, including Stanford's, as their first exposure to international soccer. Exposure quickly led to obsession.

Two decades later, the circle has come full: The children of '94 are the core of what many consider the most talented United States team ever assembled, the heart of a thriving professional soccer league and the idols of the next generation of kids with World Cup fever.

Forward Chris Wondolowski was an 11-year-old from Danville when he peered through a fence to watch Brazil practice at Santa Clara University. Midfielder Graham Zusi participated in the opening ceremonies of the World Cup matches in Chicago. Defender Matt Besler recalled being awestruck by penalty kicks -- "I thought that was the coolest thing" -- and blown away by the wondrous blond Afro of Colombian star Carlos Valderrama.

"We are the first generation that has really grown up with the game," Besler said.

The '94 World Cup not only sparked a generation of soccer lovers, it launched a professional league.

FIFA, the governing body of international soccer, irked countries across the globe by awarding the cherished event to a disinterested nation. The North American Soccer League had gone out of business in 1984, leaving the U.S. with nothing but a pro indoor league.

But the '94 Cup proved wildly successful on the field and in the stands. Brazil won in thrilling fashion, beating Italy in a penalty shootout. The unheralded U.S. team shocked Colombia to reach the knockout stage, and the average attendance of 68,991 in the nine stadiums set a World Cup record that still stands.

Zusi, who was 7 at the time, remembers the rowdy opening ceremony at Chicago's Soldier Field, where he celebrated with thousands of other kids.

"I think I had a blowup soccer ball and was just running around the field throwing it," he said.

Half a continent away, World Cup fever struck one young fan as he watched Argentina defeat Romania in the Rose Bowl. The 12-year-old would go on to become the greatest player in American history.

"Going to that game was such a big deal for me, because I'd never seen a live soccer game," Landon Donovan told MLSsoccer.com. "I didn't know what it was about. It sort of opened my eyes to the bigger world of soccer besides just playing club soccer or playing in my backyard."

Defender Omar Gonzalez, who was just 6 in 1994, told reporters last month at Stanford that he has vague recollections of volunteering at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas with his mom.

"That was when I first made my dream to one day play in a World Cup," he said.

The transformative effect of the World Cup wasn't lost on the American players, who posted a 1-1-1 record in group play and were eliminated in the round of 16 by Brazil at Stanford Stadium.

"It provided many people with the first opportunity to watch high-level soccer played and the passion that surrounds it," defender Alexi Lalas, now an ESPN analyst, told USA Today. "It gave us a huge platform ... but most of all it just gave us a more educated soccer public in the United States."

FIFA had that education in mind when it selected the U.S. to host the '94 event over Morocco and Brazil. In exchange for the rights to the Cup, American soccer officials pledged to start a professional league.

Two years later, Major League Soccer was born. The 10-team league included the San Jose Clash and possessed a more stable financial model than the North American Soccer League, which had served as home to high-priced but past-their-prime stars such as Pele and Franz Beckenbauer.

The U.S. national team and Major League Soccer grew up together. Both experienced setbacks -- the MLS lost hundreds of millions of dollars in the early years, while internal strife derailed the 1998 World Cup team in France -- but they are now mature, thriving entities.

The MLS has 19 teams, packed stadiums and just signed a television deal reportedly worth $90 million a year. It has also become the primary pipeline to the national team, placing 10 players on the 23-man roster bound for Brazil, including captain Clint Dempsey and star midfielder Michael Bradley.

Four years ago, the MLS placed just four players on the national team.

"We're all excited about what's happened in MLS," said U.S. coach Jurgen Klinsmann, who was Germany's star at the '94 World Cup. "Every year, another step forward. Their base is getting better, their base is getting stronger. It is exciting times in the United States that we have a league that is really catching up."

The national team is thriving, as well. It dominated World Cup qualifying in the North and Central America and Caribbean region and has overtaken rival Mexico as CONCACAF's premier team.

At No. 13, its world ranking is higher than traditional powers France and the Netherlands.

Even the national team's all-time leading scorer was considered expendable -- Donovan was cut during training camp at Stanford.

Had the United States been slotted into another Group in Brazil, it might be a favorite to advance to the knockout round. Instead, the so-called "Group of Death" awaits, with Germany, Portugal and African power Ghana. Success depends, to a large extent, on the children of '94.

Bradley, who watched Italy's training sessions near his home in Pennington, N.J., is the hub, distributing the ball from his midfield position. Besler, who watched Valderrama's giant hair on a tiny television, is the defensive stopper. Midfielder Alejandro Bedoya, who wore a Valderrama wig while watching Colombia play the U.S. -- his parents, Adriano and Julieta, are Colombian immigrants -- provides essential versatility on the wing.

In all, 13 players were in their formative years when the Cup arrived on American soil.

"We were aware of what was happening -- we could see the fan base growing, and all the attention," said Cobi Jones, one of the top players on the '94 U.S. team. "We knew it was something special, and what it could mean for soccer in the country.

"You hear Wondolowski talk about sneaking (looks through the fence) at his soccer heroes, and now those guys are the heroes. You hope kids sneak to see them. Soccer has to be a generational sport."

Staff writer Elliott Almond contributed to this story.

Source : http://www.mercurynews.com/spo...

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