FA to take time over replay date decision

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A date for the FA Cup quarter-final replay between Manchester United and Chelsea is not expected to be announced by the Football Association until later this week.

Ramires fires home Chelsea's leveller at Man United

GettyImagesRamires fires home Chelsea’s leveller at Man United

• Jolly: Rafa brings Blues a replay

United let slip a two-goal lead at Old Trafford in their FA Cup sixth round tie with Chelsea on Sunday, as the match ended in a 2-2 stalemate.

The draw means a replay at Stamford Bridge must be worked into an already-congested fixture list, which is seemingly dependent on Chelsea’s progress in the Europa League – with the club to face Steaua Bucharest on Thursday.

If Rafael Benitez’s side lose, the replay is set to be played during the first week of April, even though UEFA prefers major countries not to arrange domestic fixtures at the same time as their competitions.

If Chelsea are able to overturn a 1-0 first-leg deficit, then a fixture pile-up would cause a real headache, in particular with the forthcoming international break.

United boss Sir Alex Ferguson said after Sunday’s 2-2 draw at Old Trafford: “I don’t know when the replay will be played, probably May!”

Information from the Press Association was used in this report.

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Woods rolling his way toward the Masters (Yahoo! Sports)

DORAL, Fla. (AP) — Tiger Woods had gone more than three years without a World Golf Championship. He had no trouble remembering the drill.

He sat at a table with the blue Gene Sarazen Cup trophy – he has six just like it at home – and signed a stack of flags for posterity and charity after a two-shot win that was never in question during the final two hours on the Blue Monster at Doral.

Woods entertained a few questions about his new 5-wood, how his performance stacked up with a four-shot win in January at Torrey Pines and whether he thought Rory McIlroy, now overlooked as the No. 1 player in the world, was on the right track.

”Can the Masters get here soon enough?” someone else asked.

It was the only question Woods ignored.

The Masters is a month away, and Woods hasn’t looked this equipped to win another green jacket in five years.

A year ago, he hobbled off the Blue Monster and was driven away in a cart after 11 holes of the final round because of tightness in his left Achilles tendon, raising questions about his health and his immediate future.

Sunday he left Doral on his own terms and with a record that is starting to look familiar.

Woods delivered two quick birdies to end the suspense, and two late bogeys only made the Cadillac Championship look closer than it was. Woods never let anyone get closer than three shots until it no longer mattered. Despite a conservative bogey on the final hole, he closed with a 1-under 71 for a two-shot win over Steve Stricker.

He now has won five times in the last year, the most of anyone in the world.

He goes to Bay Hill in two weeks for the Arnold Palmer Invitational, where he is the defending champion, with a chance to go to No. 1 in the world.

And he stamped himself as the favorite at the Masters.

”That’s how I know I can play,” Woods said. ”That’s the thing. To be able to bring it out a couple times so far this year – and then be able to close and get the Ws on top of that – that’s nice. Any time I can win prior to Augusta, it always feels good.”

Just like Torrey Pines, it was a helpless feeling for those trying to catch him.

Graeme McDowell, who also played with Woods in the final group at Bay Hill last year, again tried to apply pressure early in the round with a two-putt birdie and a beautiful approach into 7 feet on the second hole. Woods, who had to scramble for par on the easy opening hole, sank an 18-foot birdie putt on the second.

”Graeme hits it in there stiff, I need to answer,” Woods said. ”It was important to make that, and basically continue it.”

And that he did.

Woods hit a high cut with an 8-iron into 4 feet on the par-3 fourth hole, and he was on his way.

Stricker chipped in for birdie on the 13th hole and kept trying to make up ground until he ran out of chances, and ultimately ran out of holes. He had a 68 to finish second.

”His attitude and what I saw this week, and his belief in himself again, looks very similar to when he was in the early 2000s, or you can pick any year when he was playing great,” Stricker said. ”He just seems to be in a better place mentally.”

Woods was in a better place on the putting green, and he can thank Stricker for that.

They were going to play a practice round on Wednesday, but when Woods arrived at Doral, he couldn’t find Stricker. Only after he finished playing and headed to the practice green did they meet.

Stricker offered a valuable tip for Woods, noticing that his posture was off when he stood over putts. They spent nearly an hour on the green that Wednesday afternoon, and Woods felt as good as he did at Torrey Pines. And it showed.

He took only 100 putts for the week, the fewest of his career on the PGA Tour. He made 27 birdies, one short of his personal best.

And he finished at 19-under 269 for the 76th win of his PGA Tour career. Not only is that six away from the record 82 won by Sam Snead, it’s one more than Phil Mickelson and Vijay Singh combined.

”Thank you to Steve for the putting lesson,” Woods said at the trophy presentation. ”It was one of those weeks where I felt pretty good about how I was playing, made a few putts and got it rolling.”

Stricker, playing a part-time schedule, picked up his second runner-up finish in just three starts. He had no regrets about offering Woods some help.

”At times you kick yourself,” Stricker said with a laugh. ”He’s a good friend. We talk a lot about putting. It’s good to see him playing well.”

Asked if he would have won without that chance meeting with Stricker, Woods hedged.

”I would like to say I probably would have, but …” he said with a smile. ”I’ve been putting at home and it just still hadn’t felt right. I still was a little bit off. … He basically got me in the same position that I was at Torrey. So once he put me in there where I felt comfortable, I said, ‘Well, this is not too foreign. This is what I was a month or so ago.’ And I started rolling it and it felt really, really good.”

McDowell had third place to himself until he went for the green on the 18th hole and found the water. He made double bogey, shot 72 and fell into a four-way tie for third that cost him $172,500. Phil Mickelson (71), Sergio Garcia (69) and Adam Scott (64) also tied for third.

Woods improved to 41-2 on the PGA Tour when he had the outright lead going into the final round, the last two wins with McDowell at his side. Woods last won while ahead at Bay Hill a year ago.

”The way Tiger was playing, I was always in chase mode,” McDowell said. ”He was always going to be a tough guy to catch. Fair play to him. He played fantastic golf the last couple of days.”

McIlroy’s week ended on a happy note.

Not only did he finish the tournament, he might have turned the corner with a bogey-free 65. McIlroy opened with a 7-iron into 18 feet for eagle, which he called one of the best shots he hit. He shot a 32 on the back nine for a round that surprised him considering how far away he felt when he arrived at Doral.

”Just goes to show, it’s not as far away as you think,” McIlroy said. ”That’s been one of my problems. I always think when I’m playing bad that it’s further away than it is. That’s just where I have to stay patient … and know that if I put in the hard work, that the results will bear fruit. Whether that’s sooner or later, it doesn’t really matter.”

The Masters is approaching quickly, and Woods has reason to be excited about it. For now, he cared only about his latest trophy.

”Majors and World Golf Championships are the best because you know you are playing against the best players,” Woods said. ”That’s what makes wins like this special. That’s why I love to compete.”

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Townsend: QPR players relishing battle to stay up

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Queens Park Rangers winger Andros Townsend says the players are relishing the battle to avoid the drop after coming from behind to beat Sunderland 3-1 at Loftus Road.

Andros Townsend blasts home QPR's second goal against Sunderland

GettyImagesAndros Townsend blasts home QPR’s second goal against Sunderland

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• Blog: Sunderland surrender

Townsend, on loan at QPR from Tottenham Hotspur from the remainder of the season, was one of the stars of the show against Sunderland and scored with a fine, dipping effort to give his side the lead.

Aston Villa’s win at Reading means Rangers remain four points adrift of safety and face a massive six-pointer at Villa Park on Saturday which will go a long way to mapping out the rest of the season for both sides.

“I don’t think we won in my first three games here, but our heads didn’t drop because we knew how good we are as a team in terms of the players we’ve got,” Townsend said. “We knew once we got that first win we could go on a run. We’ve got two wins now and hopefully we can carry on doing that.

“We’ve got massive six-pointers and that is why our heads didn’t go down. We keep saying each game is a massive game and that it is a must-win but as a team we are relishing that. We know we can’t drop points now and we’re relishing that. You could see that against Sunderland and last week.

“If you look at the team we put out, we had two out-and-out wingers and two strikers so we were going for it. Junior (Hoilett) on the left was unbelievable in the first half – he tore the right-back to pieces.

“We came in at half-time and the manager was saying that was the best we had played in the first half and to take it into the second. It didn’t quite work out that way. It was a bit up in the air, we couldn’t get the ball down and play but the goal kind of settled us down and got us on the way to the win.”

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Yankees’ Rivera won’t return after 2013 season

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Updated: March 9, 2013, 10:37 AM ET

By Andrew Marchand | ESPNNewYork.com

Rivera Will Retire At Season’s End

Rivera Will Retire At Season’s End

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TAMPA, Fla. — The greatest closer of all time, Mariano Rivera, will retire at the end of the 2013 season.

In a news conference at George M. Steinbrenner Field on Saturday morning, the 43-year-old Rivera made the expected announcement official with his family, Yankee owner Hal Steinbrenner and all his teammates, led by Derek Jeter and Andy Pettitte, at his side.

“After this year, I will be retiring,” said Rivera, flanked by his wife, Clara, and his two sons.

The Great Mariano

Dating to 1900, only one pitcher with over 1,000 innings has a better WHIP (walks+hits per inning) than Mariano Rivera.

Player Seasons WHIP
Addie Joss 1902-10 .968
Mariano Rivera 1995-12 .998
Ed Walsh 1904-17 1.000
Pedro Martinez 1992-09 1.054
Trevor Hoffman 1993-10 1.058
ESPN Stats & Information

Before making the announcement, Rivera joked that general manager Brian Cashman broke policy and gave him a three-year deal.

On Saturday afternoon, Rivera is expected to pitch in a game for the first time since early May when he crumbled to the warning track shagging flies at Kaufman Stadium in Kansas City. Rivera tore his ACL and has not faced an opponent in nearly a year.

Rivera wanted to finish his remarkable story in more upright fashion. The son of a fisherman, signed out of Panama for $3,000 to be a shortstop, Rivera vowed in Kansas City that he would not go out in such an ugly way.

For years, Rivera has wrestled with retirement, wanting to spend more time with his family and devote an even greater amount of energy to his church.

Rivera has been recognized as the greatest closer of all time and is regarded as a potential first-ballot Hall of Famer. The numbers back up the universal praise.

Rivera will retire with the most saves in the history of baseball. His 608 are seven more than Trevor Hoffman, who is second on the list.

Rivera’s 42 postseason saves are the most in history. While aided by the modern era’s expanded playoffs, Rivera’s playoff mastery is exemplified by his postseason ERA of 0.70 in 141 innings.

He has been instrumental in the Yankees winning five World Series since he arrived to the majors in 1995. Rivera was a starter for part of his initial season, going 5-3 with a 5.94 ERA. In 1996, he set up for John Wetteland. In 1997, he became the Yankees’ closer.

Rivera would be the first one to say he wasn’t perfect. In 1997, he gave up an important home run to Sandy Alomar Jr. in the Yankees’ playoff loss to the Cleveland Indians.

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• Stats & Info: Farewell by numbers

In Game 7 of the 2001 World Series, he was on the mound for Luis Gonzalez’s broken bat game-winning bloop over a drawn-in infield.

In 2004, Rivera could not stop the Boston Red Sox‘s epic comeback after trailing the ALCS by three games to none.

Still, Rivera’s greatness, it can be argued, is the biggest reason for the Yankees’ success over the past two decades. In 141 playoff innings, besides Alomar’s long ball, Rivera has only allowed one other homer, to Jay Payton in Game 2 of the 2000 World Series.

In 2003, Rivera made the Aaron Boone ALCS Game 7-winning homer possible by holding the Red Sox scoreless the final three innings.

Rivera’s teammates and opponents have often talked about how knowing that “Enter Sandman” would play over the loudspeakers made the game seem shorter, as if Yankee opponents only got 24 outs instead of 27. The feeling was that if the ball got into Rivera’s hands, the game would be over.

Andrew Marchand

ESPNNewYork.com

Andrew Marchand is a senior writer for ESPNNewYork. He also regularly contributes to SportsCenter, Baseball Tonight, ESPNews, ESPN New York 98.7 FM and ESPN Radio. He joined ESPN in 2007 after nine years at the New York Post. Follow Andrew on Twitter »

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Report: Patriots ‘have some interest’ in Mike Wallace

Tom Brady winging passes to Mike Wallace: Impossible to imagine? Maybe not.

Armando Salguero of The Miami Herald cited an agent to report that the New England Patriots “have some interest” in the free-agent wide receiver.

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It’s not implausible that the Patriots would put feelers out on Wallace. Tom Brady‘s contract extension generated cap space, and Wes Welker’s future with the team is uncertain. On top of that, Brandon Lloyd might be facing his release after a disappointing season.

New England has two of the NFL’s most dynamic pass-catching tight ends in Rob Gronkowski and Aaron Hernandez, but the team lacks what Randy Moss once gave the offense. Nobody on the roster can take the top off a defense, something Brady made the most of when Moss was in town. Wallace is an incomplete wideout — he’s not going to work the entire field, he’s frustrating in that sense — but he would give New England a wild new dimension.

With that said, multiple teams will pursue Wallace, and the Patriots aren’t the bidding-war type. Even if Bill Belichick has an eye for Wallace, there’s a difference between “interest” and the steps that come next.

Follow Marc Sessler on Twitter @MarcSesslerNFL.

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Fergie refuses to kick Benitez when down

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Manchester United v Chelsea

Sir Alex Ferguson has refused to put the boot into ailing Chelsea boss Rafael Benitez, with the Manchester United chief insisting it was not his style to kick a man while he was down.

Rafa Benitez, Sir Alex Ferguson

PA PhotosRafa Benitez and Sir Alex Ferguson have clashed in the past

• Blog: United can regroup

United entertain Chelsea in the quarter-finals of the FA Cup on Sunday, with both sides heading into the clash on the back of defeats in Europe. The Red Devils’ loss to Real Madrid was the more damaging, as it ended their interest in the Champions League while Chelsea have the chance to overturn their 1-0 defeat in the second leg of their Europa League tie with Steaua Bucharest.

Irrespective of whether Chelsea win the Europa League and the FA Cup, it seems certain that Benitez will be moved on in the summer. He has failed to keep the Blues in the title hunt since taking charge last year and said last week that his time at Stamford Bridge was coming to a close.

Benitez and Ferguson have not had the best of relationships, with the pair clashing regularly when Benitez was in charge of Liverpool, but Ferguson opted not to comment on his rival – albeit by making it clear that the Spaniard was on the rocks.

“I’m not going to kick anyone when they’re lying down,” Ferguson said. “It’s not my style. My concern is the manager of Manchester United and what happens at Chelsea does not affect me.”

Looking ahead to Sunday’s game, Ferguson said: “It’s a big game, the FA Cup. We have a hard game against good opponents. Chelsea have a terrific record in the FA Cup, probably the best of any team in the last decade. We haven’t won it for almost 10 years, so there are a lot of incentives for us.”

The Scot also confirmed Ryan Giggs would take no part, with the Scot not prepared to risk his elder statesman following his brilliant effort in defeat to Real.

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QB Portis among four inked by Argonauts

Argonauts.ca Staff

TORONTO — The Toronto Argonauts announced today that QB Josh Portis, and DBs Talmadge Jackson, Drandyn Thompson and Brent Vinsonhave all signed contracts with the club.
 
Portis started 12 games in his senior year at California University of Pennsylvania.  That season, he totalled 2,651 passing yards and 33 touchdowns while completing 205 of 335 passes. 

Born in Woodland Hills, California, Portis also spent time with Maryland and Florida during his college football career. He was also in training camp with the NFL’s Seattle Seahawks in 2011.
 
Thompson is a former draft pick of the Washington Redskins and was activated for six games during his rookie season. He spent four seasons at Boise State making 31 tackles and three interceptions as a senior.
 
Brent Vinson spent two seasons at the University of Tennessee before transferring to the University of North Alabama. Vinson’s best season came in 2007 with Tennessee when he started ten games and finished with 37 tackles and one interception.
 
Talmadge Jackson played 13 games in his senior year at Oregon totalling 70 tackles, two interceptions and one forced fumble. Jackson has spent time with the NFL’s Baltimore Ravens and the Jacksonville Jaguars, and recently attended Saskatchewan Roughriders training camp in 2012.

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OHL Roundup: Betzold scores twice to lead Petes over Frontenacs 4-1

Greg Betzold scored twice Thursday to lead the Peterborough Petes to a 4-1 win over the Kingston Frontenacs in the Ontario Hockey League.

Nelson Armstrong and Stephen Nosad also scored for Peterborough (23-34-7), while Cody Alcock replied for Kingston (25-32-5).

Andrew D’Agostini made 33 saves to get the win, while Mike Morrison stopped 31 shots in taking the loss.

Alcock opened the scoring for Kingston just 43 seconds in, banging home a loose puck at the edge of the crease. Armstrong then slid down from the point to take a pass and fire in a power-play goal at 18:53 to make it make 1-1 and Betzold scored 50 seconds later to give Peterborough a 2-1 lead after one.

Nosad then came out of the penalty box and put in the rebound of a Connor Boland shot from the point with 1:28 remaining in the second to make it a two-goal cushion for the Petes heading into the final period.

Elsewhere in the OHL it was: Niagara 4, Mississauga 3 (SO); Windsor 7, Sault Ste. Marie 4; and Barrie 5, Sudbury 1.

At Peterborough, Ont., the Petes killed off a two-man advantage with one player without a stick in the first half of the third and Kingston then had back-to-back breakaways while shorthanded that were stopped by D’Agostini.

Betzold then put the game away with power-play goal at 12:52.

Before the game, the crowd sang along to “The Hockey Song” in memory of Canadian singer-songwriter Stompin’ Tom Connors, who died Wednesday at the age of 77.

A memorial service for Connors will be held in Peterborough next week.

IceDogs 4, Steelheads 3 (SO)

At St. Catharines, Ont., Brendan Perlini scored the shootout winner as Niagara (30-30-4) rallied past Mississauga (25-32-6).

Spitfires 7, Greyhounds 4

At Windsor, Ont., Kerby Rychel scored his team-leading 37th and 38th goals of the season as the Spitfires (25-31-8) topped Sault Ste. Marie (34-23-6).

Colts 5, Wolves 1

At Barrie, Ont., Mark Scheifele had two goals and an assist as the Colts (40-19-4) downed Sudbury (28-25-11).

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NHLPA gives approval to NHL’s proposed re-alignment

The National Hockey League Players’ Association has given its approval to the NHL’s proposed re-alignment plan.

NHLPA executive director Don Fehr released a statement on Thursday, saying, “After discussions with the Executive Board, the NHLPA has given consent to realignment, to be re-evaluated following the 2014-15 season.”

In an NHL memo obtained by TSN last week, the league proposed an Eastern Conference with 16 teams and a Western Conference with 14 teams.

Most notably, the Detroit Red Wings and Columbus Blue Jackets will move East, while the Winnipeg Jets will move back West. The Jets have been playing in the Southeast Division since the Atlanta Thrashers franchise moved north to Winnipeg prior to last season.

A vote from the NHL Board of Governors is expected within a week to make the plan official.

NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly also released a statement on Thursday, saying, “The NHL Players’ Association confirmed to us today that it has consented to a revised Plan for Realignment, effective for the 2013-14 season. Our next step will be to bring the proposed Plan for Realignment to the NHL Board of Governors for its consideration. We will update the status of the process as future developments warrant.”

The divisional re-alignment, as outlined in the memo, would be as follows:

Western Conference

Pacific Division: Anaheim, Calgary, Edmonton, Los Angeles, Phoenix, San Jose and Vancouver.

Mid-West Division: Chicago, Colorado, Dallas, Minnesota, Nashville, St. Louis and Winnipeg.

Eastern Conference

Central Division: Boston, Buffalo, Detroit, Florida, Montreal, Ottawa, Tampa Bay, Toronto.

Atlantic Division: Carolina, Columbus, New Jersey, N.Y. Islanders, N.Y. Rangers, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Washington.

The top three teams in each division would make the playoffs, along with the four wild-card teams – the best two non-division winners in each conference.

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