Zaha sorry for middle finger gesture

Manchester United-bound forward Wilfried Zaha has apologised for making an obscene gesture during Crystal Palace’s meeting with Leeds United on Saturday.

Wilfried Zaha puffs cheeks

PA PhotosWilfried Zaha will join Manchester United in the summer

Zaha, 20, was seen showing his middle finger to Leeds supporters as Palace played out a 2-2 draw with their Championship rivals at Selhurst Park.

The England international, who signed for the Red Devils in January before being loaned back to Palace for the remainder of the season, said his actions were “unprofessional”.

On that note I also wanted to apologise for the gesture I did towards the Leeds fans in yesterday’s game. Very unprofessional from me

— Wilfried Zaha (@wilfriedzaha) March 10, 2013

Zaha has played in 35 of Palace’s 37 league games this season, scoring six times for the club he will leave in the summer after a fee in the region of £15 million was agreed in January.

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Woods tied for lead at Doral as McIlroy struggles (Yahoo! Sports)

DORAL, Fla. (AP) — Tiger Woods and most of the world’s best golfers were on their games Thursday in the Cadillac Championship.

Except for the world’s No. 1 player.

Woods made birdie on half his holes on the Blue Monster at Doral for a 6-under 66. He was part of a five-way tie for the lead that included Masters champion Bubba Watson, former U.S. Open champion Graeme McDowell, Sergio Garcia and Freddie Jacobson. Phil Mickelson, Steve Stricker and Hunter Mahan were among those one shot behind.

It was another struggle for Rory McIlroy. He hit only three fairways and made six bogeys that kept him at par or worse on a perfect day for scoring. He wound up with a 73, and has yet to have a round under par this year.

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Ancelotti cools PSG’s hopes of CL glory

Image int_130306_soc_PSG_vs_Valencia_Post_Andrew_Orsatti.jpg

PSG 1-1 Valencia (agg 3-2)

PSG advance but question marks remain

PSG advance but question marks remain

Paris Saint-Germain boss Carlo Ancelotti has played down his side’s chances of winning the Champions League following their round of 16 triumph over Valencia on Wednesday evening.

• Blog: Valencia dominate PSG but lack a second goal
• Blog: PSG built for Europe, just about

Ancelotti’s men did enough in the second leg of their tie with the La Liga outfit, earning a 1-1 draw at the Parc des Princes. Ezequiel Lavezzi netted the equaliser for the home side after Jonas gave Valencia a sniff of hope on 55 minutes.

However, the 53-year-old, who won the Champions League twice with AC Milan, believes PSG must improve if they are to claim this season’s crown.

“It’s very difficult for us to win [the UEFA Champions League], but it’s our aim to do our best,” he told Sky Sports. “At the start, everyone said the team didn’t know what they were going to do, but we won the group, won the last 16, and we hope to do well in the quarter-final.

“It was very hard, a very difficult game. They [Valencia] played really well. We were not at our best in the first half.

“After we conceded the goal, we did better. It’s a very important result for the club, to reach the quarter-finals after 18 years is very important. The goal we conceded woke us up. We were controlled too much in the first half.”

Midfielder Blaise Matuidi was more optimistic about PSG’s chances, insisting the club can be proud of leading Ligue 1 while remaining in contention for the Champions League and Coupe de France.

“It’s great but it’s true that we fought like dogs for that. We have done something great and now anything can happen,” he explained.

“We have done something great, and now anything can happen. We are still in three competitions (the Champions League, Ligue 1 and Coupe de France), which many people tend to forget. We showed we’re in the mix. We will fight until the end.”

Meanwhile, Valencia’s Ernesto Valverde expressed pride in his team-mates’ showing after they bowed out of the competition 3-2 on aggregate.

“The locker room is sad now, but we are aware we played well and leave with our heads held high. We did not play as we usually do but we mastered the attacks of PSG.

“In the first half we stopped their counterattacks [and] we contained them. In the second half we had to go all-out attack and then they had their chances,” said Valverde.

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Darrelle Revis reportedly wants to stay with Jets

Our daily spin around the Darrelle Revis Wheel of Speculation and Misinformation has landed us on a different section of the rumor circle.

Citing unnamed sources close to Revis, the New York Post reported Thursday morning that the cornerback does not want to be traded from the New York Jets.

10 reasons you need Revis

The rumors are swirling that Darrelle Revis could be on the move. Adam Rank knows 10 reasons why the all-world cornerback should be on your team. More …

“He wants to remain a Jet,” a source said. “He has never asked to be traded.”

Revis’ people clearly are trying to moonwalk away from the cornerback’s poorly timed appearance on Michael Robinson‘s web-based show, where he said it would be “awesome” to win a Super Bowl with the San Francisco 49ers.

Sure, Revis still wants to be a Jet. He also wants to get paid — somewhere around $16 million per season.

To recap:

General manager John Idzik is doing his due diligence to improve the Jets, while at the same time denying he is shopping Revis. All reported suitors deny they are in fact suitors. And Revis wants to stay in New York, even with a poorly stacked team suffering financial hardships.

The wheel will keep on spinning — probably again tomorrow morning, or later today, or in seven minutes. We’ll update you on the nauseating ride until the wheel finally comes unhinged.

Follow Kevin Patra on Twitter @kpatra.

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Darrelle Revis trade could mean two high picks for Jets

Whether coach Rex Ryan cops to it or not, the New York Jets are looking to trade Darrelle Revis.

The real question is whether the Jets can find a team willing to pay the price for the star cornerback.

With the offseason under way, Around The League examines what’s next for all 32 teams. Dan Hanzus breaks down the Jets. More …

NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport spoke with two general managers in an effort to get a ballpark price on what the Jets might be able to get for Revis on the trade market. Both GMs believed New York could fetch a 2013 first-round pick and a 2014 conditional pick that would be a second-rounder or better.

Rapoport said Wednesday on “NFL Total Access” that the San Francisco 49ers and Atlanta Falcons are not interested in Revis, despite reports connecting Revis to the teams.

The Falcons are focusing on their own free agents, while a Niners source gave a succinct summation of the reports: “Don’t believe any of that crap.”

Given Revis’ trade price, contract wishes and uncertain health status, don’t be surprised if the Jets struggle to find a dancing partner. At least right now.

Follow Dan Hanzus on Twitter @DanHanzus.

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David Akers officially released by San Francisco 49ers

The San Francisco 49ers have cut ties with David Akers.

The team made the expected news official Wednesday, issuing a statement that it has released the 38-year-old kicker following an erratic season.

Offseason Forecast: Niners
With the offseason under way, Around The League examines what’s next for all 32 teams. Gregg Rosenthal covers the Niners. More …

“The 49ers would like to thank David for his service, dedication and leadership over the past two years,” 49ers general manager Trent Baalke said in the statement. “He is a true professional who represented himself and this organization with class. We wish him, and his family, all the best.”

By cutting Akers, the 49ers save $3 million in salary-cap space. Adam Caplan of The Sideline View reports Akers will represent $567,000 in “dead” money from proration of his signing bonus.

Akers battled through a difficult season in which he missed 13 of 42 field-goal attempts and played through a painful pelvic injury. Niners coach Jim Harbaugh brought in Billy Cundiff before the start of the playoffs but ultimately decided to stick with Akers.

Expect Akers to land on his feet somewhere. As he showed during a record-setting 2011 season, he remains one of the NFL’s best players at his position. He just needs to get healthy.

Follow Dan Hanzus on Twitter @DanHanzus.

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Westbrook’s 37 help Thunder bump Lakers below .500

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Russell Westbrook, left, was in total control against the Lakers. (Layne Murdoch/Getty Images)

Russell Westbrook, left, was in total control against the Lakers. (Layne Murdoch/Getty Images)

By Ben Golliver

The Thunder defeated the Lakers 122-105 at Chesapeake Energy Arena in Oklahoma City on Tuesday night, improving to 44-16 on the season. The Lakers dropped to 30-31.

•  The Thunder’s superiority over the Lakers in the talent and depth departments affords them the opportunity of winning match-ups between the two teams in all sorts of ways. Including their 2012 playoff series victory, Oklahoma City is 9-3 against L.A. since the beginning of the 2011-12 season, grinding out low-scoring games against Mike Brown teams and blowing out Mike D’Antoni’s Lakers in shootouts. With athletic star players at key positions and the ability to go big, go small or go medium, depending on match-ups,  the Thunder boast the versatility and adaptability that are crucial characteristics of championship contenders.

With that said, the Thunder that showed up on Thursday night were unlike any other Thunder team we’ve seen, ever, in one major way: they took care of the basketball at a record level. Oklahoma City was charged with just two turnovers in the 48-minute game. Had Russell Westbrook not been dinged for a travel in the fourth quarter, the Thunder would have set an all-time NBA record for fewest turnovers in a game. Instead, OKC’s two turnovers set a new NBA 2012-13 season record, set a new franchise record, and tied the NBA’s all-time record.

Remember, protecting the basketball was arguably Oklahoma City’s biggest weakness: turnovers have been this team’s Achilles’ heel. The Thunder entered the game tied for fourth in the league with 930 turnovers on the season, trailing only the Rockets, Pistons and Warriors. Their 14.7 turnover percentage — that is, the number of turnovers they commit per 100 possessions — tied for last with the Rockets. That the Thunder possess the NBA’s second-best offensive efficiency while also being so loose with the ball is impressive and it speaks to the aggressive and relentless nature of their attack. What happens when the Thunder combine their scoring efficiency with total control? 71 points on 50 shots at halftime. That’s nearly inconceivable.

Just how out of line was this turnover result with Oklahoma City’s standard? Westbrook alone averages 3.6 turnovers per game, No. 6 in the league, and he’s registered at least two turnovers in 49 of Oklahoma City’s 60 games this season. Kevin Durant is right behind him at No. 7 in the league, averaging 3.3 turnovers per game. Durant has registered at least two turnovers by himself in 52 games this season. As a team, Oklahoma City has only committed less than 10 turnovers only four other times before Tuesday night.

There’s a lot of luck with loose balls, deflections and 50/50 whistles not getting blown that contributes to this accomplishment. It also certainly helped that the Lakers are a below-average defensive team with no ability to apply meaningful ball pressure, especially with Kobe Bryant nursing a bum elbow (see below). Indeed, the Lakers entered the game ranking No. 29 in opponent turnover percentage, forcing turnovers on just 12.2 out of 100 possessions. Still, none of that should take away from what was a restrained massacre, the likes of which we haven’t seen previously from these Thunder.

•  Westbrook’s dominance over the Lakers has reached broken record status. His quickness and explosiveness off the dribble can’t be contained by Bryant, Steve Nash, Steve Blake or anyone else.  He finished with a game-high 37 points (on 15-for-29 shooting) and added 10 rebounds, five assists and two steals. Incredibly, all 15 of Westbrook’s field goals came from 15 feet or in and nine of them came from within two feet of the hoop. Westbrook’s 20 points in the paint nearly matched the Lakers’ entire team (22).

That comparison underscores just what a non-factor Dwight Howard was in this game. Not only did he fail to make an imprint on offense, where he finished with six points (on one-for-seven shooting, Howard didn’t block a shot or register a steal on the other end.  Howard is battling a shoulder injury and didn’t look particularly healthy, but he logged 37 minutes and played for much of the fourth quarter.

With Howard ineffective and without the Lakers having any interior depth behind him, it was open season for Westbrook and fellow point guard Reggie Jackson to attack at will. Jackson played just 13 minutes but he showed more than a few flashes of why Eric Maynor was dumped for a trade exception at the deadline, embarrassing the Lakers’ perimeter defenders off the dribble and scoring five baskets at the rim of his own, including one sneaky dunk that was Westbrook-esque. Jackson finished with 10 points (on five-for-seven shooting).

• Lakers guard Kobe Bryant left the game during the first quarter with an ulnar nerve contusion in his right arm. Bryant first showed pain after Thabo Sefolosha applied pressure defense in the game’s opening moments. He departed the game a few minutes later after committing a turnover on a drive. Bryant was clearly in pain and he attempted to keep his arm straight whenever possible, using his left hand to remove his shooting shirt, drink a Gatorade and launch a runner in the key. The Lakers initially said Bryant was “questionable” to return but re-entered the game later in the first quarter, wearing a pad on his elbow, and he received further treatment at halftime.

“I just got popped right on that button,” Bryant said in a post-game interview, adding that he was in “a lot of pain.”

Here’s video of the sequence that saw Bryant depart in the first quarter.

Bryant finished with a team-high 30 points on eight-for-19 shooting in 39 minutes. His ability to get to the free throw line and sink three three-pointers kept L.A. hanging around until the Thunder launched an 11-0 run to close out the game.

The Lakers’ schedule and playoff positioning isn’t particularly conducive to getting Bryant time off for rest. L.A. plays Wednesday night on a back-to-back and then plays seven games in the following 12 days. One reason that The Point Forward wasn’t sold on the Lakers’ ability to make the playoffs was that their margin for error when it comes to losing streaks and injuries is virtually nil given their 2.5 games out of the playoff picture as they chase Rockets and Jazz teams that have played fairly well over the last six weeks. The already-depleted Lakers simply can’t manage without Bryant under any circumstances. The good news: Bryant’s pain threshold is legendary and three of the Lakers’ next four games come against teams that project to make the lottery.

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Sudden questions about Ryan’s future with Rangers (Yahoo! Sports)

Nolan Ryan is synonymous with the Texas Rangers.

Yet, suddenly there seem to be some questions about Ryan’s future with the team. Primarily, how has his role changed and is he going to stay?

The Hall of Fame pitcher spent the last five seasons of his playing days in a Rangers uniform, getting his 300th victory, throwing the last two of his record seven no-hitters and getting his 5,000th strikeout.

Since Ryan became the team’s president five years ago, the Rangers have made their only two World Series appearances. Those AL pennants came after he helped lead the team through a bankruptcy and was a primary figure in the ownership group that bought the team.

Speculation about Ryan’s future with the Rangers has been growing since some seemingly routine promotions. Team ownership last week gave general manager Jon Daniels and chief operating officer Rick George new presidential titles.

The team’s announcement that Daniels would be president of baseball operations/general manager and George president of business operations said that the two will continue to oversee the day-to-day baseball and business operations of the team under the leadership of Ryan, who remains chief executive officer but gave up the title of president.

Included in that announcement was a statement from Ryan in which he said he was ”proud of what we have accomplished as an organization over the last several years. … That has been due in large part to the efforts of a lot of talented and dedicated individuals who work in all areas of the ballclub.”

Ryan congratulated Daniels and George on their promotions and said the organization was moving forward ”to achieve an even greater level of excellence in 2013 and in the years to come.”

That statement remains the only public comment by the wildly popular Ryan since the moves that have raised questions about if the new titles for Daniels and George diminish his role.

The Rangers on Tuesday had their first day off since the start of spring training.

After getting to Arizona last month, Ryan was asked about his role leading the Rangers organization and how it had altered since he was hired by former owner Tom Hicks as president in February 2008.

”Obviously things have changed with the organization and the organization is more stable now than it has been since I’ve been here,” Ryan said then. ”So obviously some of the things that we used to focus on, we don’t have to anymore, because it’s changed with the ownership and with the success of the ballclub. It’s been a growing process and I think with experience you have a comfort level and more feel for things.”

But there were no indications then that any changes had been made in the team’s organizational structure, or were forthcoming.

After the promotions were announced Friday, Daniels said there ”won’t be any dramatic difference” in his role on a day-to-day basis and that he still reported to Ryan, who wasn’t on that conference call.

Daniels has since repeated that ”I report to Nolan,” and said they have talked daily as usual since the announcements.

Bob Simpson, a co-chairman of the ownership group, told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram this week that Ryan leaving the Rangers ”would be a tragedy” and is not something the group wants to happen.

”We absolutely do not want Nolan to leave. The moves we announced were to preserve Nolan, not to remove him, or remove his power,” Simpson said. ”We want Nolan to be with the Rangers forever, and in charge of the team as long as he wants to be.”

The 66-year-old Ryan, who has a minority ownership stake, has three years left in his front-office contract.

When Ryan became the Rangers president, Daniels already had been the general manager for more than two years. Daniels was the youngest GM in major league history at 28 years old when he was promoted from being an assistant in October 2005.

In March 2011, Ryan added the title of CEO after Chuck Greenberg left the organization only seven months following the sale following a dramatic bankruptcy court auction.

Ryan’s No. 34 is the only jersey worn by a Rangers player to be retired, and there is a statue of the pitcher at Rangers Ballpark. He is the only player in the Hall of Fame whose bust is topped by a Texas cap.

”I don’t know what’s going on, to be honest with you. Nolan obviously brings credibility on both sides of the ball,” Rangers second baseman Ian Kinsler. ”He had a successful career, he’s a successful businessmen and he brings respect in a lot of different ways. To have a guy like that in the organization is important.”

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Waiting For Things To Pop

Image virginia.jpg

Posted March 05, 2013

Virginia boosted its stock with a win over Duke, but took a hit with a loss to Boston College. (Steve Helber/AP)

Virginia boosted its stock with a win over Duke, but took a hit with a loss to Boston College. (Steve Helber/AP)

So close, yet so far away. That’s the feeling of today’s Bubble Watch and bracket update on the day conference tournament play begins in a handful of smaller conferences. We’re now 12 days away from Selection Sunday, and four days away from the first automatic bids being dispensed. We can taste the madness. The NCAA tournament picture feels like it’s nearly developed, but we know better.

This week’s cutline for the bracket seemed very soft and shockingly uncomplicated. In the end, I was only really considering seven teams for the final six spots in the bracket, and there weren’t very many options beyond that that seemed to even have a good shot. Maryland ended up as the second team out of the field this week, but that gap between being on the right and wrong side of the line felt a lot bigger than that for the Terps. But Maryland still has time. Many teams do. The picture’s not going to stay exactly like this. Not by a longshot.

Many major-conference hopefuls have at least three or four games remaining. The cutline will move. The bubble will tighten. The at-large pool is going to grow. Smaller-conference tournaments will break the wrong way. Power conference teams will grab big wins. In a way, this is my least favorite edition of Bubble Watch each season because it’s so illusory. It feels like we’re there, but we’ve only just begun.

The question isn’t whether there’s going to be late drama during the two weeks of conference championship play. The question is how much will there be? In two weeks, we will be able to look back on this update with a bit of a smile. There are a lot of data points in place, and the general look and feel of the seed pool may remain intact come March 17, but we know there are a lot of twists left in the tale, too. There always are, and that’s the beauty of March.

** RPI information is from RealTimeRPI.com’s Monday report. Questions/comments go to @AndyGlockner on Twitter or bubblewatch@gmail.com.**

ACC

Locks: Duke, Miami
Miami has at least a share of the league’s regular-season crown, and should win it outright, but Ryan Kelly’s explosion in his return after missing 13 games makes this dynamic very interesting in terms of NCAA seeding. I thought Saturday’s game, in which the Blue Devils won by three when Miami missed a three at the buzzer, flattered both teams in their quest for a No. 1 seed. Assuming one of them wins the ACC tournament, that team looks good to go. If they meet in the final, the loser has a strong chance, too, especially if it’s Duke, which remains unbeaten with Kelly in the lineup. The league is looking stronger to get several more teams in, as well.

SHOULD BE IN
North Carolina State
(21-8, 10-6; RPI: 24, SOS: 23)
The Pack beat a couple of lower division teams and faces one more (Wake Forest) at home before traveling to Tallahassee in the finale. The Seminoles, despite really fading at-large hopes, won’t be an easy out at home. It would be nice to see NC State take care of business there heading into the postseason.
GW: UConn (N), Duke, North Carolina, UMass?
BL: at Wake Forest

IN THE MIX
North Carolina
(20-8, 11-5; RPI: 20, SOS: 15)
Let’s leave the Heels here one more week, even though their resume is pretty similar to NC State’s, due to the week ahead. Carolina is at Maryland (a game the Terps absolutely need to get) and then come home to host Duke. It seems likely the Tar Heels would make it even if they didn’t win again, but a split this week would pretty much do the deed.
GW: UNLV, NC State, at Florida State?
BL: at Texas

Virginia (20-10, 10-6; RPI: 64, SOS: 119)
Virginia is for bubblers. The Cavaliers got the massive win they needed by handling Duke at home, and then gave back a lot of that credit by dumping a one-point decision at Boston College on Sunday. The danger with a loss like that is the committee may start looking at the earlier bad losses as more legit. Had they handled BC, a split this week may have had them in decent shape. Now, I’m not so sure.
GW: Duke, at Wisconsin, NC State, North Carolina, at Maryland?
BL: Delaware, Old Dominion (N), at Wake Forest, at Clemson, at Georgia Tech, at George Mason, at Boston College

Maryland (20-9, 8-8; RPI: 70, SOS: 113)
I said on Twitter after Saturday’s win at Wake Forest that I think the Terps need four more wins in any combo to make it. Sweep this week vs. North Carolina and at Virginia, then make the ACC semis. Or split and make the final. Otherwise, win the auto bid. Their first ACC tournament game won’t help at all. They’re going to need that quarterfinal game (at least) to make it. What they need beyond that depends on the next six days. The finale at Virginia now looks massive for both teams.
GW: Duke, NC State
BL: At Boston College

Big East

Locks: Georgetown, Louisville, Marquette, Syracuse
There’s building buzz about Georgetown as a 1-seed in the NCAAs. I’m not there yet, but obviously that could change in the next week and a half. Syracuse’s slide down the seed list continues. Beyond that, teams continue to shuffle their ordering. It wasn’t a great week for the bottom of the contender list.

**Reminder: Connecticut is ineligible for postseason play this season.**

SHOULD BE IN
Pittsburgh
(23-7, 11-6; RPI: 38, SOS: 53)
The Panthers handled their two home games, staving off Villanova in overtime, and are set to dance. They have two or three quality wins and a bunch of other decent ones. We’ll leave them here for now for computer-number and general reader interest, but for all extents and purposes, they’re in.
GW: at Georgetown, UConn, Syracuse, at Cincinnati
BL: None, really (but three home league losses)

Notre Dame (22-7, 10-6; RPI: 47, SOS: 73)
The Irish fell at Marquette and now the home date with shorthanded St. John’s is more important. With a finale at Louisville, the Irish don’t want to be messing around heading into the postseason. This resume isn’t that good, even though it’s hard to see a 68-team bracket without them at this point.
GW: Louisville, at Pitt, Sweep of Cincinnati, BYU (N)?, Kentucky (with Noel)?
BL: at Providence

IN THE MIX
Villanova
(17-12, 9-8; RPI: 55, SOS: 31)
That may be a costly missed opportunity at Pitt, where the Wildcats fell in overtime. Nova has beaten three of the league’s four heavyweights at home already and may need to add Georgetown to that list in the finale. Committees aren’t very friendly to borderline, home-heavy resumes with bad losses on it.
GW: Louisville, Syracuse, Marquette, at Connecticut
BL: Columbia, Swept by Providence, at Seton Hall

Cincinnati (20-10, 8-9; RPI: 49, SOS: 20)
UConn bested the Bearcats in a game of “Give the ballgame away” Chicken, which means the Bearcats grabbed a home win they had to have. Then they were handled at Louisville. Now they close with last-place South Florida at home, trying to get to .500. Where does that leave them heading into the Big East tournament? Not 100 percent comfortable, that’s for sure.
GW: Oregon (N), Marquette, at Pitt, Iowa State (N)?, Xavier (N)??, UConn?
BL: at Providence, St. John’s?

Note: St. John’s vanishes with the season-ending suspension of its leading scorer. Providence is much improved since its roster became fully intact, but lacks the quality of wins at this point for consideration. If they sweep to get to 10-8, another look will be warranted, but the Friars need big wins in NYC.

Big Ten

Locks: Indiana, Michigan, Michigan State, Wisconsin, Ohio State
Results have broken the right way for Indiana, which can clinch an outright regular-season crown Tuesday at home against Ohio State. They may also get a break if the 8-seed in the Big Ten tournament gives them an easier quarterfinal matchup than anyone else. Michigan and Michigan State also retain chances for 1-seeds in the NCAAs should they win the conference tournament. We’ll see. This league looks pretty simple at this point. Seven will dance, and probably only seven will dance.

SHOULD BE IN
Minnesota
(20-9, 8-8; RPI: 16, SOS: 2)
That’s a way to stanch the bleeding. A win over Indiana and a pounding of Penn State put the Gophers very nicely back into the safety zone. Getting to .500 with a split at Nebraska and Purdue should be plenty. If they end up 8-10 and then somehow lose their first-round tournament game? I don’t see any real concerns now, but we’ll have to see what the landscape looks like if that scenario comes to fruition.
GW: Indiana, Michigan State, Wisconsin, Memphis (N), at Illinois, at Florida State?
BL: at Northwestern, at Iowa (by 21)?

Illinois (20-9, 8-8, RPI: 35, SOS: 9)
This is basically the same scenario as Minnesota, where both teams appear to have done enough. If the Illini can get a split of the road trip this week (at Iowa and Ohio State), that should be plenty. Even if they don’t, it’s hard to see how they don’t make it with their quality wins and stabilization down the stretch.
GW: Butler (N), at Gonzaga, Indiana, Ohio State, at Minnesota
BD: at Purdue?, Northwestern?

IN THE MIX
Iowa
(18-11, 7-9; RPI: 86, SOS: 102)
It looks unlikely after they couldn’t win at Indiana, but they have two winnable home games this week. If they sweep, let’s see what their Big Ten tournament draw looks like before assessing odds.
GW: Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa State??
BL: At Virginia Tech, at Purdue, at Nebraska

Big 12

Locks: Kansas, Kansas State, Oklahoma State
Kansas continues to trend toward a 1-seed, which remains amazing after the three-game skid in February. Oklahoma State joins this group. There’s no way a 12-win team from this league is missing, especially with a win at Kansas.

SHOULD BE IN
Oklahoma
(19-9, 10-6; RPI: 22, SOS: 6)
The Sooners got an important home win (in decisive fashion) over Iowa State and now things are looking very good for their chances. If they sweep vs. West Virginia and at TCU this week, it’s hard to see how they would miss, even with a relative paucity of quality wins.
GW: Kansas, Sweep of Baylor
BL: Stephen F. Austin

IN THE MIX
Iowa State
(19-10, 9-7; RPI: 53; SOS: 62)
The Cyclones are starting to take on the look of “that team” that everyone thinks is pretty good but doesn’t make the NCAAs. The home date Wednesday with Oklahoma State is now massive. Winning at West Virginia in the finale does nothing except avoid a crippling loss. This isn’t a great profile right now.
GW: Kansas State, Oklahoma, Sweep of Baylor, BYU??
BL: at Texas Tech, at Texas

Baylor (16-13, 8-9; RPI: 69, SOS: 33)
Last-second inbounds follies against Kansas State and then a loss at Texas have the Bears arrowing hard toward the NIT. They close at home to Kansas and obviously have to win that one to have any real chance at an at-large heading into the conference tournament.
GW: Oklahoma State, at Kentucky (with Noel), BYU??
BL: Northwestern, College of Charleston, at Texas

Pac-12

Locks: Arizona, UCLA
This is not the season where the Pac-12 regular-season champ has to worry about getting in, and UCLA is pretty well positioned to claim at least a share of the crown. Both they and Oregon (tied at 12-4) have road trips on the final weekend, with one soft-ish game and one tester. Ben Howland’s done a very nice job getting this team to this spot. Oregon will move into this group soon, as long as Dominic Artis continues to seem OK and the Ducks look solid with him.

SHOULD BE IN
Oregon
(23-6, 12-4; RPI: 49, SOS: 104)
Dominic Artis came back, the Ducks staved off in-state rival Oregon State, and things look, well, ducky. They’re only here at the moment because of computer-related/Artis-related reasons. They have a chance to claim a league crown with a road sweep. They’ll get at least a share if they win at Colorado and Utah.
GW: at UNLV, Arizona, at UCLA
BL: None

California (20-9, 12-5; RPI: 43, SOS: 35)
Allen Crabbe likely is the league’s player of the year. He and Justin Cobbs have played very well down the stretch to get the Golden Bears into position to share the title should they get some help elsewhere. I don’t know if they need another W, but I’m sure beating Stanford in the finale appeals to them anyway.
GW: At Arizona, UCLA, Sweep of Oregon, Colorado?
BL: Harvard, Washington?

Colorado (19-9, 9-7; RPI: 27, SOS: 20)
This continues to be “not a great profile, but likely more than enough” after a split in the Bay Area. The offense looked ugly at Cal. Beating Oregon at home on Thursday would ease whatever nerves exist.
GW: Arizona, Baylor (N), at Oregon, Colorado State, Murray State (N)??
BL: at Utah

IN THE MIX
Washington
(16-13, 8-8; RPI: 74, SOS: 27)
Need to sweep the L.A. schools to get to 10-8 and then have a deep Pac-12 tourney run to have a case.
GW: Saint Louis, Colorado
BL: Albany, Nevada, Utah, at Oregon State

Stanford (17-13, 8-9; RPI: 72, SOS: 38)
The home loss to Colorado probably ends any legit at-large hopes.
GW: Oregon, at Arizona State?
BL: Swept by USC

Arizona State (20-10, 9-8; RPI: 94, SOS: 121)
After getting swept in L.A., things look very bleak for the Sun Devils. Their cruddy nonleague schedule is really hurting them at this point. If they can win at Arizona for the sweep, maybe the picture changes a bit more than it appears at this point.
GW: Sweep of Colorado, UCLA
BL: DePaul, Stanford?, Washington?

SEC

Locks: Florida
The Gators got outworked by Tennessee in Knoxville to drop a surprising third SEC game of the season. They’re still going to be a very good seed, but they’re starting to slip out of the discussion for a 1-seed. With geography not in their favor, the Gators could end up in some odd locations in the NCAAs. Missouri is looking more settled to make it in as the second team from this league. And then … ummm … hmmm.

SHOULD BE IN
Missouri
(21-8, 10-6; RPI: 33, SOS: 53)
They won two games they should have won, which in this league has become the exception rather than the rule. They close home to Arkansas and at Tennessee. They’d probably be OK with one more win.
GW: Florida, VCU (N), Illinois (N), Mississippi?
BL: at LSU

IN THE MIX
Kentucky
(20-9, 11-5; RPI: 51, SOS: 59)
The Cats handled Mississippi State easily at home but then were felled at Arkansas in a “show me” game for the committee. Now a trip to Georgia looms as really important ahead of a home date with Florida to wrap things up. Kentucky has to show the committee it can do more than beat bad teams (or win in OT) at home with this Noel-less lineup. Any road win would be a big one at this point.
GW: Missouri, Maryland (N)?, at Ole Miss
BL: at Tennessee

Tennessee (17-11, 9-7; RPI: 56, SOS: 38)
The Vols got a huge home win over Florida and looked like they were pushing toward at-large contention and then they lost at Georgia to take a step back. They need to win at Auburn now and then handle Missouri at home for another good win.
GW: Florida, Wichita State, UMass (N)?, Kentucky?
BL: Georgia

Mississippi (21-8, 10-6; RPI: 58, SOS: 132)
Big oops for the Rebels, who lost to in-state rival Mississippi State for another terrible loss. This is just a bad profile at this point. The final week has a home date with Alabama and then a trip to LSU. Both appear to be must-wins at this point. 11-7 in this league with one decent win total isn’t very good.
GW: Missouri
BL: at South Carolina, at Mississippi State

Alabama (18-10, 11-5; RPI: 60, SOS: 88)
The game at Mississippi Tuesday is now huge. The loser is in extremely grave condition.
GW: Kentucky??
BL: Mercer, Tulane, at Auburn, at LSU

Mountain West

Locks: New Mexico
New Mexico already is the solo champ of the league with two games left and is thrusting itself into the picture for a 1-seed in the NCAAs. The scrum for positioning below the Lobos continues, but this league is almost certain to get four teams in and may very well get five.

SHOULD BE IN
UNLV
(21-7, 9-5; RPI: 13, SOS: 17)
The Rebels looked good at Nevada in their final road game of the season. Now they have two home games (Boise State and Fresno State) and then the league tournament in their building.
GW: Sweep of San Diego State, New Mexico, Colorado State, Iowa State?, at Cal
BL: At Fresno State

Colorado State (20-7, 9-5; RPI: 17, SOS: 25)
The Rams held off Fresno State at home and then were nice enough to get beaten at Boise State to help the Broncos’ cause. Jokes aside, Derrick Marks’ 33-point second half is the latest evidence that MWC teams have figured out how to exploit the Rams on the perimeter. This has been going on since the Nevada game and should have Rams fans worried and looking even closer at possible NCAA matchups.
GW: UNLV, San Diego State, at Air Force?, at Washington??
BL: At Illinois-Chicago

IN THE MIX
San Diego State
(18-8, 8-6; RPI: 32, SOS: 29)
The Aztecs couldn’t handle The Pit and now are in an interesting position. If they handle Air Force at home, do they need to win again? They close at Boise State (tough) and then would face an equally challenging MWC quarterfinal. Maybe against the Broncos. Hmm…
GW: UCLA (N), Indiana State (N), Colorado State, New Mexico
BL: None

Boise State (18-8, 8-6; RPI: 44, SOS 67)
So far, so good for the Broncos. I thought they needed to get all three home games, and they nailed the first two, including a strong win over Colorado State. Now they get a shot at UNLV and then close at home to Sad Diego State. Get a split here, and they may — emphasize may — be able to absorb a quarterfinal loss. If they win two more, I don’t see how the committee keeps them out.
GW: at Creighton, UNLV, Colorado State, sweep of Wyoming??
BL: at Utah?, at Nevada

Atlantic 10

Locks: Saint Louis
The Billikens are in, and they can win the league outright with wins at Xavier and home to La Salle. If they can’t get that done, VCU has a chance to grab a share. The Rams look pretty good to go. Butler’s still fine, although seeding (and perception) are taking a dent. How much deeper will it go?

SHOULD BE IN
VCU
(23-6, 11-3; RPI: 31, SOS: 62)
When Havoc meets a slower team that’s loose with the ball, Saturday happens. The Rams obliterated Butler in a national TV showcase of their prowess. If they can handle Richmond, they’ll head to Temple maybe with a chance at grabbing some of the league crown. No great wins, but enough good ones and the eye test in their favor.
GW: Memphis (N), Butler, Belmont?, Alabama??
BL: None, really

Butler (21-7, 9-5; RPI: 28, SOS: 45)
Let’s just forget that happened, shall we? The Bulldogs have a trip to UMass and a home date with Xavier left to get back on the right track after the VCU debacle. Too many great wins to be in any trouble, but seeding is slipping.
GW: Indiana (N), Marquette (N), North Carolina (N), Gonzaga
BL: None

IN THE MIX
Temple
(21-8, 9-5; RPI: 42, SOS: 48)
It’s been a crazy season in North Philly, and the late nonleague tilt with Detroit wasn’t any different. The Owls ended up pulling that one out and also beating Rhode Island. Now they have to handle themselves at Fordham before hosting VCU in a very important finale.
GW: Syracuse (N), Saint Louis, La Salle?, at UMass?, at Charlotte??
BL: Canisius, St. Bonaventure

La Salle (20-7, 10-4; RPI: 45, SOS: 89)
Picked up a “win for bulk” against Duquesne, and faces a similar home date with George Washington. Then the Explorers head to Saint Louis for a marquee shot at the possible league champs. Getting that one would be huge. If they can’t, we’ll see what the A-10 bracket brings.
GW: Butler, at VCU
BL: Central Connecticut State

Massachusetts (18-9, 8-6; RPI: 54, SOS: 69)
The Minutemen won at Xavier to keep their hopes alive. Now they host Butler on Thursday and then have to go to Rhode Island two days later to close.
GW: at La Salle?
BL: George Washington, at St. Bonaventure

Missouri Valley

Locks: None
What a difference a week makes. Wichita State’s unexpected home loss midweek opened the door for Creighton, which stormed through the opening and beat the Shockers for the league title in the season finale. Both teams should make the field of 68. Can a surprise winner make three? Indiana State clearly is capable, despite dumping five of six down the stretch. So are Northern Iowa, Evansville and others.

SHOULD BE IN
Creighton
(24-7, 13-5; RPI: 36, SOS: 81)
Two wins and holders of a solo championship, the Bluejays should be good to go. There are no great wins, but enough solid ones to go with winning the league.
GW: Wisconsin (N), Arizona State (N), Wichita State, at Cal?, Indiana State?
BL: at Drake, Illinois State

Wichita State (24-7, 12-6; RPI: 38, SOS: 94)
The Shockers won at Indiana State and then handled Detroit in BracketBusters and look very good for a bid now. There are no truly great wins, but a lot of decent ones in the profile. A share (at least) of the Valley crown should be enough to punch the ticket. And if they beat Evansville midweek, they will have that. Of course, they can totally take care of business by winning at Creighton in the finale.
GW: at VCU, Creighton, at Air Force?, Southern Miss, at Indiana State?
BL: at Evansville, at Southern Illinois

IN THE MIX
None.

West Coast

Locks: Gonzaga
The Zags very well may be two wins away from a 1-seed in the NCAAs. Can Saint Mary’s feel OK with things without an auto bid? It’s starting to lean toward yes.

SHOULD BE IN
None

IN THE MIX
Saint Mary’s
(25-5, 14-2; RPI: 37, SOS: 115)
The Gaels did what they had to do, winning out and finishing without a WCC blemish besides two losses to Gonzaga. The Creighton win has picked up value, too. They’re one semifinal win away from (assumedly) a third shot at the Zags in Las Vegas. Can they absorb that loss and six more days of bubble teams doing work once they’re done?
GW: Creighton, sweep of BYU
BL: Pacific (N), Georgia Tech (N)

BYU (19-10, 10-6; RPI: 59, SOS: 96)
The “None” sitting one row below this equals “Go win three games in Vegas.”
GW: None
BL: at San Diego, San Francisco

Best of the Rest

Locks: None

SHOULD BE IN
Memphis
(25-4, 14-0; RPI: 18, SOS: 71)
The fact that the Tigers are rolling through the league and have flopped more often than not outside of it isn’t great news for the modest at-large hopes of Southern Miss. The Tigers smell like an 8/9 game candidate again.
GW: Sweep of Southern Miss, at Tennessee?
BL: None, really

IN THE MIX
Belmont
(22-6, 13-2; RPI: 23, SOS: 87)
The Bruins won the Ohio Valley by two games in their debut season. Now what? Can they eat a loss in their hometown and still get in? Seems unlikely despite the computer numbers, but we’ll see.
GW: Middle Tennessee State?, at Stanford?
BL: Northeastern (N), at Murray State?

Middle Tennessee State (27-4, 19-1; RPI: 25, SOS: 127)
The Blue Raiders have done what they had to do to make any at-large case. They won the league by five games and went 19-1. They’re rooting hard for Belmont and Akron to auto-bid in case they need an at-large. I hate this kind of situation, though. We need three more games to prove MTSU is the best Sun Belt team this season? They slaughtered the league. Just let them go to the NCAAs.
GW: Mississippi
BL: at Arkansas State

Louisiana Tech (25-3, 16-0; RPI: 48, SOS: 208)
OK, here we go. At New Mexico State on Thursday. At Denver on Saturday. If they get both, this starts to become intriguing.
GW: Southern Miss?
BL: at Northwestern State?, At McNeese State

Akron (22-5, 13-1; RPI: 46, SOS: 138)
It’s unfair to expect perfection in the MAC, but getting Buffalo’d by a sub-200 team at this stage probably wasn’t a good plan. They have two more home games against modest foes and then the league tournament, which they probably have to win, fair or not.
GW: Middle Tennessee State?
BL: at Coastal Carolina, at Buffalo

Bucknell (24-5, 12-2; RPI: 52, SOS: 180)
They won the league by two games and are the 1-seed, with home-court advantage. Hard to see how they can overcome a loss, but again, let’s see how the entire picture looks in another week.
GW: La Salle?
BL: At Penn State, at Lafayette

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Joe Flacco says he was joking about tackling Ted Ginn

Signing a $120.6 million contract a month after winning the Super Bowl gives you the platform to explain away anything.

Joe Flacco clarified at his news conference Monday that he was only joking when he told his Baltimore Ravens teammates to run from the sidelines and tackle Ted Ginn Jr. if the San Francisco 49ers‘ returner broke loose on the final play of Super Bowl XLVII.

“There was four seconds left in the game, and that was probably the only time all year that I was really, really nervous,” Flacco said, via The Baltimore Sun. “I thought it was a pretty funny thing to kind of get my mind off of the fact that there is a possibility that he could run this thing back. I’m sure if I did do that, I’m sure that they could probably give the guy a touchdown.”

Perhaps he was joking, but he sure fooled his teammates.

In the video of the incident, the responses from tight end Dennis Pitta and Matt Birk don’t convey that they got the humor in Flacco’s joke.

“I don’t know,” the Super Bowl MVP said. “But it’s the Super Bowl, man. I’m doing anything I can to win that game. [Laughter]. Yeah, not really serious. They all looked at me like I was crazy. I told the linemen and they kind of backed up for a second like, ‘What are you talking about?’ [Laughter] But, hey, it was just all in good fun, kind of to distract my mind a little bit.”

Follow Kevin Patra on Twitter @kpatra.

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