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Kellen Moore: No QB Will Be More Motivated Than Me

Detroit (NFL/Newsfeed) -Kellen Moore learned over the weekend that college success doesn’t always translate to NFL interest. The Boise State product won a record 50 games during his college career, but he was without an NFL job until the Detroit Lions picked him up as an undrafted free agent.

Moore’s fall from grace hasn’t diminished reader interest in him. He was the most popular search item on NFL.com Sunday. Ian Rapoport of NFL.com broke the news about Moore’s arrival in Detroit, and gained roughly 600 followers on Twitter immediately thereafter.

While the draft didn’t go as planned, Moore spun things positively after learning his new team.

“Very frustrating process, but a great outcome in the end,” Moore told the Idaho Statesman, via the Detroit Free Press. “Going into it, you felt very comfortable and confident that you’d get an opportunity to get drafted. Bottom line is, it didn’t happen. But it’s kind of funny you end up where you’d love to go in the first place.”

Moore has become a bit of a hot-button topic. Peter King of SI.com was incredulous that Moore went undrafted. In the video embedded in this post, NFL Network draft analyst Mike Mayock said Moore’s skill set doesn’t look “draftable.” There is some speculation that he could be a coach before long. That type of talk is only going to fuel Moore.

“I don’t think there will probably be a more motivated quarterback,” Moore said.

MySportNews іѕ a sports news digest publication that compiles real time, on demand sports news, articles, аnd resources. This article was distributed by Syndicated Sports news wire and aggregation service, For more NFL news see: Kellen Moore: No QB will be more motivated than me.

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Race Strategy More Important – Drivers Too

Autosport is reporting that strategy is going to be much more important this year for teams to win races thanks to the wearing out of the tires.

Teams have noted also that drivers’ observations are going to be much more important in terms of tire wear. Indeed, with a victory of Fernando Alonso in the Ferrari in the Malaysian Grand Prix, it is clear that not always the fastest car will win, but the driver and his mental approach will no doubt become more important.

MySportNews іѕ a sports news digest publication that compiles real time, on demand sports news, articles, аnd resources. This article was distributed by Syndicated Sports news wire and aggregation service, For more Formula 1 news see: Race Strategy More Important – Drivers Too.

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One More Chance to Remember Paterno

STATE COLLEGE (CFB/Rivals) – The man in the white dress shirt, Penn State tie and rolled-up khakis jogged through the Beaver Stadium tunnel and on to the field before slowing down at the finish line – the 50-yard-line.

It was alumnus Gus Curtin’s tribute to the iconic look once sported in the same stadium on fall weekends by the late coach Joe Paterno.

A weekend during which the annual Blue-White spring game gave fans a glimpse into the Nittany Lions’ future under new coach Bill O’Brien also allowed people like Curtin to remember the past. From the bouquets of blue-and-white carnations left at the bronzed Paterno statue outside the stadium to the charity 5K race run in Paterno’s honor Sunday, fans paid tribute to the Hall of Fame coach who died in January at age 85.

“It’s nice to know that the support and the love is all there, because all the people who love and support … he’s been a part of them for so many years,” Paterno’s widow, Sue Paterno, said before the race Sunday. “They’re feeling a loss like we’re feeling a loss. Our (loss) is maybe more acute.”

The spring football game marked the first event at the stadium since her husband’s death. Many alumni still question the circumstances behind Paterno’s ouster last November by university trustees in the aftermath of child sexual abuse charges against Jerry Sandusky.

The retired defensive coordinator has maintained his innocence and awaits trial. Paterno testified before a grand jury investigating Sandusky that he relayed a 2002 allegation brought to him by a graduate assistant to his campus superiors, including the administrator overseeing the police department.

Authorities have said Paterno wasn’t a target of the probe. The Board of Trustees ousted him, citing in part a moral obligation to do more to alert authorities outside the school, and a “failure of leadership.”

Last week, Penn State agreed to provide millions in payments and benefits to Paterno’s estate and family members under the late football coach’s employment contract, although a family lawyer says the Paternos did not sign away their right to sue.

But unless the subject came up in conversation, there were no outward displays by fans of protest against school administrators or trustees over the weekend. Fans were eager to see what the team looked like under O’Brien.

“It seems like he’s genuinely excited to do new things and to put a good team out there, but he’s also respectful of tradition,” said Curtin, 39, of Annapolis, Md. “So far I like him.”

Inside the stadium, there were no apparent mentions during the spring game of Paterno’s name over the sound system. No images of Paterno were seen on video boards.

Like Curtin, dozens of alumni, students and other spectators wore attire that offered some kind of reminder of Paterno.

Some people donned “Joe Knows Football” T-shirts, a play off the old Nike ad campaign slogan featuring Bo Jackson.

Others wore T-shirts or sweatshirts that read “Team Paterno” on the front and “Make an Impact” on the back – the latter phrase referencing a command from Joe Paterno’s father, Angelo, to his son.

The “Team Paterno” shirts were a gift to some donors for the cause of Sunday’s race, Special Olympics of Pennsylvania, a charity long championed by Sue Paterno.

“We were in it together,” Sue Paterno said when asked about the “Team Paterno” phrase. “I said, ‘I help you all the time. Now you help me.’ He got hooked … It turned out to be a real good tagline this year.”

The charity said Sunday it hoped to raise nearly $ 300,000 from the race, which would triple the amount it raised last year.

“I’m 55 years-old, and I’ve never known another coach here,” Rich Ellers, a lifelong season-ticket holder from Centre Hall, said Saturday at the Paterno statue. “His spirit will live on. He’ll never be gone in that sense.”

The statue served as a gathering point for mourners after Paterno died, and visitors returned to the site in droves again this weekend. One effort organized by alumni left 409 bouquets of the blue-and-white carnations at the site – one for each of Paterno’s Division I-record career victories.

“Obviously I miss Joe,” 2011 Penn State graduate Erin Davis said at the statue. “He’s like a grandfather to this university.”

The small cemetery in State College where Paterno is buried has seen increased visitors since his death. Many well-wishers have left flowers there, too, and Penn State hats. Police say some mourners have held candlelight vigils. A family spokesman and police say there have been no major problems, though the cemetery last week decided to start closing at dusk.

The Paterno family is planning to start a “Paterno Foundation” charity, from which sales of a DVD of the Jan. 26 memorial service for Paterno are being sold. The family has said proceeds will go to Special Olympics.

Sue Paterno said she no plans to leave the modest ranch home in town where she and her husband raised their family. She plans to continue helping Special Olympics, including the state Summer Games held on the Penn State campus each year.

“Absolutely, they’re my people,” she said about working Special Olympians. “They become your buddies. This gives you a bigger family.”

Sue Paterno also offered backing to her husband’s successor, the 42-year-old O’Brien. She called Penn State a “magic place.”

“The guy has got a job to do, and we’ve got to support him,” Sue Paterno said. “Joe was in that position at one time, a little bit younger. But I hope (the O’Briens) love it here as much as we did.”

MySportNews іѕ a sports news digest publication that compiles real time, on demand sports news, articles, аnd resources. This article was distributed by Syndicated Sports news wire and aggregation service, For more college football news see: One more chance to remember Paterno .

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Poll: More Majors for Bubba?

So Bubba Watson is the 2012 Masters champion. Watson’s rise to prominence is impressive, as is, certainly, the variety of shots he’s able to pull off. What do you think the future holds for him? Do you see Bubba being a golfer who can remain at a high level for a long time, who can win more majors? Or do you think Watson just hit his high point and is unlikely go this way – major champion – again? Vote in the poll, and leave your comments.

See also:
Do Masters champions get to keep the green jacket?

MySportNews іѕ a sports news digest publication that compiles real time, on demand sports news, articles, аnd resources. This article was distributed by Syndicated Sports news wire and aggregation service, For more golf news see: Poll: More Majors for Bubba?.

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Pens Need More from MVP Candidate Malkin

PITTSBURGH -There’s no getting away from it for the Pittsburgh Penguins: Evgeni Malkin hasn’t been himself offensively so far in the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

The Philadelphia Flyers are taking a physical approach as they try to slow down the Art Ross Trophy winner, jostling and jarring him whenever possible. They’re also shadowing him with 19-year-old center Sean Couturier, who was expected to fill mostly a defensive role in this Eastern Conference Quarterfinals series yet already has three goals.

It would almost seem to be a mismatch, one of the world’s most accomplished offensive players against a teenage forward who wasn’t being counted on heavily by coach Peter Laviolette for playing time or for contributions when the season started.

Evgeni Malkin

Center – PIT

GOALS: 0 | ASST: 2 | PTS: 2
SOG: 5 | +/-: -5

A mismatch it has been — but not in the way expected. Malkin, who had 12 goals during the Penguins’ final 14 regular season games, couldn’t find the net as the Flyers won 4-3 in overtime in Game 1 and 8-5 in Game 5, both on the Penguins’ home ice.

Couturier, by contrast, was effective defensively against Malkin and became only the second teenager in NHL history to have a Stanley Cup Playoffs hat trick Friday in Game 2, when he was a plus-4 and Malkin was a minus-4.

It’s doesn’t take a coach or an hockey expert to discern this: Unless the Penguins begin getting Malkin away from Couturier, the series could get away from then very quickly, if it hasn’t already. Game 3 will be Sunday afternoon at the Wells Fargo Center, with Game 4 there on Wednesday.

The Penguins knew the Maxime Talbot-Couturier-Zac Rinaldo line would be out constantly against Malkin. What they might not have guessed is that it would be this effective.

Malkin has been quiet in this series for a multitude of reasons; he also hasn’t been talking with reporters. Penguins coach Dan Bylsma said Saturday there’s nothing wrong with Malkin that some more offensive zone time can’t correct.

Bylsma said the two shorthanded goals the Flyers produced in Game 2 against the Penguins’ power play unit, which includes Malkin, negated everything that Malkin did well on the ice.

“They’re in a tough matchup right now, but I thought our last game was a lot of what we need to be in offensive zone — they were effective there,” Bylsma said Saturday. “We know that’s going to be a factor moving forward in Games 3 and 4. They’re going to have that matchup and they are going to be faced with that situation. They’ve got to keep playing through it and be effective.”

Talbot had one of the shorthanded goals and was a plus-5 in Game 2, all while displaying the same kind of determined, focused play the Penguins saw from him when he was in their lineup during their Stanley Cup run in 2009.

If the Penguins hadn’t blown leads of 3-0 in Game 1 and 2-0 and 3-1 in Game 2, Bylsma said, “We’d think [Malkin] was playing better.”

Penguins captain Sidney Crosby, their other big star, said everyone in uniform needs to play better in Game 3 if only because no one wants to deal with the alternative. The Penguins have never rallied from a playoff series in which they trailed 3-0.

Crosby said it’s really not that complicated. The Penguins need to reduce the mistakes they’re making defensively and do a better job of controlling the puck when they own it.

“I don’t think we need to change a whole lot,” Crosby said. “We’ve made a few mistakes. We gave up two goals (in Game 2) on our power play. You can’t do that and expect to win a hockey game. (It’s) little mistakes that we need to clean up. We want to manage the puck better, hold onto it little bit more and possess it.”

Malkin was held to two shots, or eighth fewer than Flyers star Claude Giroux during his three-goal, three-assist performance in Game 2. Malkin had three shots and was a minus-1 in Game 1.

James Neal, the 40-goal scorer who plays on Makin’s line, also has yet to produce a goal in the series and has one goal in nine playoff games with Pittsburgh.

“We knew it was going to be tough with Couturier and Talbot,” Neal said. “They also have other guys that want to shut down our top line and stay on us. They’ve done a good job so far. But we need to go into Philly and do the job, and that’s going through that line and being physical with them and doing the right things.”

Despite the effectiveness of the Couturier line, Malkin experienced success against Philadelphia during the season, getting three goals and six assists in six games. If the Penguins are to come back and make a series of it, they need Malkin to return to being the elite scorer he was while finding the net 50 times during the season.

“I’ve just got to try to limit his offense and not give him too much time and space,” Couturier said. “So far we’ve done a good job. But it’s going to get tougher and tougher.”

MySportNews іѕ a sports news digest publication that compiles real time, on demand sports news, articles, аnd resources. This article was distributed by Syndicated Sports news wire and aggregation service, For more NHL news see: Pens need more from MVP candidate Malkin.

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Kelly Throws More at His Four Quarterbacks

SOUTH BEND, Ind. As head coach Brian Kelly and offensive coordinator Chuck Martin start to install more layers to their offense, they hope leaders will start to emerge in their four-man quarterback competition.

On Saturday the added layer gave the quarterbacks the first opportunity to call checks in plays at the line of scrimmage. With spring practice wrapping up with next week’s Blue-Gold scrimmage on Saturday, Kelly expects to start seeing those players exuding confidence.

“If you’re confident and you walk up there and you know what you want to do and you’re making the check, you’re commanding your presence – that obviously goes a long way to the unit. That was the thing that we wanted to see today,” Kelly said. “Who commands that respect? Who goes up there and as I told them, even if you’re wrong, go up there with a certainty that you know what you’re doing.”

Kelly has had no qualms about declaring the competition as wide open for all four quarterbacks and simplified the playbook to start the spring, leveling the playing field for sophomore Everett Golson and early-enrollee freshman Gunner Kiel. Now as the offense begins to get more complicated, those two will have to prove their knowledge base can match returning starter junior Tommy Rees and junior Andrew Hendrix.

Kelly said as the competition progresses, he expects Tommy Rees to show the confidence that it’s his job to lose after starting 16 games the last two seasons.

“As we go longer into this, our expectations are ‘listen, you’ve got more experience than anybody else here. Go out and act like that.’ I think he did today,” Kelly said.

The next step for Rees will be eliminating the turnovers and careless mistakes.

“I think the thing that we need to get with Tom is he’s confident, but we’ve got to make sure he’s making good decisions under duress,” Kelly said. “That’s the next step for him.”

Kelly and Martin have also stressed with each quarterback the importance of making plays with their feet – whether it’s running for a first down or just being able to get out of the pocket to throw the ball away. Hendrix and Golson may own the best natural running ability at the position, but Rees said working with Martin has helped him understand the need for him to make plays with his feet in practice.

“He’s instilled some confidence in me in the running game,” Rees said. “It’s something I know I can do and I’ve just got to continue to get better at.”

For Hendrix, the challenge will be to learn the offense as a whole rather than the packaged versions that he used in the five games he played in last season.

“As the offense has widened for me, it’s really time for me to get the whole grasp and not just be specialized,” Hendrix said. “It definitely helped last year, but I still have a long way to go.”

This spring, Hendrix said he’s made the most improvements in his throwing accuracy with improved footwork.

“I’m throwing it as good as I’ve ever been throwing it and it feels really good to know that where I want to put the ball, that’s where it’s going to go,” Hendrix said. “I can’t say that that’s been the case in the past.”

As for Golson and Kiel, the two continue to make progress to try and keep pace with their elder counterparts.

“When Everett got here it was the unconscious incompetence,” Kelly said. “He didn’t know that he didn’t know. And then he’s grown to a conscious competence, but it’s so hard for him every day to be that guy. But he’s trying so hard. He wants to do it. He will do it. We just wish it was sooner, but it’s going to come.”

Kiel returned to practice a few days after his uncle and former Notre Dame quarterback Blair Kiel passed away at the age of 50 on Sunday. After spending time with his family in Columbus, Ind., Kiel returned to practice ready to go, Kelly said.

“He came back locked in as usual,” Kelly said. “He’s great in the classroom. He’s great on the field. He’s got a great temperament, demeanor. I just like the fact that he’s very coachable.”

The spring competition will come to a close in a week, but the end of this quarterback marathon may not end for several more months. Hendrix said Kelly and Martin haven’t even hinted at when they’ll make up their minds.

“They don’t mention it,” Hendrix said. “Right now they’re just trying to make every single one of us the best quarterback that we can. At the end, whoever’s the best guy for the job, they’ll make the decision.”

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MySportNews іѕ a sports news digest publication that compiles real time, on demand sports news, articles, аnd resources. This article was distributed by Syndicated Sports news wire and aggregation service, For more college football news see: Kelly throws more at his four quarterbacks.

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Blues Seek a More Complete Effort in Game 2

HAZELWOOD, Mo. - The St. Louis Blues showed up Friday morning ready, eager and willing to be better than they were on Thursday night.

Even though there were good portions of a 3-2 double-overtime loss to the San Jose Sharks in Game 1 of the Western Conference Quarterfinals, the Blues came in with the type of attitude after a tough loss that a coach wanted to see.

But with every loss at this time of year comes adjustments, and coach Ken Hitchcock said to expect them from the Blues.

He just wouldn’t name any.

“It’s our turn to make adjustments. We’ve got to make adjustments,” Hitchcock said. “Any time you lose, you don’t want to stand and live on the just-abouts, so we’re going to have to make some adjustments.

“For whatever reason, our best period was the first overtime. That was our chance. We really played well. I thought they played a little better than we did in the third even though we got the two goals, but I thought we really played well in the first overtime. Obviously the second one didn’t last very long.”

And with that, the Blues were in no mood to pat themselves on the back. There were video sessions and players willing to listen to what the coaches had in store, including what changes will be made.

“We’re in the playoffs now. It’s results-oriented,” said Blues captain David Backes, who was held without a shot in 24:53 of ice time. “We just need to be better. Portions of the game, we really controlled it, and portions of it, they controlled us. We’ve got to make sure that we sway those scales in our favor. If we do that, we’re a dangerous team. When we don’t, we leave it up to coin-flip type opportunities. Two overtimes … it was there. We could have won that game, but a little bit more was needed.”

In the first overtime, when the Blues outshot the Sharks 14-8, there were a number of quality opportunities to beat Antti Niemi, but the Sharks netminder was up to the task. What the Blues needed was more time like they had in the first extra session.

“You have to take away the positives and you’ve got to look at the negatives and find ways to even get better,” Blues defenseman Alex Pietrangelo said. “It’s never going to be a perfect game. If it was, you’d win every game.

“We’re feeling pretty good in here still with the performance that we had. It’s not always going to take 60 minutes. It might take more. Unfortunately, we came out on the wrong end last night.”

So for a veteran coach like Hitchcock, his message was pretty simple.

“It’s more keeping them hungry,” Hitchcock said. “We’re hungry and we want more. We’re not living on the fact that we played well and lost. We want more. I think there’s a fine line at this level between being happy to be here and being happy to want more. We’re hungry, we want more. We think we can play better.

“I don’t put any stock until four games are won anymore. Oh-two, Boston wins [in the opening round last season against Montreal]. They’re facing closure three times. I don’t put any stock until the four games are over.”

But the Blues certainly don’t want to go out West to San Jose down 0-2.

“There should be urgency every game,” Blues veteran winger Jamie Langenbrunner said. “That must-win gets thrown out a lot in the playoffs, but you play every game as a must-win. You don’t want to give teams momentum, you don’t want to fall down games. You play every game that way. Our focus is going to be no different when it comes to that point of us wanting to win. It’s going to be what we’re willing to do in order to do that. I think maybe we learned a little lesson in playoff hockey and the desperation we’re going to need to play with.

“We need to be better. You win or lose in this League because you don’t do enough.”

MySportNews іѕ a sports news digest publication that compiles real time, on demand sports news, articles, аnd resources. This article was distributed by Syndicated Sports news wire and aggregation service, For more NHL news see: Blues seek a more complete effort in Game 2.

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Poll: More Majors for Bubba?

So Bubba Watson is the 2012 Masters champion. Watson’s rise to prominence is impressive, as is, certainly, the variety of shots he’s able to pull off. What do you think the future holds for him? Do you see Bubba being a golfer who can remain at a high level for a long time, who can win more majors? Or do you think Watson just hit his high point and is unlikely go this way – major champion – again? Vote in the poll, and leave your comments.

See also:
Do Masters champions get to keep the green jacket?

MySportNews іѕ a sports news digest publication that compiles real time, on demand sports news, articles, аnd resources. This article was distributed by Syndicated Sports news wire and aggregation service, For more golf news see: Poll: More Majors for Bubba?.

Posted in PGAComments Off

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