Jumat, 13 Januari 2017

Falcons’ playoff hopes driven by enhanced chemistry, culture

Atlanta wide receiver Julio Jones and the Falcons lost in the regular season at Seattle. Curtis Compton AP

Read more here: http://www.macon.com/sports/nfl/article126479694.html#storylink=cpy


FLOWERY BRANCH 

The Atlanta Falcons have surpassed the expectations of many this season, which can be attributed to the culture within the team’s locker room.
Typically the focus of newly hired head coaches is a change in culture. For Atlanta, that focus has paid off.
In Dan Quinn’s first season as their head coach, the Falcons finished with 8-8 as Quinn was just getting settled into his position. A year later, however, the Falcons won 11 regular-season games and a NFC South title and claimed a first-round bye, and the locker room appears to be united.
Atlanta hosts Seattle at 4:35 p.m. on Saturday in the NFC playoffs.
“It takes time to build that, and our team is tight and very connected,” Quinn said. “They spend a lot of team on and off the field together. When you want to play for someone other than yourself, you take your team to a new spot. That’s so clear and evident with our guys. It’s a great team to be a part of, and there are a lot of good teammates that are totally battling for the guy next to them. It’s an exciting time for us, we have a clear understanding of who we are and how we want to play, which is must different than at any point a year ago.”
Offensively, the chemistry is evident with an MVP candidate at quarterback in Matt Ryan, All-Pro wideout Julio Jones and role players who have been integral to one of the league’s most potent offenses.
The change is evident defensively, as well, even from the beginning of the season. The young defense features a group led by De’Vondre Campbell, Deion Jones, Vic Beasley Jr. and Keanu Neal.
“We have grown a lot as a defense,” Neal said. “There have been growing pains, but that’s a part of the process. We have molded and jelled together, and that’s due to going and playing with our brothers. We’re a better mold of ourselves than we were at the beginning of the year.”
The overall change in culture in Atlanta has produced a term has brought the team closer together.
“It’s a brotherhood,” Neal said. “That’s one thing we do a good job of around here, taking care of our guys and emphasizing that brotherhood. It’s real. You can tell, and see it both on the field and off of it, as well.”
Source : macon.com

Playoff loss to Atlanta in 2013 was start of something big for Seahawks

Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson leaves the field after shaking hands with Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan after an NFC divisional playoff game Jan. 13, 2013, in Atlanta. The Falcons won 30-28. (AP Photo/David Goldman)



The last time the Seattle Seahawks traveled to the Georgia Dome for a divisional playoff game, they had to deal with the disappointment of having their season come to an end.
But while they may not have been victorious that day, the Seahawks came away with so much more than just a loss.

Seattle returns to the Georgia Dome on Saturday for another divisional playoff game against the Atlanta Falcons, and they do so knowing the loss to the Falcons on Jan. 13, 2013 in many ways catapulted the Seahawks’ franchise to where it is today.

Seattle lost 30-28 to the Falcons that day, the victim of Matt Bryant’s 49-yard field goal with 8 seconds remaining. Atlanta quarterback Matt Ryan moved the Falcons 41 yards in two plays over 12 seconds as Atlanta snatched victory away from the Seahawks in stunning fashion. Losing in that manner could have crushed some franchises.

But the nature of Seattle’s comeback — the youthful Seahawks rallied from a 27-7 fourth-quarter deficit behind then-rookie quarterback Russell Wilson to take the lead with 31 seconds remaining — served as the springboard into bigger and better things. Seattle won the Super Bowl the following year and advanced to the Super Bowl the year after that. The Seahawks won three NFC West titles in the ensuing four seasons, reaching double-digit victories every year. Seattle has become one of the NFL’s model franchises, and that loss to the Falcons helped get things started.

“We had done well enough during the finish of that season, felt momentum and all of that, that we didn’t let that loss really get in the way of looking towards the future,” said Pete Carroll, who was in his third season as Seattle’s head coach.
Seattle has 12 players on its roster who appeared in that game. In addition to Wilson, linebackers Bobby Wagner and K.J. Wright and defensive backs Richard Sherman, Kam Chancellor and Earl Thomas also started. Receivers Doug Baldwin and Jermaine Kearse, linebacker Mike Morgan, defensive backs Jeron Johnson and Jeremy Lane, and punter Jon Ryan also played.

And while the Seahawks may have lost, they also gained the knowledge that they were capable of beating anyone. This despite having the youngest roster in the NFL.
“For me, I felt like our team didn’t realize how good we were,” said Baldwin, who was in his second year. “We were kind of just going through the motions like everything was new to us. When we got there it kind of hit us in the face and we had to bounce back. Once we realized we’re talented enough to do this, then we came back in the game. Unfortunately, it didn’t end the way we wanted to. But I think it gave us a lot of confidence realizing we can play with the best.

“We were such a young team, too,” Baldwin continued. “We had a lot of young guys at important positions. I think that confidence really gave us some strength to be able to come back the next year and do what we did.”

That confidence was most important with regards to Wilson. Wilson began the season as the surprise starter, a third-round draft pick beating out big-money free-agent signing Matt Flynn for the starting quarterback role. Though Wilson took Seattle to the playoffs, there remained skepticism about whether Wilson was an effective enough passer be a franchise quarterback. But Wilson led the Seahawks on three fourth-quarter touchdown drives, and his 385 yards passing is still his career high. That performance, under the bright lights, proved Wilson was capable of coming through in the clutch.

But just as important as Wilson’s performance was to Seattle’s future was his reaction to the loss.

“We’re walking out of the tunnel on the way off the field and he’s already talking about next year and what we’re going to be able to do and all that kind of stuff,” Carroll recalled. “It was a pretty clear indicator at that point, if nothing else had told us before then, that this guy really is looking to the future, always going and always believing that things are going to happen right.”

Said Wilson: “Basically the thought process was, you can get down when you lose a game sometimes, that’s the initial thought for most people. For me, I was just thinking about the opportunity, what was next for our football team. I got a great sense of great things coming.”

The loss also exposed Seattle’s greatest area of need: the pass rush. The Seahawks had no sacks and only one quarterback hit on Ryan that game. Seattle set out that offseason to fix the problem, signing free agent defensive ends Michael Bennett and Cliff Avril away from Tampa Bay and Detroit, respectively. Avril has 33.5 sacks in four seasons with the Seahawks, Bennett has 30.5, and both were named to this year’s Pro Bowl. The pass rush has gone from being a weakness to being a strength.

But more than anything else, what that loss gave to the Seahawks was a sense of desire and a sense of belief.
“We felt like we were far, but we still had a long way to go,” Wagner said. “It kind of woke us up and definitely made us hungry, too, because when you feel like you have a great team and you felt like you should win it all, and you lose, you have to sit there in the offseason and watch the other teams win. It gives you that hunger to come in to the next season prepared.”

Said Chancellor: “It just showed us we were capable of getting to a certain point. We knew what it felt like, we knew what it tasted like.”

All from a divisional playoff loss at the Georgia Dome. Seattle gets another crack at the Falcons there on Saturday, but this time the Seahawks don’t need to find that belief. This time they already have it.

Source: heraldnet.com


Here It Is If DeMarcus Cousins Stays In Sacramento, Who Wins?


A DeMarcus Cousins extension isn't even signed yet, and we're already past the point at which Boogie in Sacramento is interesting. The Kings exacerbate his worst tendencies on and off the court, and that's been clear for several years. Cousins takes a lot of criticism now, but he'd probably take even more if mainstream fans actually watched Kings games. And obviously, the team has failed year after year to build a coherent roster around him.
We should be honest about this if it's going to happen this summer. All an extension ensures is that we're all going to be stuck spending an extra few years feigning interest in this third world relationship. The other night's postgame scene was a perfect example. After the extension news broke, we got classic Kings Boogie, which is to say: kinda funny, but kinda mean, and all coda to a game that nobody watched. 
I want Boogie to succeed for a number of reasons. He's got a preternatural gift for unnerving some of my least favorite people in sports, and I don't want them to be proven right. He's also got John Calipari on his side, and I don't want John Calipari to be wrong. He's one of the six or seven most gifted players in the league. If he maxes out his potential, it makes the whole sport more entertaining. When he chooses to play along in interviews, he can be funny and thoughtful, but still allergic to bulls**t, which is refreshing. In general, basketball is more interesting because of players like him. 
But every season now, the Kings plod forward toward eighth or ninth place, and at least a handful of times each year, Boogie's given to public eruptions of frustration and/or hot sculpting. Then the front office will scramble to make a shortsighted move that will cost them flexibility without yielding many benefits, and then everyone watches them do it again the following year.

The Kings could deal Cousins next month, or next June, and they'd likely bring back at least one lottery pick. Couple that with a top 10 pick of their own, plus a 2018 first, and there are at least three lottery picks as a foundation, along with Dave Joerger coaching. That's a start. It's not a flawless blueprint—especially not with Kings management in place—but it seems like a healthier option than chasing the eighth seed year after year, all to appease a superstar who's angrily asking reporters if they're happy to have him around. For Cousins, a move would give him a fresh start, and ideally, a winning team that could hold him more accountable. Likewise, playing with another star could give all basketball fans an additional contender—which is why there's been so much trade buzz over the past few years. An extension presses pause on all of that.
Since the rumors surfaced—thanks to this report from James Ham at CSN California—there have been several reactions explaining why this deal could happen. A good one explained:DeMarcus Cousins re-signing with Kings isn’t just the best choice, it’s the only choice. Basically, the collective bargaining agreement's new "designated player exception" allows the Kings to pay him more than any team in the league—at least $30 million more over four years, and an $80 million difference if you compare the five-year deal in Sacramento to the four-year deals he'd sign elsewhere. So that's the rationale from Boogie's side. Likewise, the Kings are able to secure their most valuable asset to help make money in the short term, and the added years on the end of the deal will probably mean they can bring back more value if they trade Cousins a few years from now. That's Sacramento's incentive.
Strictly from a basketball perspective, though: why should either side want to continue this experiment? If Cousins decides to stay in Sacramento this July, who does that actually benefit? Is a slightly better trade in two years really worth it if it means two more years of tension and mediocrity?

The questions are interesting enough as a continuation of the same Cousins/Kings take purgatory we've been occupying for years. But the answers are most interesting in the context of the NBA's latest CBA, and what it means for the league. Any CBA has unintended consequences. The NBA's last deal, in 2011, was designed to protect small markets, but wound up hurting the Thunder more than any team in the league. It's too early to say how the new CBA will shape player movement over the next few years. But the most meaningful reform was obviously the designated player exception, designed to give teams an advantage keeping their stars. And as we try to imagine the consequences of that rule, Boogie's situation could be telling.
This is a case where the smartest business decision under the new CBA—for both the Kings and Cousins—probably prolongs a doomed era for the team, probably limits the growth of a star who needs a new environment, and makes the rest of the league less entertaining in the meantime. It's financial sanity at the expense of actual sanity for everyone involved. And if Boogie's extension is the first example of what the NBA's designated player exception looks like in the real world, let's be clear: it's not looking all that great.
Source: si.com


Jazz notes: Rudy Gobert envious of Zaza Pachulia's support



SALT LAKE CITY — It isn’t uncommon for Rudy Gobert to say or tweet something edgy or humorous, and this week was no exception.
“Seriously thinking about changing nationality,” Gobert tweeted in English and French along with some laughing face emojis on Thursday.
The message wasn’t serious. Gobert is fiercely proud of France and isn’t going to pledge his patriotic allegiance elsewhere. Rather, the tweet carried a facetious tone in reference to the NBA’s revelation that Warriors center Zaza Pachulia was in second place behind Kevin Durant in the fan voting for this year’s All-Star starters.
Gobert — not to mention about every other center in the West — has a much better All-Star portfolio than Pachulia despite not ranking among the top 10 frontcourt players in the Western Conference. The Stifle Tower leads the NBA in individual offensive rating and defensive rating and in blocked shots.
The reason why Pachulia is even in this conversation, as he was last year, is because the native Georgian is receiving oodles of votes from his fellow countrymen.
Gobert, who would certainly love a similar outpour of support from the French, laughed about it on Friday.
“I think it’s great. His country is showing support,” Gobert said of Pachulia. “Whatever he does on the court, I think it’s great to see that (support).”
Gobert received at least two votes from NBA players. The 7-foot-1 center admitted he voted for himself and for Gordon Hayward on Thursday when Jazz players submitted their votes.
“I think he’s better than and he deserves it more than some guys,” Gobert said of Hayward. “We’re (fifth) in the West, so why not?”
The 10 starters will be chosen by votes from fans (50 percent), a media panel (25 percent) and players (25 percent).
Hayward returned the favor, which one could argue is legit considering the seasons they’re both putting together.
“Did I vote for Zaza? No,” Hayward responded to a sarcastic question. “I voted for my teammates.”
Gobert, who’s second in the league in field-goal percentage, admits he’d be honored to be included in the All-Star Game, something that would have to happen via the coaches’ voting for reserves unless France picks up the pace.
“That would be great,” Gobert said. “I know the main focus is the team, winning games, but of course everybody wants to be an All-Star for sure.”
SPOTLIGHT, SCHMOTLIGHT: The Jazz’s game against the Pistons on Friday night was broadcast on ESPN, but that national TV audience didn’t exactly move Hayward to do cartwheels.
“The only difference is it’s a late game,” he said, “so I get a little bit longer of a nap.”
Hayward isn’t necessarily basking in the extra-exposure glory now that the Jazz are being noticed around the league, either. He’s much more focused on his game and team than getting attention.
Added Hayward: “I couldn’t care either way.”
POSTER BOYS: Hayward and Gobert are featured on some billboards around town as part of the Jazz’s efforts to entice local fans to vote for their potential All-Stars.
“It’s always fun to see yourself on a billboard, for sure,” Gobert said.
Hayward has had mixed feelings about seeing himself on billboards over the years.
“I really appreciate what the Jazz have done for me to try to advertise,” he said, “and to try to get me into the All-Star Game.”
It’s still bizarre for him to see larger-than-life versions of himself plastered around town, but not as odd as it used to be when he came to Salt Lake City as a 20-year-old out of Butler in 2010. It caught him off guard to see himself with his teammates on a billboard the first time.
“It’s definitely weird to see yourself.”
Source : deseretnews.com


Finally Al Horford returns to Atlanta for first time with Celtics

AP Photo/Elise Amendola


ATLANTA (AP) — Al Horford knows this won’t be just another game tonight.
The four-time All-Star is returning to Philips Arena for the first time with a new team, and many are still adjusting to the fact that he no longer plays for the Atlanta Hawks.
After nine seasons as a franchise cornerstone, Horford left for Boston as a free agent last summer, signing a four-year, $113 million contract.
But a big part of the big center will always be in the Deep South. He hopes his impact with everyone in Atlanta was positive.
“I always tried to be a guy that plays hard and was committed to giving his all, on and off the court,” Horford said Friday. “So that’s something I’m really proud of.”
Horford led Florida to back-to-back national championships before the Hawks drafted him No. 3 overall in 2007. He helped Atlanta make the playoffs each season he was with the franchise, but the team only got close to the NBA Finals once, in 2015. The Hawks won 60 games and advanced to the Eastern Conference finals for the first time.
They were swept by Cleveland each of the last two years, and coach Mike Budenholzer has remade the roster. Kyle Korver now plays for Cleveland, Jeff Teague for Indiana and DeMarre Carroll for Toronto.
The Hawks have rebuilt around Atlanta native Dwight Howard, an eight-time All-Star center, and point guard Dennis Schroder. The overhaul continues to be a work in process with just four players with double-digit scoring averages and the team lacks consistent perimeter shooting.
“It really has changed fast,” Horford said. “That just shows us what the NBA business can be like sometimes. That’s just the way it is. All you can do is embrace those times that you had here and accept these new challenges that we’re in.”
In his first game against the Hawks, Horford said he expects some mixed emotions, but hopes to settle down after a pregame video tribute. There’s plenty at stake tonight with Boston third and Atlanta fourth in the Eastern Conference. The Celtics have won five of six and the Hawks seven in a row.
Horford keeps up with some of his former teammates and wishes them well.
“It’s a team that’s gone through its ups and downs, but I feel like they’ve found a really good rhythm right now,” he said. “They’re playing really well. Dennis has impressed me a lot, the way that he’s been playing and leading the team. Paul (Millsap) being as consistent as he is, and Tim (Hardaway Jr.) is really impressive off the bench.”
Horford said many times over the years that he wanted to spend his entire career with the Hawks, but when they wouldn’t match Boston’s offer, his decision was easy.
“I think for me individually it was the right decision,” Horford said. “It takes time to adjust to a new team, a new city and everything, but my teammates and coach have made my transition very easy.”
Boston guard Isaiah Thomas credits Horford with helping him get off to the best start of his six-year career. Thomas is averaging 28.2 points, tied for fourth-best in the league. Horford is averaging 15.3 points, 6.9 rebounds and 4.9 assists.
“He helps me out because he puts me in position,” Thomas said. “He sets really good screens for me to get me open and he also is a hell of a passer, so when he gets the ball in situations where I’m on the opposite side, he usually finds me. I think that’s what making me have a pretty good year as well.”
Thomas said the Celtics intend to get Horford a win Friday night.
 “He hasn’t brought it up to us,” Thomas said. “That’s just the type of person he is. Everything is the same for him.”
Horford likes to keep it that way. He’s ready to put this game behind him.
“It’s a little different, but I think probably tonight I’m sure it will be more surreal for me,” Horford said. “Right now it’s just a shoot-around and it feels very normal.”
Source: boston.com


Whoaaa!!! Lotus launches the fastest Exige sportscar ever

Lotus Exige Race 380 (Source: Group Lotus PLC)
The final iteration of the mid-engine hardtop Lotus sportscar is the Exige Race 380, a dedicated track-only car that weighs less than 1000kg and will cost over $100,000, but for that owners will get a car that meets FIA regulations and that has set a new record around Lotus's own Hethel test circuit.
Now that Lotus's finances are well and truly back on track it's about to start developing a flagship Esprit and testing the feasibility of a crossover or SUV.
However, it hasn't forgotten its hardcore fans and the reason why the company has managed to weather the storms of financial uncertainty -- it makes some of the greatest track-focused cars that any amount of money can buy.And the new Lotus Exige Race 380, announced on Thursday, continues in this tradition.
Built exclusively for racing, it starts out life as the already ferocious yet road-legal Exige Sport 380 and jettisons regulatory elements like headlamps and airbags that hold back performance.
"The Lotus Exige Sport 380 is a real giant slayer on the road," said Group Lotus CEO Jean-Marc Gales. "It gave us the ideal platform from which to develop the new Exige Race 380."
It keeps the 3.5-liter supercharged V6 but now it's mated to a six-speed Xtrac sequential transmission complete with carbon fiber steering column-mounted paddle shifts. There's a limited slip differential, the gearbox gets its own oil cooler and the exhausts are lightweight titanium.
Built for teams and for individuals to race in sanctioned competitions, the car meets FIA criteria for its class so there's a roll cage, racing seats with six-point harnesses, a fire extinguisher system and motorsport towing eyes for those moments when the car eventually runs out of grip and leaves the track.
However, thanks to adjustable dampers and roll bars all round plus external aerodynamic improvements that increase downforce to 240kg, it's going to take some very heavy-handed piloting for the car to come unstuck.
As for performance, because the car tips the scales at just 998kg, it will go from 0-60mph in 3.2 seconds but, more importantly, laps the Lotus Hethel test track in one minute, 23.5 seconds, making it the fastest Exige ever.
"By setting its weight below 1000kg, its power to weight is unsurpassed in its class. When lapping Hethel, it's a phenomenal 1.5 seconds faster than the previous Exige Cup R -- a massive performance gain," said Gales.
Available to order now, the Lotus Exige Race 380 will cost £99,500 ($122,000) excluding taxes, and deliveries are scheduled to begin in May in time for the 2017-18 race season.


Source : ctvnews.ca

Ultra Street Fighter II Confirmed For Nintendo Switch


Capcom is releasing a new version of Street Fighter 2 for Nintendo Switch called Ultra Street Fighter 2: The Final Challengers. It features a new mode and characters, along with the updated art used in 2008's Super Street Fighter 2 Turbo HD Remix.
The two new characters are Evil Ryu and Violent Ken. The latter of the two first appeared in crossover fighting game SNK vs. Capcom: SVC Chaos.
"For the first time in nearly 20 years, since Super Street Fighter 2, two new characters join the fight; Evil Ryu and Violent Ken," Capcom said on its website. "This version of Ryu has succumbed to the Satsui no Hado and is now obsessed with fighting in order to prove he is the strongest. His former honorable self has been purged, allowing him to enjoy absolute power and embrace an unquenchable bloodthirst for battle.
"Violent Ken is the result of M. Bison kidnapping and brainwashing Ken, enhancing his abilities with Psycho Power and twisting his brotherly rivalry with Ryu into hatred. Violent Ken is more ruthless, aggressive, and fearless with moves that feature purple flames instead of his signature fire."
In addition to the classic arcade mode, players will be able to team up in 2v1 fights, similar to the Dramatic Battle mode from Street Fighter Alpha series.
For those that want the classic Street Fighter 2 visual style, Ultra Street Fighter 2 will allow players to choose between pixel-art graphics or HD graphics created by UDON Entertainment.
"Nintendo Switch TV, Tabletop, and Handheld modes allow you to play Ultra Street Fighter 2 at home or on-the-go with brand new single-player and multiplayer modes," Capcom continued. "More information and details on these modes, along with confirmed pricing and release timing, will be shared at a later date."
Nintendo is scheduled to host a livestream on January 13 at 6:30 AM PT / 9:30 AM ET discussing the Switch's upcoming games. Street Fighter producer Yoshinori Ono will be appearing to talk about Ultra Street Fighter 2.

Source : gamespot.com