Senin, 15 Januari 2018

Antonio Brown to test calf in pregame, likely to play vs. Jaguars


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Pittsburgh Steelers All-Pro wide receiver Antonio Brown's injured calf is 'not close to 100 percent,' but he is likely to be active and 'give it a go' in Sunday's AFC divisional playoff game against the Jacksonville Jaguars, a source told ESPN's Adam Schefter.

Brown will go through pregame warmups and test out the calf, the source said. He is almost one month removed from a partially torn left calf muscle that occurred against the Patriots on Dec. 17 and forced him to miss the final two games of the regular season.

Jacksonville (10-6) is at Pittsburgh (13-3). (1:05 p.m. ET Sunday, CBS):

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Playoffs schedule | Divisional matchups
Insider predictions through Super Bowl
How to bet Jacksonville-Pittsburgh

Sources told ESPN's Dan Graziano there are lingering concerns about Brown's calf holding up in the cold weather at Heinz Field, but Brown participated in Saturday's walkthrough and also was a full participant in practice on Wednesday and Thursday. Coach Mike Tomlin said Brown missed Friday's practice because of an illness.

Brown's teammates have maintained for several weeks that they believe he will be back for the playoffs, and Tomlin said he had seen enough out of Brown's two practices.

'I think we've all seen Antonio play enough that we know what he's capable of,' Tomlin said Friday.

Brown led the NFL with 1,533 receiving yards despite playing in only 14 games and ranked fourth in the NFL with nine receiving touchdowns in 2017. He was the league's only unanimous All-Pro this season.

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Nick Foles benefits from run-first mentality in win


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Doug Pederson knows he doesn't have a game-changing quarterback. Fortunately for the Eagles, he realized this before it was too late.

Pederson adjusted his play-calling late in the first quarter after two drives proved what we already knew -- Philadelphia couldn't win the game primarily on the arm of Nick Foles -- and it made a world of difference in what ended up being a 15-10 win over the Atlanta Falcons.

'Part of our success this season has been the balance, balance of run and pass. We got back to that,' Pederson said after Philadelphia's Divisional round victory. 'We stuck with it and guys executed the game plan extremely well.'

The storylines surrounding this one were cemented well before kickoff: The No. 1 seed isn't favored, despite being at home and owning a 13-3 regular season mark. Foles isn't good enough to win a playoff game. Atlanta has been hot, especially defensively.

A majority of that went by the wayside on Saturday when Pederson decided to stop calling the game like he had Carson Wentz under center. It was almost as if someone handed the play-calling head coach a copy of his own team's roster and he flipped to the page that listed his running backs -- Jay Ajayi, LeGarrette Blount and Corey Clement -- and had an epiphany.

Since losing Wentz, Pederson had done his team no favors in his play-calling, surprisingly moving away from the run with Foles under center. The production drop-off that ensued wasn't all that shocking, and through a quarter on Saturday, it was predictable and borderline frustrating to watch. But Pederson's shift led to a brutish drive that landed the Eagles in the end zone via, you guessed it, a Blount rushing touchdown.

More importantly, it took Foles out of the precarious position of playmaker and shifted him into the role of game manager. It's an insult to any quarterback, but it's Philadelphia's best chance at a postseason victory without Wentz. On Saturday, it worked well.

'Nick is Nick,' Pederson said of Foles. 'That's what we've talked about and that's what he and I have talked about. We stayed committed to the run obviously, and that helps, and then with the passing game, just him making great decisions. Getting the ball out of his hand, finding the open receiver and did a really nice job executing the gameplan.'

Getting the ball out of Foles' hand is key to the offensive's rhythm, flow and success, and it's also code for Pederson saying he doesn't want the Eagles relying on Foles' arm. The numbers don't show it, but the tape does. After Philadelphia's first scoring drive, much of the Eagles' offense from there was built out of the run: run plays, run fakes, screens and everyone's favorite hot term, run-pass options.

RPOs aren't anyone's comfort zone and Foles wasn't anywhere near excellent, but Philadelphia succeeded in putting the quarterback in short down-and-distance situations. The result was a line that reads much better than it looked: 23-of-30 passing, 246 yards and a 100.1 passer rating. Foles misfired fairly often, overthrowing open targets, and even a handful of his completions were poorly located passes that required his receivers to make good or great catches. He was also the beneficiary of a botched interception that deflected off the knee of a Falcons defender and into the hands of Torrey Smith.

None of that inspires much confidence, but it does get the Eagles to next week and a date with either the Vikings or Saints in the NFC Championship Game next Sunday. That's more than most of us expected entering Saturday.

'Since (Wentz suffered his season ending injury), no one's given us a chance,' Pederson said after the win. 'Nobody's given us a chance. I understand, Carson's a great player. But every week, our guys are hearing the same thing, and now we're all of a sudden not good enough?

'We're 13-3, we have the best record in football, home-field advantage throughout. The guys are going to motivate themselves just based on what they've done and heard for the last month of football. Listen, it really doesn't matter what you guys talk about because that locker room in there is united, and I'll go to bat for every one of those guys and I'll go to war with every one of those guys in the dressing room.'

The narrative will revolve around Foles, but the real story starts (and potentially ends) with Philadelphia's running backs and its stifling defense. How that translates against either New Orleans and Minnesota, we'll learn next week. But for seven more days, the Eagles are still alive.

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from Sports - Google News http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000906088/article/nick-foles-benefits-from-runfirst-mentality-in-win
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Vitor Belfort wishes Uriah Hall a speedy recovery after UFC St. Louis cancellation


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Not fighting at UFC Fight Night 124 on Sunday is difficult for Vitor Belfort, but he has no ill will towards his scheduled opponent, Uriah Hall.

The Brazilian legend posted on Instagram Saturday afternoon his reaction to his co-main event bout being cancelled due to Hall weight-cutting issues.

“I dedicated 2 months for this training camp,” Belfort wrote. “Stayed away from my family and who knows me knows how hard this is for me. I spent all necessary to have the best structure to achieve my goal. My team had an intense dedication even during the holidays. I did all my fight week obligations, cut the weight and made the fight weight.

“Unfortunately my opponent had a problem during his weight cut, I wish him a soon recovery. Now I just want to go back home and see my family. Thanks for all the support along this training camp. Love you all!”

The fight was scrapped at the end of the official weigh-ins Saturday morning when Hall failed to weigh in during the two-hour window given to fighters. Hall reportedly was on weight but fainted on his way to the weigh-ins.

UFC Fight Night 124, which will go on with 11 fights, takes place at Scottrade Center in St. Louis.

For Belfort, this was an important bout: leading up to UFC Fight Night 124, he said that it would be his last time stepping into the cage before hanging his gloves up.

Belfort did not say what is next for him in MMA.

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from Sports - Google News https://www.bloodyelbow.com/2018/1/13/16888820/vitor-belfort-wishes-uriah-hall-speedy-recovery-after-ufc-fight-night-st-louis-cancellation-mma-news
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Falcons' Julio Jones: 'At the end of the day, I can make those plays'


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PHILADELPHIA -- Atlanta Falcons wide receiver Julio Jones made no excuses for not coming up with what would have been the game-winning, fourth-and-goal catch in the final moments of Saturday's 15-10 divisional playoff loss to the Philadelphia Eagles.

With the ball on the Eagles' 2-yard line, Jones, covered by cornerback Jalen Mills on the play, slipped to the ground and appeared to take a push from Mills. He still was able to get to his feet and almost make a play on Matt Ryan's floating pass.

'It was just a sprintout, a rollout to me,' Jones said. 'Trying to take advantage of one-on-one [coverage] down there.

'I don't know, but at the end of the day, I can make those plays. I ended up on the ground when I came out of my route. And that's a tough call [for the official] to make during that situation in the game. That was it.''

Jones, the Falcons' leading receiver this season, had four touchdowns receptions in 16 regular-season games and two playoff contests. According to ESPN Stats and Information, Ryan went 1-of-18 (6 percent) on passes to Jones in the end zone this season, after going 3-of-8 on those passes last season.

Ryan explained Saturday's final play from his vantage point.

imagePasses from Matt Ryan to Julio Jones in the end zone this season were 1-of-18, according to ESPN Stats & Information. Brad Penner/USA TODAY Sports

'That's a play we practice all the time, and certainly in those situations you go to your best player,' Ryan said. 'Obviously, roll to the right and have an opportunity to Julio. It just didn't work out and that's disappointing. That's the life you live as a competitor -- when you get in those situations, you want the ball in your hand. I think it was a right call. I think we had the right players in mind at the right time -- and we just fell a little bit short.''

Eagles safeties Malcolm Jenkins and Rodney McLeod said they identified the play before the snap based on formation. They alerted the rest of defenders, including cornerback Jalen Mills, who said he knew Jones was coming his way.

'They communicated all the way from [Ronald] Darby's side to my side,' Mills said. 'You can't do nothing but be thankful for having those veteran safeties that are able to ID formations.'

Said McLeod: 'It was right hash. That's kind of a lot of team's tendency, is to sprint out, and as soon as I saw the tight end come over I was like, 'There it is.' This is everything you dream of as a player. You do your study, you do your preparing, and they come out and run the identical play, and the guys did a good job of stopping it, man.'

Falcons coach Dan Quinn didn't appear to have a problem with the playcall by offensive coordinator Steve Sarkisian. Quinn was asked if he was confident Ryan and Jones could execute the play.

'Damn right. Absolutely,' he said. 'We're giving our shots to Matt and Julio to go for it and win the game. We didn't get the job done, but 100 out of 100 we're gonna put the ball in those two guys' hands to try to win.'

The Falcons were 1-of-3 in the red zone against the Eagles. They finished the season 0-7 in games they failed to score 20 points.

ESPN's Tim McManus contributed to this report.

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from Sports - Google News http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/22087807/julio-jones-atlanta-falcons-makes-no-excuses-failed-fourth-goal-play
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Patriots lead Titans 21-7 at halftime


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The Titans trailed the Chiefs 21-3 at halftime last week and rallied in the second half to advance. They are down “only” 21-7 tonight. But the Patriots aren’t the Chiefs, and Tom Brady isn’t Alex Smith.

In other words, the Titans are within 30 minutes of the offseason.

For one quarter, Tennessee appeared as if it was going to hang with the Patriots. The Titans’ 95-yard drive gave them a 7-0 lead and quieted Gillette Stadium.

But after that, it was all Patriots with New England outgaining the Titans 209 to 60 and outscoring them 21-0 the rest of the half.

James White scored two touchdowns on a 5-yard pass from Brady and a 6-yard run. Chris Hogan added a 4-yard touchdown catch. Both White and Hogan returned from injuries this week.

Tennessee self-destructed on offense and defense late in the half.

The Titans forced a New England three-and-out only to jump offsides on fourth-and-five, with Brynden Trawick‘s miscue giving the Patriots a first down with 6:32 remaining in the second quarter.

Later in the drive, on a 7-yard pass from Brady to Danny Amendola, Erik Walden drew an unnecessary roughness penalty for punching Nate Solder in the facemask. The 7-yard penalty — half the distance — moved the ball to the Tennessee 6. Three plays later, Hogan scored.

The Titans then botched a chance for points late in the half with poor clock management and a questionable play call on fourth-and-one as Derrick Henry was tackled for a 5-yard loss.

Tennessee was fortunate Stephen Gostkowski missed a 53-yard field-goal attempt on the final play.

Brady has completed 21 of 31 passes for 206 yards and two touchdowns, while Mariota is 9-of-15 for 117 yards and a touchdown and leads the Titans in rushing with 31 yards on three carries.

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Warriors narrowly hold on to huge lead at Toronto


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As the Raptors try to fight back against the Warriors, Steph Curry responds to a Toronto fourth-quarter triple with one of his own.

TORONTO -- The Golden State Warriors were playing their fifth game in eight days, their third game in four days and the second of a back-to-back set.

All those fatigue-inducing circumstances looked pretty irrelevant for much of Saturday night, as the defending champions built a 27-point lead halftime lead over the Toronto Raptors at the Air Canada Centre.

But then in the second half, and especially the fourth quarter, the Raptors charged back, erasing that lead and bringing a once-dormant crowd to a fever pitch during the final seconds.

And the Warriors during that span? They looked flat and somewhat out of sorts -- especially when Stephen Curry, who returned from a one-game absence because of a sprained right ankle, missed a pair of free throws in the final minutes.

However, the Warriors were saved by a late Kevin Durant jumper with 21.8 seconds left, helping them seal a 127-125 win over the Raptors, who were coming off a 133-99 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers on Thursday night.

Curry finished with 24 points, Durant scored 25 and Klay Thompson led the Warriors with 26.

DeMar DeRozan led the Raptors with 42 points on 17-of-31 shooting from the field. Saturday marked the first time this season that the Raptors lost when DeRozan scored 30 or more points; they had been 11-0 in such games.

imageKlay Thompson and the Warriors had to keep making shots to outlast DeMar DeRozan and the Toronto Raptors. Ron Turenne/NBAE/Getty

While temperatures were frigid outside, the NBA-best Warriors started off white-hot. They scored 43 first-quarter points, their most in an opening frame this season. They scored 81 first half points, their season high for any half.

And things really got out of hand when the Warriors used a 16-2 second-quarter run to take a 59-37 lead.

But the Raptors didn't lay down, especially behind DeRozan, who notched his 92nd career 30-point game, passing Vince Carter for the most in Raptors history. Toronto went on a 23-6 fourth-quarter run to shrink Golden State's lead to 116-115 with 3:54 left to play. But the Warriors got key field goals from Curry, Thompson and Durant to prevent a blown lead.

Had the Warriors lost, it would have been quite an upset. Entering Saturday, NBA teams were 988-8 when leading by 25 or more points at halftime in the shot-clock era (since 1954-55), according to ESPN Stats & Information.

The Warriors earned their 12th straight road win, improving their road record to 19-3 this season. They now sit at 35-9 overall and will head to Cleveland next to face the Cavaliers on Monday, the third game of Golden State's five-game road trip.

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from Sports - Google News http://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/22088008/warriors-offense-crests-toronto
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NBA wrap: Warriors blow 27-point halftime lead, hold on for win over Raptors


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One night after the Cavaliers blew a 22-point lead, it looked like the best team in basketball was going to have a collapse of their own. The Warriors led Toronto by 27 points at halftime and had the game all but locked up.

Thanks to a big comeback by the Raptors, though, this one was much closer than Golden State would have liked. However, the Warriors showed why they have won two of the last three NBA titles as they held on for a 127-125 victory.

'Definitely a wild night, we came out that third quarter and we started fouling a lot and they went to the free-throw line probably 10 possessions in a row,' Draymond Green told NBA TV after the game. 'That slowed our pace down and when you're playing against a set defense every time no one is as good as when you can get out in transition and get a couple of easy baskets and then get the flow going.'

DeMar DeRozan did all he could to lead a comeback for Toronto with 42 points, five rebounds and three assists while going 8 for 10 from the free-throw line, but 20-point games from Kevin Durant (25), Steph Curry (24) and Klay Thompson (26) were just enough to hold off the Raptors.

Golden State has now won seven of their last eight games. The Raptors have dropped two of three.

“The one thing that we know is it’s a process,' Green said. 'You don't win the championship in June, you win the championship from September to May, June, and then you've got to enjoy the process, embrace it and try to get better every time we step on the floor.'

Studs of the Night

John Wall didn't have the best shooting night going 9-of-24 from the floor in the Wizards' 119-113 win over the Nets, but he added 16 assists to help lead his team to victory.

Lakers forward Julius Randle had a game-high 23 points and registered a double-double with 15 rebounds in Los Angeles' 107-101 win over the Mavericks in overtime.

Russell Westbrook did what he does best, nearly registering a triple double with 27 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists all while shooting less-than-stellar from the floor as he went 10-of-27 from the field in the Thunder's 101-91 over the Hornets.

Duds of the Night

Pistons guard Tobias Harris went 3-of-14 from the floor and 0 for 6 from three-point range in Detroit's 107-105 loss to the Bulls.

Hornets guard Kemba Walker didn't have a bad night with 19 points, but going 5-of-17 shooting, including 2 for 7 from beyond the arc, with five turnovers isn't great either.

Highlight

Kelly Oubre made a nice cut down the baseline, and with a little help from Wall he finished strong at the basket.

What's Next

Portland (22-20) at Minnesota (28-16), 9 p.m. ET — The Timberwolves are quietly one of the hottest teams in the NBA as they have gone 11-3 in their last 14 games. They are 28-16 after starting the season off a pretty mediocre 17-13. Karl-Anthony Towns has posted double-doubles in eight straight games and in 12 of his last 13. C.J. McCollum is averaging 21.6 points per game on the season and nearly 25 points per game in Damian Lillard's four-game absence.

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Trade grades: Astros boost their bid to repeat with Cole, but did Pirates get enough?


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Now that the Gerrit Cole trade from the Pittsburgh Pirates to the Houston Astros finally happened, my initial reaction: Great job, Jeff Luhnow. The Astros dealt from their deep reservoir of talent to acquire a starting pitcher with All-Star upside without giving up any players who project as major contributors to the 2018 team.

That doesn't necessarily mean this will end up as a huge win, nor does it mean that the Pirates didn't get enough in return. For those -- especially Pirates fans -- who are disappointed in the return, receiving either Forrest Whitley or Kyle Tucker as the centerpiece of the trade was never going to happen. Those are arguably two of the top 10 or 15 prospects in the game and the Astros weren't going to give up one of them for two years of Cole.

Plus, the Pirates did their due diligence. This was what they viewed to be the best offer as they received three players who will have major league careers in Joe Musgrove, Colin Moran and Michael Feliz, plus prospect Jason Martin. Maybe it feels a little light, but the Pirates went with depth and certainty over risky potential, and it seems pretty obvious that nobody really viewed Cole as an ace.

imageWhy the Astros made the deal: In his four-plus seasons with the Pirates, Cole -- the No. 1 overall pick in 2011 -- has had just one dominant season, back in 2015 when he won 19 games with a 2.60 ERA and finished fourth in the Cy Young voting. He's battled a couple of nagging injuries, although he was healthy in 2017 when he posted a 4.26 ERA over 33 starts and 203 innings. Over the past two seasons, he ranks 48th out of 92 pitchers with at least 250 innings in ERA, sandwiched alongside Jeff Samardzija and Sean Manaea. Despite an average fastball velocity of 95.8 mph in 2017 -- fourth-best among starting pitchers -- his strikeout rate over those two seasons is 38th out of those 92 pitchers.

The Astros will look to unlock that talent. The biggest culprit compared to his 2015 breakout was the increase in home runs: 11 to 31. Fix that, and the ERA will go way down. He'll receive all the benefits of working with a smart organization -- although the Pirates are also one of the best in analytics -- plus he'll have run support, a shot at postseason glory and the opportunity to use Justin Verlander as a mentor. He has two seasons before free agency, where he can receive a nine-figure contract heading into 2020 if everything clicks in Houston.

The Astros now have a rotation that rivals the Indians and Nationals for best in the game, lining up Verlander, Dallas Keuchel, Cole, Lance McCullers Jr. and Charlie Morton, with Brad Peacock and Collin McHugh in deep reserve. The Indians and Nationals can maybe match the top five, but nobody can match that depth.

In many ways, the best part about this deal for the Astros is they acquired a big rotation piece without having to pay the $100-plus million needed to sign Yu Darvish or Jake Arrieta. With Cole, they have insurance when Keuchel and Morton hit free agency after the season. They also kept Whitley and Tucker, which leaves open this intriguing possibility as they continue to build a potential superteam: They could make one of those two guys the centerpiece for a Christian Yelich trade with the Marlins. Stew on that idea, American League rivals.

Astros grade: A

image? Why the Pirates made the deal: The Astros are so deep that the best guy they gave up in the deal was Musgrove, a former starter who excelled when moved to the bullpen last year. He had a 6.12 ERA in 15 starts, but a 1.44 ERA over 31 relief innings, where he fanned 31 and walked just five. His velocity clicked up a couple mph out of the pen and he eliminated the home run issues that plagued him as a starter. At a minimum, the Pirates probably have a good reliever, but you don't want to trade Cole for a nice bullpen part. Pittsburgh will commit to giving Musgrove another chance at starting.

Moran is a third baseman with some prospect pedigree, the sixth pick in 2013 by the Marlins out of North Carolina. The Marlins quickly gave up on him and the Astros acquired Moran, Jake Marisnick and Francis Martes in a steal of a deal for Jarred Cosart and Enrique Hernandez. Moran struggled in the minors until a repeat performance in Triple-A in 2017 and was passed by Alex Bregman as the team's third baseman of the future (actually, he's also been passed by J.D. Davis on the depth chart at third base). There was no room for him in Houston.

Can Moran hit in the majors? After posting a weak .697 OPS at Fresno in 2016, Moran hit .308/.373/.543 there in 79 games in 2017. Like much of the PCL, Fresno is a nice place to hit and you always have to be a little skeptical about a prospect repeating the same level. Moran will be 25, so it's time to see if he can hit. I'd project Moran as a second-division starter, but there's the chance he won't hit for enough power to play a corner infield slot.

In order to maximize the potential return of the trade, the Pirates need to start Musgrove and employ Moran at third base, which means a possible trade for David Freese. (GM Neal Huntington had said in December that Jung Ho Kang, still caught up in visa issues, was unlikely to return to Pittsburgh for 2018.)

Feliz is a wild card. He's a giant, hard-throwing right-hander who posted an ugly 5.63 ERA in 48 bullpen innings in 2017. There's some upside here as he's fanned 165 in 113 innings in two seasons of relief. He's also surrendered 18 home runs, however, and been more hittable than you'd expect given that strikeout rate. You know the story: He needs better command and more consistency with his slider.

Martin has been one of the youngest players at his level in the minors the past two seasons. The outfielder who hit .278/.332/.487 with 18 home runs and 16 steals between High-A and Double-A doesn't turn 22 until September. He's interesting, but may project as a fourth outfielder, lacking the range to stick in center, but also lacking the arm strength you want in right.

Is it an underwhelming return? I'm not high on Moran, but maybe 2017 was a turning point. Musgrove and Feliz could certainly turn into something if you want to extend the maximum benefit of the doubt to Ray Searage. You also get a combined 21 years of team control with the four players, so even if you hit semi-big on one guy and moderately OK on two of the other three, the Pirates will have done OK. You can maybe knock the Pirates for not trading Cole last offseason, but he needed to prove he was healthy and there was no way to expect his home run rate to turn crazy.

Pirates grade: B-

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Curry scores 24 in return, Warriors hold off Raptors 127-125


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TORONTO (AP) Stephen Curry returned from a two-game absence to score 24 points, Klay Thompson had 26 and the Golden State Warriors blew nearly all of a 27-point lead before beating the Toronto Raptors 127-125 on Saturday night.

DeMar DeRozan scored 42 points for the Raptors, but the Warriors had just enough to beat Toronto for the eighth straight time.

Kevin Durant scored 25 points and Draymond Green had 14 for the Warriors, who have won 12 straight on the road. Golden State’s 19 road wins are the most in the NBA.

OG Anunoby had 17 points and Serge Ibaka 14 for the Raptors, who rallied from a 19-point deficit through three quarters to make it a one-point game in the fourth.

SPURS 112, NUGGETS 80

SAN ANTONIO (AP) – Kawhi Leonard scored 19 points in his return from a three-game absence, Davis Bertans had 18 and San Antonio never trailed in a victory over Denver.

San Antonio won its 14th straight at the AT&T Center, improving the league’s best home record to 19-2.

The Spurs’ projected starting lineup of Leonard, LaMarcus Aldridge, Pau Gasol, Tony Parker and Danny Green played together for only the sixth game this season and just the second time at home.

Leonard played 28 minutes after sitting out the previous three games with a strained left shoulder.

Green had 11 points in his return from a 10-game absence due to tightness in his left groin.

Nikola Jokic had 23 points and nine rebounds for Denver, which has lost 10 straight in San Antonio.

THUNDER 101, HORNETS 91

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) – Russell Westbrook had 25 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists, and Oklahoma City beat Charlotte to snap a three-game losing streak.

Paul George added 17 points and Steven Adams had 14 rebounds and 11 rebounds as the Thunder avenged a loss earlier this season to the Hornets.

Oklahoma City trailed by three entering the fourth quarter, but its bench helped open a double-digit lead as Charlotte shot 5 of 21 from the field over the final 12 minutes. The Thunder attempted 97 shots as they dominated the offensive glass.

All-Star point guard Kemba Walker had several shots blocked on drives to the basket and finished 5 of 17 from the field. He still led the Hornets with 19 points, while Dwight Howard added 11 points and 17 rebounds.

BULLS 107, PISTONS 105

CHICAGO (AP) – Zach LaVine scored 14 points in his first game in 11 months, rookie Lauri Markkanen added 19 points and Chicago beat Detroit.

Chicago made 17 3-pointers and held off several late charges by the Pistons to win for the 13th time in its last 20 games.

LaVine was making his Bulls debut after being acquired from Minnesota in the Jimmy Butler trade. LaVine, who last season averaged 18.9 points in 47 contests, hadn’t played since he suffered a torn ACL against Detroit on Feb. 3.

Avery Bradley scored 26 points and Andre Drummond had 21 points and 15 rebounds for Detroit, which lost its sixth road game in seven tries.

WIZARDS 119, NETS 113, OT

WASHINGTON (AP) – John Wall scored 17 of his 23 points in the second half and overtime and added 16 assists as Washington beat Brooklyn after giving back a 23-point lead.

Bradley Beal added 24 points and Marcin Gortat had 16 points and 13 rebounds for the Wizards, who needed their first overtime victory of the season to avoid being swept by the Nets in the season series.

Kelly Oubre added 17 points off the bench off 5-of-6 shooting as Washington moved to 2-2 on a five-game homestand.

Rondae Hollis-Jefferson scored 22 points for Brooklyn, which forced overtime despite never holding the lead. Jarrett Allen added 16 points and DeMarre Carroll had 13 points and 10 rebounds for the Nets, who have yet to win in three overtime contests this season.

CLIPPERS 126, KINGS 105

LOS ANGELES (AP) – Lou Williams scored 26 points and injury-depleted Los Angeles beat Sacramento to get to .500 at the season’s halfway mark.

Willie Reed added 14 points and 13 rebounds starting in place of DeAndre Jordan, who has a sprained left ankle. Blake Griffin had 11 points and nine assists as one of eight Clippers in double figures.

Besides Jordan, they were without Austin Rivers and Danilo Gallinari. Patrick Beverley had season-ending knee surgery while C.J. Wilson is out indefinitely.

Willie Cauley-Stein had 23 points and 13 rebounds for the Kings in their fourth straight loss. De’Aaron Fox added 17 points and 10 assists.

LAKERS 107, MAVERICKS 101, OT

DALLAS (AP) – Julius Randle’s rebound and late putback sealed an overtime victory for Los Angeles against Dallas.

With his team leading 104-101, Randle grabbed a rebound on Lonzo Ball’s missed jump shot and scored on the rebound with 18.3 seconds remaining, giving the Lakers a five-point lead they needed to extend a season-best four-game win streak.

The Lakers (15-27) trailed by double digits in the fourth quarter, but battled back for their first win against the Mavericks in 15 tries and their first win in Dallas since Feb. 24, 2013.

Randle, a Dallas native, had 23 points and 15 rebounds. Jordan Clarkson added 19 points, Kyle Kuzma had 18, and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope scored 17.

Mavericks rookie Dennis Smith Jr. had 23 points as the Mavericks (15-29) had a two-game win streak snapped. Harrison Barnes and Wesley Matthews each had 17 points for Dallas.

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Embracing 'underdog' status, Eagles players wear dog masks after beating Falcons


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PHILADELPHIA -- The Eagles embraced the underdog role.

Boy, did they embrace it.

So much so that a pair of veterans, right tackle Lane Johnson and defensive end Chris Long, went out and bought dog masks -- German Shepherd masks, to be precise -- to sport in order to get into full character in the days leading up to the game.

imageChris Long celebrates the Eagles' 'underdog' win over the Falcons by wearing a dog mask. Al Bello/Getty Images

'Me and Chris Long were talking [at lunch], and everybody's calling us underdogs, so hey, let's go get us a dog mask,' Johnson said. 'That's what we did.'

The sixth-seeded Atlanta Falcons entered Saturday's divisional-round game in Philadelphia as three-point favorites. It was the first time in NFL history that a top seed was not favored in its first postseason game.

The Eagles organization pounced on this angle, playing up the idea that they were being disrespected. The Eagles even hung up copies of analyst predictions to show how many people were siding with the Falcons.

Philly used that edge to help fight past Atlanta 15-10 and into the NFC Championship Game.

And the dog masks were donned after the game.

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    The underdog Eagles used a mistake-free performance from their backup QB and a spirited defensive performance to advance to the NFC title game.

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    Falcons receiver Julio Jones didn't make any excuses for slipping and failing to come up with what would have been a winning touchdown reception in the final moments of Saturday's playoff loss to the Eagles.

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'When did Carson [Wentz] go down? Since that point, no one's given us a chance,' Eagles coach Doug Pederson coach, referring to the QB's Dec. 10 ACL tear. 'I understand Carson's a great player, but every week our guys are hearing the same thing. Now, all of a sudden, we're not good enough? We're 13-3, best record in football, home-field advantage throughout.

'The guys are gonna motivate themselves based on what they've heard for the last month. It really doesn't matter what you guys talk about, because [our] locker room is united. I'll go to bat for every one of those guys; I'll go to war for every one of those guys in that dressing room.'

The loss of Wentz certainly factored into the questions about the Eagles' playoff viability, as did the shaky play of his replacement, Nick Foles, to close out the regular season. On Saturday, the offense was up and down against Atlanta and found the end zone just once, but it was backed by a lights-out defense that came up with a big stand in the shadow of the end zone to close the game.

The Eagles advance as a result and await the winner of Sunday's game between the New Orleans Saints and Minnesota Vikings. Philadelphia will have home-field advantage again.

The Eagles certainly earned some respect by taking care of the Falcons, but Johnson is holding onto the dog mask, just in case.

'I would imagine we're probably not going to be favored next week, either,' Johnson said. 'At this point in the season, it really don't matter; it's anybody's game.'

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Raptors Mount Huge Second-Half Comeback, Command Warriors' Full Attention


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There is still nothing in the league more fearsome than when the Warriors decide to give a damn. Even their partial investment is enough to roll over most opponents, burying them beneath casual displays of unbelievable talent. Golden State’s full attention tends to go reserved for the games that matter most: playoff bouts, rivalry games or any time they deem a statement to be necessary.

Saturday’s session against the Toronto Raptors—one of the best teams in the league this season—proved to be the latter. Golden State came out with a commitment to ball movement exceptional even by their standards. Clean, free-flowing basketball helped the Warriors build a 28-point lead by halftime in their highest-scoring first half of the season. Yet by game’s end, the Raptors had ground all but a few points of that lead to dust behind stout coverage and a resilient offensive. The Warriors won, 127-125, by the skin of their teeth.

This year’s Raptors are among the rare teams capable of sustaining through a Warriors' haymaker. The first half could hardly have been more decisive; even without heating up from beyond the arc, Golden State laid down run after run. Turnovers were sparse, and layups all too common. When they choose to, the Warriors can balance every bit of their considerable three-point potency with an endless string of cut and drive. Maintaining any kind of cohesive team defense is a challenge when players like Stephen Curry, Kevin Durant and Klay Thompson—each a devastating scorer—work first as a screener. 

It’s somewhat amazing, in retrospect, that Toronto returned from halftime with any spark at all. No one would have blamed the Raptors for dropping a game to the defending champions in the absence of Kyle Lowry, who missed the game with a back injury. This was never a game that the Raptors were supposed to win. Yet their response to Golden State’s 81-point first half was a 71-point second half of their own, ignited by the sensational driving game of DeMar DeRozan (42 points on 17-of-31 shooting). The tact of the game’s officiating clearly changed in the second half and DeRozan was the first to take advantage. By catching an angle against Thompson and Patrick McCaw, DeRozan was able to wedge open driving lanes and initiate contact to draw fouls. Any advantage he created seemed to end in points. A blowout margin had relaxed the Warriors’ defense just enough for DeRozan to slice through the seams.

For Toronto to cut a 28-point deficit to a single possession, however, would require so much more. What was a mellow defensive effort in the first half tightened up to stifle much of Golden State’s perimeter action. Improved communication and sharper switching put the Raptors in perfect position for ball denial. There’s not much any team can do to keep the ball out of the hands of Durant or Curry, but Toronto managed to push both far out of the rhythm of the offense to claim possession. Stall enough of those sorts of passes and the most dynamic offense in the league can devolve into a trickle of isolation plays. 

In that context, the Warriors are still formidable—but beatable. Their misses were answered with drive after drive, resulting in 16 points in the paint and 17 free throws for the Raptors in the third quarter alone. When DeRozan wasn’t completing possessions on his own, Toronto was drawing enough offense from cuts and hustle plays to sustain. Contributors like OG Anunoby and Fred VanVleet became essential scorers. Jonas Valanciunas created just enough out of the post to offer DeRozan some relief. Toronto did everything they could to close the gap and came within a few flukey possessions of claiming a game they should never have had a chance to win. Golden State, thanks to Durant and Curry, simply had too many answers.

It is a sign of the utmost respect that the Warriors ran pick-and-roll sequences between Curry and Durant as often as they did down the stretch. That style of basketball is hardly the taste of Steve Kerr, who would much prefer his team spiral through pass after pass into a wide-open shot. Instead, Golden State turned to runs of targeted, matchup-driven basketball when they most needed to score. Durant had supplied pull-up three-pointers to stave off previous Raptor runs. Curry attacked the basket once the Warriors’ offense stalled in the second half, exploiting the same tight whistle as DeRozan to total a game-high 12 free throws. Neither Durant nor Curry was especially dominant, but the beauty of their playing together usually means that neither has to be. Their playing simple, effective basketball—like the game-saving score, in which Curry drew two defenders to the ball only to make an easy pass off to Durant—is typically more than even teams like the Raptors can match. 

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Philadelphia Eagles' D shuts down Falcons' late push to advance


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PHILADELPHIA -- It is rare for an NFL playoff game to truly come down to one moment, one play. It is even rarer for the players on the field, for an entire stadium full of fans ravenous for their first playoff win in nearly a decade, to understand the moment before it happens.

As the NFL's replay officials examined a third-down catch from Julio Jones with 1:05 remaining in a stirring 15-10 Eagles victory Saturday that was over-stuffed with plot twists, Eagles safety Malcolm Jenkins gathered his team to make sure they got it.

'The biggest thing I wanted everyone to realize was this is it. This is the season. I wanted guys to feel that moment,' Jenkins explained after the game. 'The crowd is going crazy. It's fourth-and-2. ... It's one of those things that you dream about. Literally, where you make a play, you move on. You don't, you go home. Everything we worked for since last April is coming down to one play, and we got to be ready.'

They could not have been more ready. After a Divisional Round game jam-packed with so many strange, unpredictable turns, the fateful fourth-and-goal play call from the Atlanta Falcons was easier to read than a children's book.

Through film study and practice, Eagles safeties Rodney McLeod and Jenkins both identified that Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan was going to sprint right and look for Jones. Jenkins was asked when he recognized the play, and he replied:

'Probably before they broke the huddle,' he answered to laughter that could haunt Falcons fans frustrated with offensive coordinator Steve Sarkisian all offseason.

'It was right hash. That's a lot of teams' tendencies for a sprint out. As soon as I saw the tight end come over, I was like, 'There it is!' ' McLeod said with deep satisfaction. 'This is everything you dream of as a player.'

Eagles defensive coordinator Jim Schwartz had his players defend that exact play multiple times in practice, and they went over it again during Friday's walk-through session. It's one thing to be prepared for a season-changing play, however, and another to execute a stop against a future Hall of Fame wide receiver.

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Falcons coach Dan Quinn explained after the game that they wanted to get Jones matched up against Eagles cornerback Jalen Mills, and they were successful in that. Mills said he was coached up to be physical with Jones at the top of the route, which wound up causing Jones to slip as Ryan rolled out, disrupting the timing on the play.

'I ended up on the ground,' Jones said via NFL Network's Tiffany Blackmon. 'In that situation, it is very difficult (for an official) to call that play.'

Getting a penalty was the last thing on Mills' mind.

'This is playoff ball. Big boy ball. If you go out there and play timid, (Jones) is gonna push you around,' Mills said.

While there was little separating the Nos. 1 and 6 seeds in the NFC throughout Saturday's game, the Eagles are going to their first NFC Championship Game since 2008, in large part because they refuse to get pushed around. The final score and style of play on a sub-freezing, windy night in Philadelphia was reminiscent of the Buddy Ryan years in Philadelphia.

The Eagles' offensive line wore down the lightweight Falcons defense in the second half during a pair of long field-goal drives that took up 26 plays and more than 13 minutes of game time. Perhaps Philadelphia's defining play before Ryan's failed fourth-down throw was a 32-yard screen pass to Eagles running back Jay Ajayi, in which both center Jason Kelce and guard Stefan Wisniewski got on the edge and tossed multiple Falcons defenders aside like ragdolls.

'I know I hit two guys. I don't remember how,' Wisniewski recalled.

After a month of consternation about how Eagles quarterback Nick Foles would fare in his quest to replace MVP candidate Carson Wentz, who was lost for the season in Week 14, the Eagles did a fantastic job minimizing Foles' exposure. Foles' numbers -- he finished 23 of 30 for 246 yards -- are a reminder that a quarterback is so often the function of the team around him.

The Eagles made Foles' life easier with spotless protection and well-defined throws after halftime. Ajayi's long play came on a second-straight screen pass, which the Falcons didn't anticipate coming.

'It's a lot easier to throw it when you can run it,' Eagles linebacker Nigel Bradham said. 'Our backfield is a monstrous backfield. A lot of defenses aren't built for that style. Old school style!'

The Eagles didn't dominate on the ground, but so many of Foles' best plays came on run-pass options where Atlanta loaded up to stop Philadelphia's three-headed backfield of Ajayi, LeGarrette Blount and Corey Clement. Eagles coach Doug Pederson emptied out the playbook, using a misdirection handoff to receiver Nelson Agholor that seemed straight out of a Single Wing Offense playbook. Philadelphia's lone touchdown came after going for it on fourth down from the 1-yard line. Despite being the NFC's top seed, the Eagles played like a team that knew it needed to do a little extra to come out on top.

'I got no problem with being an underdog. Ain't no pressure. They expect us to lose anyway. Why not ball out?' cornerback Ronald Darby said.

The pressure is only going to mount on Sarkisian in Atlanta after only scoring 10 points in this playoff loss and choosing not to run once after facing first-and-season from the 9-yard line. It was striking in the Eagles locker room how the team just assumed the Falcons were not going to run on the final play of the game.

After suffering perhaps the most heartbreaking defeat in Super Bowl history, this Falcons team seemed to chase the ghost of the 2016 Falcons offense all year. It was fitting that it was the team's offense, even their best two players, that couldn't quite connect on the key play of the game. Quinn's defense made huge strides late in the season, but Sarkisian failed to help get his receivers open like his predecessor Kyle Shanahan.

'We are a much better offense than we showed, for sure,' Jones said. 'Everybody is always talking about last year, this year, this and that. ... Everybody has to be on the same page and it takes time.'

It's worth noting that the stories over the next week would be so much different if the Falcons were just one play better. We'd hear about their mental toughness and defensive prowess. But on a weird evening that included four Eagles fumbles, a punt block, a Foles completion that bounced off Falcons safety Keanu Neal's knee and a temperamental wind that knocked down deep passes and punts, the game did come down to one play.

And the Eagles knew the play before the ball was ever snapped.

'It's a beautiful feeling,' Darby said. 'It's like something from a movie.'

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Patriots rout Titans 35-14, move on to AFC Championship Game


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FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — To borrow the words of the late Dennis Green, “They are who we thought they were.”

Did anyone really think the New England Patriots, who thumped the Tennessee Titans 35-14 Saturday night, would take the field in the divisional round of the playoffs and look like anything less than the New England Patriots?

Sure, Tom Brady had just emerged from a less-than-stellar December (completing just 61.3% of his passes while recording six touchdowns, five interceptions and a passer rating of 81.6).

Yep, the Patriots defense had struggled this season against mobile quarterbacks — think Alex Smith, Deshaun Watson and Cam Newton — and that provided a degree of hope for the Titans and their dual-threat signal-caller Marcus Mariota.

And yes, there had been whispers about friction between owner Robert Kraft, coach Bill Belichick, and Brady. Such speculation, fueled by an explosive ESPN story, raised the question about the immediate and long-term stability of the union.

But keep it real. These are still the Patriots.

Belichick remains one of the best game-planners, and he always gets his players to buy in. Meanwhile, Brady remains an effective future Hall of Famer, recording his 13th career 300-yard-postseason game.

Brady was as surgical as ever, throwing dart after dart, unaffected by mayhem around the pocket. He even made a few you-gotta-be-kidding-me throws that make it worth wondering if the TB12 Method and practices have indeed made him ageless.

And, regardless of the whispers suggesting cracks in the foundation, New England still boasts one of the strongest top-to-bottom rosters, and those 53 players and their coaches share the common goal of winning yet another Super Bowl.

And that’s why the Patriots dispatched the Titans with apparent ease to punch a ticket to their seventh straight AFC Championship Game, where they will host the winner of the Pittsburgh-Jacksonville game on Jan. 21.

“It’s just a lot of good coaching, a lot of good football players, and we recognize we have a great chance here, and we want to maximize our opportunity,” said New England wide receiver Danny Amendola, who had 11 catches for 112 yards.  

“We know we’ve got a good team, and as long as we play well, we can go as far as we want.” 

The Titans simply found themselves overmatched on virtually every front.

The quarterback position best illustrated the discrepancies between these two teams. Mariota, making only the second playoff start of his career, facing off with Brady, who entered the game boasting an NFL record 25 postseason victories.

Mariota had virtually willed the Titans to victory in the wild-card round, throwing a pair of touchdown passes (one to himself), scrambling to both extend plays and pick up chunks of yards and even throwing a key block while directing a 22-21 comeback over the Kansas City Chiefs.

Mariota’s strong play briefly carried into Saturday night’s game as he closed out the first quarter with a touchdown drive that featured the same well-rounded effectiveness.

But it’s one thing to exchange blows with Smith and the Chiefs. Keeping pace with Brady and Co., while fending off an aggressive New England defense, represents a much greater challenge.

After Tennessee’s first-quarter touchdown, the Patriots responded with a scoring drive of their own, and then added another, and then a third, a fourth and a fifth.

What made the offensive display so impressive was the fact that the Patriots moved the ball at will against one of the best minds in the game in Tennessee defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau. The 80-year-old found himself pitted against familiar foes in Brady and Belichick for the ninth time in his career. But the familiarity did little good as LeBeau again struggled to find an answer for Brady.

The quarterback entered the game owning a 6-2 record against LeBeau, including a 2-0 playoff mark. In those eight games against LeBeau’s units prior to Saturday, Brady had recorded 19 touchdowns and just three interceptions while completing 68% of his passes for 2,496 yards and a passer rating of 110.9.

Add another 337 yards and three touchdowns to those tallies.

'They were out there making plays, more plays than we did. On those third downs, we couldn’t get of the field,' said Tennessee cornerback Adoree’ Jackson.

Meanwhile, as Brady spread the ball around and racked up yards and touchdowns, the Patriots’ defense essentially shut the Titans down, yielding only six second-half first downs while sacking Mariota seven times after halftime.

Anti-Patriots factions spent Saturday night crowing over calls against the Titans that appeared questionable and helped extend New England drives. An offensive pass interference call, a Tennessee neutral zone infraction and unnecessary roughness calls ranked among the head-scratchers.

But truthfully, the Patriots didn’t need any help from the officials.

Nothing was going to deter New England Saturday. And if the defending champs continue to roll like this next week in the AFC Championship Game, it’s hard to envision anything preventing the Patriots from achieving their ultimate goal, again.

“The reality of the NFL is what we did this week will have nothing to do with what we happens next week,” Brady said. “We’re going to have to repeat it, so you’ve got to get right back to work.

'Everyone’s got to feel good physically and mentally and go out there and try to cut it loose one more time in a huge game.”


On day of missile scare, Tom Hoge takes a 1-shot lead at Hawaii's Sony Open


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HONOLULU -- Tom Hoge was too caught up watching college basketball in his hotel room to be bothered with a push alert -- a false alarm, as it turned out -- that a ballistic missile was headed toward Hawaii.

He showed a steady hand on the golf course, too, even as the leaderboard at the Sony Open became increasingly crowded.

Hoge finished off a 6-under 64 by holing a 40-foot birdie putt at the par-3 17th, and then hitting a 40-yard bunker shot to within 3 feet for a birdie on the par-5 closing hole at Waialae Country Club for a one-shot lead.

Hoge was at 16-under 194, one shot ahead of Brian Harman (68) and Patton Kizzire, who recovered from a double bogey on his opening hole and shot 64. Another shot behind was Kyle Stanley (65).

Seven players were separated by four shots, a big difference from a year ago when Justin Thomas led by seven going into the final round of his wire-to-wire victory.

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    Charles Howell III, Marc Leishman and other golfers participating in the Sony Open in Hawaii describe their responses and reactions to Saturday's false alarm missile alert.

Hoge has never led going to the final round on the PGA Tour in his 75 previous starts. He has never won.

'A new position,' Hoge said. 'It's a good one, obviously. I've been close to the lead a few times in the fall, so a little bit to draw on there. Haven't quite pulled it off yet. Just getting a little more belief in myself and hopefully, tomorrow will be a better day for me.'

It should be a day where everyone can breathe a little easier compared with how Saturday began.

Hawaii was buzzing -- literally -- when the push alert came through on mobile phones across the island shortly after 8 a.m. alerting of a missile. It said to seek shelter and that it was not a drill.

There was panic across the island. J.J. Spaun tweeted that he was in the basement of his hotel. John Peterson tweeted that he was in a bathtub with his family covered by mattresses.

Hoge?

'I was watching the TCU basketball game at the time, so I was a little frustrated with that,' he said of his alma mater ultimately losing to Oklahoma. 'The missile was kind of off my radar on that one. I don't even know what you do for a missile. So I wasn't really freaking out or anything. Some other people were around us. If it's going to be your last day, it's going to be your last day, right?

'To be here in Hawaii and see the beach and everything, I guess it would be a good spot to go.'

Hoge once shared the 36-hole lead with Tiger Woods at the Wyndham Championship, the last tournament Woods played before two back surgeries in the fall of 2015. This time he starts out the final round as the leader.

With so many players right in the mix, no one is sure what to expect in the final round.

'There's a lot of birdies out there,' Kizzire said. 'You just have to make the most.'

Thomas had a wild start -- bogey on No. 1, holing out from 175 yards for eagle on No. 2, another bogey on No. 3. He settled down for a 66 and was six shots back, with other eight players ahead of him.

'You can go shoot 8 or 9 under in a heartbeat out here,' Thomas said. 'It's hard if you're five back and you're in 15th or 20th as opposed to five back and you're in sixth or seventh. We'll just wait and see.'

Hoge figured out how to handle Waialae on another warm, sunny and missile-free day. He was bogey-free, picking up birdies with good tee shots on some of the shorter holes, knocking in the long putt on the 17th and finishing with a birdie.

Five players had at least a share of the lead at some point, and Harman was never too far from the mix. It was a steady performance, just not as low as the players chasing him, and he failed to hit his bunker shot close on the 18th, two-putting from 25 feet for par.

Even so, he'll be in the last group in Hawaii for the second straight week, and Kapalua winner Dustin Johnson already is on his way to Abu Dhabi.

Jordan Spieth never got much going again and headed to the putting green after his round for more work. He only made four birdies in his bogey-free round of 66, but that left him nine shots behind.

For most players, the talk of the day was the push alert that turned out to be a mistake.

'It was pretty scary at the hotel when they came over the loud speaker and said, 'Everyone take shelter, this isn't a drill,'' Spieth said.

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Kevin Durant: Despite trash talk, Drake is no distraction in Toronto


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TORONTO — Kevin Durant won't give Drake any recognition as a disruptive force when playing games against the Toronto Raptors.

Drake was stationed in his usual court-side seat on Saturday when the Golden State Warriors visited Air Canada Centre in Toronto. In typical fashion, he heckled Durant and other players throughout the game, which the Warriors won in a 127-125 nail-biter.

A sold-out crowd of 20,078 filled the arena for the anticipated game between the Raptors and Warriors. Drake, a multi-time Grammy Award winner based out of Toronto, feeds into the crowd enthusiasm when in attendance. When Durant was asked about how Drake's presence influences the game, though, he downplayed the notion of any real impact.

'Don't give Drake that much credit,' Durant said. 'Do not give him that much credit. He's not the reason why it was fun out there. He does bring a different element to the game, someone that's so close to the organization and the city. Everybody realizes it when you play here in Toronto. It was a fun game. The crowd is always amazing here. It was a solid turnout and I'm glad we got the W.'

Durant, who scored 25 points with six rebounds and five assists, did admit to hearing some of Drake's comments. He was ripped by the famed artist after missing a wide-open dunk in the second quarter, but Durant made sure to note that he made up for it on the next possession.

'I hated that one,' Durant said. 'I had to ignore him because I heard he was talking some trash on the sideline. I made up for it the next play.'

Despite Drake's comments from the stands, there are no signs of any ill will toward Durant. In fact, there appears to be a great deal of affection. Drake recently revealed some new tattoos which featured the jersey numbers of Durant and teammate Steph Curry.

Durant is clearly aware of the tattoo, but he had no desire to touch on it.

'I'm not talking about no other man's tattoo,' Durant said emphatically.

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For reasons large and small, Patriots roll back into AFC title game


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FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — A cold wind blew Saturday night into Gillette Stadium, and it could have been taken for either foreboding chill or frigid comfort. Palace intrigue swirled all week around the New England Patriots, a foreign commotion for the NFL’s crown jewel franchise. But the Patriots have not won five Super Bowls without meeting disruption and smashing it into powder. Nothing could soothe their turmoil, whatever amount existed, like January football in a Massachusetts freeze.

If the Patriots really are a dynasty on the brink of downfall, they are an active dynasty nonetheless, still lording over the league with metronomic virtuosity. If the Patriots are squabbling, it did not prevent their advancement to a seventh consecutive AFC championship game, the prize for their 35-14 demolition of the game-yet-helpless Tennessee Titans.

Pause and think about that for a second: Every year since “Game of Thrones” made its television debut, the Patriots have stood among the final four NFL teams. The last time the Patriots did not make the AFC title game was 2010 — Mike Shanahan’s first season with the Redskins, the year before Jim Harbaugh took over the 49ers and Sam Bradford’s rookie season.

“This team has always been consistent in what they did, and they always stick to what they know, and that’s winning,” said defensive lineman Ricky Jean-Francois, a late-season addition. “Besides winning, they stuck to the process. They stick to the journey. They stick to the grind — everything that leads to a game like this.”

The Titans, two-touchdown underdogs, put a brief scare into the Patriots, taking a 7-0 lead late in the first quarter. New England scored the next 35 points as Tom Brady choked the life out of another opponent on another January Saturday night in Foxborough. He surpassed 300 yards passing in a playoff game for the 13th time, making every throw imaginable and some outside those bounds, submitting a classic performance in his first as a quadragenarian.

[Amid amplified scrutiny and advanced age, Tom Brady has yet to buckle]

Brady overcame a lack of separation from his outside receivers and shredded the Titans with short, precise passes. He completed 35 of 53 passes for 337 yards and three touchdowns, hitting Danny Amendola 11 times for 112 yards. He commanded the pocket with remarkable poise and agility. Brady was a statue in a mosh pit at times, a pogo stick in a phone booth at others. The performance was a finger in the eye to anyone who believed the 40-year-old’s skills are eroding.

That group may include members of his own coaching staff. For the past week, the Patriots listened to — or had to forcibly ignore — reports of internal conflict. According to an ESPN story, reliant on anonymous sources, Bill Belichick had traded Brady’s heralded backup, Jimmy Garoppolo, against his will for a pittance to appease owner Robert Kraft, whose fondness for Brady had transcended New England’s transactional ruthlessness. Meanwhile, Belichick and Brady were at odds over the growing influence of Alex Guerrero, Brady’s health guru, whom Belichick had stripped of privileges around Gillette Stadium as a confluence of Patriots chose Guerrero’s methods over the New England training staff’s.

“The team was focused on Tennessee,” Devin McCourty said. “At this time of year, there’s no such thing as distractions. It comes down to what’s our goal since the beginning of the season.”

Those issues still may need to be sorted out, but the notion of the Patriots in decline seemed frivolous as the New England machine rumbled on Saturday. Next Sunday, they will face either the Pittsburgh Steelers in a rematch of last year’s AFC title game or the upstart Jacksonville Jaguars. One more victory and the Patriots will play for their second consecutive Lombardi Trophy, and Brady and Belichick will appear in their eighth Super Bowl together.

[Tom Brady makes curious attempt to shoot down ESPN story: ‘Everyone has different truths’]

They won for big reasons, and they won for small reasons. After falling behind, the Patriots eschewed huddles and quickened their offensive tempo. The breakneck scheme prevented the Titans from substituting and gave the Patriots’ running backs matchups that gouged Tennessee. James White and Dion Lewis combined for 81 yards on eight catches in the first half, with White scoring on both a reception and a run. That was a big reason — it revived the crowd and allowed the Patriots to seize control.

The Patriots, as ever, were willing to calibrate strategy for specific circumstances to intricate detail. As a matter of vaunted practice, Belichick defers when the Patriots win the coin toss, in hopes of setting up a score immediately before and after halftime. When the Patriots won the coin toss Saturday night, they took the ball. Belichick does not submit to many forces, but one of them is the weather: The wind howled at kickoff and promised to pick up, and Belichick wanted the wind at New England’s back in the fourth quarter. That was a small reason — the game had been decided by the fourth quarter, but Belichick could plan with confidence.

New England’s defense appeared vulnerable early, but as Tennessee suffered injuries to its offensive line, most notably right tackle Jack Conklin, the Patriots’ pass rush started thumping Marcus Mariota, sacking him eight times, a franchise playoff record. The Patriots’ defense, in tatters for the season’s first month, actually yielded the fifth-fewest points in the NFL. That was a big reason — New England proved it can utterly shut down an opponent.

Officiating mattered, too. One early Titans drive stalled near midfield when officials flagged Eric Decker on a phantom pass interference call. In the second quarter, the Patriots were about to punt on fourth and five from their own 14 when an official called a false start on New England, only for the crew to huddle and reverse the call, instead penalizing Tennessee for offside and giving the Patriots a first down. Brady would cap a 16-play drive with a touchdown pass to Chris Hogan. That was a small reason — the Patriots didn’t need favorable calls, but luck never hurts any team.

By the final snaps, it had been forgotten that the Titans had once stunned Gillette Stadium into dead silence. A holding penalty on a punt return set them back to the 5-yard line, a hole Mariota dug out of immediately with a 36-year strike to tight end Delanie Walker, whom the Patriots let roam free despite his standing as Tennessee’s top target. Mariota pushed the Titans downfield, scampering for two first downs, settling them at the New England 15.

Before the snap, Mariota motioned Corey Davis, lined up his left, toward the sideline. Davis burst off the line, faked inside and bolted to the corner of the end zone, a step behind Butler. Mariota floated a pass, and as Davis held off Butler with his right hand, he hauled Mariota’s pass with his left, gorgeous proof of what the Titans saw when they chose him with the fifth pick in April. The Titans, expected to play patsy, held a 7-0 lead.

The quiet would not last — Brady responded with a surgical seven-play drive, and another party at Patriot Place had started. When third-string running back Brandon Bolden plunged in from two yards out in the third quarter, the Patriots moved ahead 28-7. House of Pain’s “Jump Around” blared on the public address system, and the stadium shook. The sky above was dark, and the temperature had dropped into the teens, and nobody wearing Patriots colors seemed to notice.

More on the NFL: Nick Foles outplays Matt Ryan, and Eagles hold off Falcons to reach NFC title game Former Dolphins assistant says cocaine video got him on the right track Despite all the bad news, poll shows football still is America’s favorite sport by a wide margin Diversity group calls for NFL to investigate Raiders for possible Rooney Rule violation

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Raptors angry with officials after controversial video review in loss to Warriors


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TORONTO — The Toronto Raptors were unhappy with the officiating in their 127-125 loss to the Golden State Warriors on Saturday, and it didn’t help that Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban suggested the Raptors could protest the game.

The mini-issue involved a replay review with one second left in the game and the Warriors ahead 125-122.

Referee Tony Brothers whistled the play dead, saying the ball went out of bounds off Warriors guard Steph Curry with one second left. On review, the referees ruled that the ball went out of bounds off DeMar DeRozan with three seconds left.

Cuban tweeted: 'Watching end of Warriors Raptors. Refs can’t go back in time for a review. They can only review the out of bounds event. #protestable'

Cuban’s point: The refs should have been looking only at the Curry portion of the play and not DeRozan’s involvement.

Said DeRozan: 'I thought you couldn’t even do that. I’m not even a referee, and I know that rule. Somebody correct me if I’m wrong.'

NBA senior vice president of replay and referee operations Joe Borgia clarified the ruling further.

'Instant replay review was used because the officials were unsure who should be awarded possession after the ball went out of bounds,' Borgia said. 'During replay, we checked the loose ball sequence at the sideline and we determined that Toronto’s DeMar DeRozan caused the ball to go out of bounds with three seconds remaining. The Warriors were awarded the ball and the clock was reset to three seconds.'

The Raptors, however, were bothered by other calls and non-calls.

'It’s frustrating being out there feeling you playing 5-on-8,' DeRozan said.

He continued: 'Some of those calls were terrible. Period.'

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DeRozan’s comments will be examined by the league office for a potential fine.

The Raptors trailed 81-54 at halftime and shot four more free throws than the Warriors. But Toronto coach Dwane Casey didn’t like the timing of calls that didn’t go his team’s way.

Casey did not agree with a foul called on Toronto’s Jacob Poeltl with Golden State up 123-122 and 45 seconds remaining. Still, Curry missed both free throws, and DeRozan, who scored 42 points, missed a jump shot with 37 seconds to go. The Raptors' C.J. Miles also missed a three-pointer with 11 seconds left and Golden State up 125-122.

'There was just so many calls down the stretch, I’ve got to look at them and see,' Casey said. 'It’s just mind-boggling that you ask the official, 'Did you see it?' 'Nah, I didn’t see it, wasn’t my call.’ I’ve got to have an explanation. I have all the respect in the world for our officials, but when you're in and have that situation — our guys fighting their hearts out and again maybe they thought we didn’t deserve it the way we played in the first half, I don’t know. But the way they scraped in the second half. It blows my mind, and I think we have the best officials in the world.'

Follow Jeff Zillgitt on Twitter @JeffZillgitt.

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Patriots dominate Titans, quieting distractions and talk of demise


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FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- At some point in every game, opponents of the New England Patriots receive the stark reminder that they have to play flawlessly, leaving no room for adverse judgments, to have a chance to beat a team that rolls through postseasons with the regularity of a metronome.

For the Titans, that realization probably arrived in the second quarter. They had held the Patriots scoreless in the first quarter and taken a seven-point lead, leaving Gillette Stadium silent with a flawless 95-yard drive capped by a pinpoint perfect touchdown pass from Marcus Mariota to Corey Davis as he sprinted for the back corner of the end zone.

In the two weeks since the Patriots last played, whispers about fissures in their foundation burst into the open, filling the vacuum created by inaction. Against that backdrop, for a minute or two, that touchdown might have started to send a frisson of nervousness through the acolytes of the Patriots empire.

Eventually that empire will crumble as they all do, and its expiration may, in fact, be as ugly as most are. But not yet. Not now. Not when the errors start to accrue for the opponents and the breaks start to go the Patriots' way and they pounce while the opponents wilt. An up-tempo drive here, an offensive pass interference call against Eric Decker there, and a very late neutral zone infraction call against the Titans on a Patriots punt and suddenly New England led by 14 going into halftime. You could practically feel, and you could certainly see, the Patriots grinding through the Titans, keeping Tom Brady clean in the pocket, getting free releases for Rob Gronkowski, sacking Marcus Mariota eight times, exerting their will on the way to a 35-14 victory.

All seemed normal for the Patriots after the victory and Brady even joked when he was asked about how much negativity has swirled around the team recently.

'Really?,' he said, feigning ignorance of the criticism. 'I've been around long enough; 18 years. There's been so many nice things said about me. That just goes with the territory. I just try to be consistent, show up and do the best I can do every week for the team and regardless of whether I'm the worst quarterback in the league or the best quarterback in the league or somewhere in-between, it's just my job is to do the best I can do for us every week.'

If you needed one snapshot of how futile it must sometimes feel to face the Patriots during this extraordinary ear, look up a third-and-10 pass from early in the fourth quarter, in which Brady was flushed from the pocket and began an awkward amble to his right. He stopped and began to fall backwards without being hit, but heaved the ball across the field, where it dropped into Danny Amendola's arms for the first down. It was improvisation of the Michael Jordan sort, one of Amendola's 11 receptions, and Gronkowski scored a few plays later. The dynasty's demise had been forestalled for at least another week.

This has been an odd Patriots' season, with an undercurrent of uncertainty about the future that accompanied the unexpected trade of backup quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo and a noticeable dip in Brady's play in the last five games of the regular season. But that dip has to be taken in context -- Brady was 35 of 53 for 337 yards and three touchdowns Saturday and is the expected winner of this season's most valuable player award. And the Patriots will host next Sunday's AFC Championship game against the winner of Sunday's Divisional game between the Jaguars and Steelers. Of all the Patriots' accomplishments, the most astounding may be that they have been to 12 AFC championship games in the 17 years that Brady has started for Bill Belichick and this will be the seventh straight.

'It's hard to win,' Belichick said. 'I think you have to give these guys a lot of credit. It's not about what other guys have or haven't done.'

For Brady, it has long been clear that the games provide some kind of refuge from whatever noise exists in his world and this week has been no different.

'I think it always feels that way and I think being on the field is a great place to, you know, that's where you go prove it,' Brady said. 'You can talk all day about what you're going to do or what you can do. Ultimately, you've got to go out there and do it. I think just having the opportunity to go play, and I've had so many great teammates over the years and this team has done such a great job this year focusing on what we need to. When you get out there, that's the best part of the week.'

Out in the bundled-up crowd Saturday night, a fan held aloft a sign: 'Ya Gotta Believe,' the rallying cry lifted from the lovable losing Mets. There, of course, hasn't been much reason to not believe in the Patriots for almost a decade. But Saturday seemed to provide some evidence that the future of the Patriots era is still worth believing in, too.

Follow Judy Battista on Twitter @judybattista.

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