Showing posts with label cbs sports live tv. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cbs sports live tv. Show all posts

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Derry Matthews vs Anthony Crolla live streaming Saturday Night Fight At PC | Derry Matthews vs Anthony Crolla 12 rounds, for Crolla's British lightwe

Derry Mathews battles Anthony Crolla on Saturday NIGHTS

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DERRY MATHEWS has delivered a chilling warning to British lightweight champion Anthony Crolla (23-2). The Liverpool man (29-6-1) challenges for ‘Million Dollar’ Crolla’s cherished Lonsdale belt at Oldham Sports Centre on Saturday night (April 21).

He warned: “Anthony has never been cut, been floored and got up to win.
“He is like John Murray. He comes forward, is very brave but never been hit and that is what I am going to put to him.

“I am going to take him to places he has never been before.”




Mathews, 28, also insists he has not been troubled by a nose injury that has handicapped him in recent fights.

He challenged Gavin Rees for the European crown last October, but the fight ended in a technical draw because of unlucky Derry’s broken nose.

Cut also played a part in a setback against unbeaten Italian Ermano Marsili in January.

Mathews added: I have had excellent sparring with Alex Arthur and Steve Williams. I have done over 40 rounds and my nose has held up.

“I have had it checked by a surgeon and everything is all right.”

Other Contests: Matty Askin v Jon Lewis Dickinson (10×3 vacant English cruiserweight championship and British title eliminator), Stephen Foster Jr v Jose Antonio Elizabeth (6×3 super-featherweight), Jazza Dickins v Yuri Voronin (6×3 super-bantamweight), Lucas Browne v Paul Butlin (6×3 heavyweight), Adam Little v Chris Jenkinson (6×3 welterweight), Tommy Stubbs v Gavin Reid (4×3 bantamweight), Ryan Doyle v Selected Opponent (4×3 featherweight).

Boxing starts at 6.15pm and tickets are on sale. They are priced at £35 general admission, £55 floor seating, £75 ringside and £100 VIP Ringside. You can buy by calling the Hatton Box Office 01925 755 222, Ticketmaster 0844 847 2500, Ticketline 0844 888 9991, any boxer on the bill or online

REPORTS: In October 2006 a young Derry Mathews produced the best performance of his fledgling career by beating hometown favourite Stephen Foster Jnr at the MEN Arena. There was a buzz amongst ringsiders following the performance – most had picked Foster, the few who picked Mathews had felt it would be close, no-one expected Mathews to win as clearly as he did.

Making his debut way down the undercard that night was Anthony Crolla, boxing his way to a four round points victory in a fight that was overshadowed by the big names on the bill (Calzaghe, Maccarinelli and the then hot prospects Kell Brook and Nathan Cleverly). Only the utterly devoted boxing fans in the arena took any notice of Crolla, knowing he was an ABA champion with a burgeoning reputation around the north-west.

Five and a half years later the pair meet at Oldham Sports Centre with Crolla very much the favourite to win. If you’d said to the spectators that night at the M.E.N that Mathews would fail to win a major domestic title in his career, most would’ve laughed at you. That’s exactly what’s happened though and time is running out for the affable Scouser to change it. Saturday night may be his last chance.



Mathews built on the Foster victory with good wins over John Simpson and Matthew Marsh before his career disintegrated with four stoppage defeats in five fights. He briefly retired before coming back less than a year later to try and rebuild his once promising career. After a few fights he entered the Prizefighter tournament, and whilst he was overwhelmed in two rounds by Gary Buckland in the final, two good performances prior to that had shown there was still something left in the tank for Mathews to build upon.

Things had been going well for Mathews up until his two most recent fights. A horrendous looking broken nose caused by an accidental headbutt brought his challenge for the European title to an abrupt end – the fight against Gavin Rees being declared a technical draw. Mathews had done okay in the three completed rounds but there was a feeling Rees was starting to control things little by little as the fight progressed.

His last fight was far more damaging; he took a shellacking against Emiliano Marsili, getting stopped in the seventh round. Mathews never looked at ease against Italian southpaw and was methodically beaten up, getting dropped in the process. There were one or two signs that night that Mathews may be on the slide – he’s only 28 but he’s had a career full of hard fights. Mathews has said in the build-up to this fight that he feels fresh but he also honestly admits that he knows his career is at risk if he loses.

The five and a half years have been more successful for Crolla, who is still on the rise after overcoming a couple of defeats early in his career. He’s been very active since his points loss to Gary Sykes three years ago and has shown improvement in nearly every one of those fights. This will be the second defence of the British lightweight title he won against John Watson last year, having beaten Willie Limond on points in his first defence.

During the last 12 months Crolla has seen a big fight with Erik Morales fall through - an opportunity one feels he would’ve taken. He hasn’t seemed too downhearted about missing out on the chance to make a name for himself worldwide though – testament to his laidback nature and quiet determination to succeed no matter what.

Mathews has the edge in power and is somewhat underrated as a boxer – he can look very good when he’s in full flow. Unfortunately for him the good patches rarely seem to last for the duration of a fight, if he doesn’t find his rhythm or cause significant damage early, he tends to lose confidence and struggles as the fight wears on. He’s not got the sturdiest of chins either and can be hurt to the body – as seen in his fights against Buckland and Marsili.

Crolla might not be a big puncher but he hits crisply and accurately enough to discourage opponents. He puts his combinations together beautifully and can be relentless when he starts finding the target – he’s adept at reading an opponent and making small adjustments to punish their mistakes and weaknesses. If he finds Mathews easy to hit, which one feels he will, he could replicate the beating Marsili dished out.

Both are good body punchers, Mathews’ left hook downstairs being particularly impressive, but one feels Crolla will box intelligently enough to avoid taking too many clean shots and will make Matthews pay every time he leaves his defences open – something which he often does when trying to land his own shots.

Matthews is as game as they come and he’ll make the fight entertaining, history suggests he may come a cropper in doing so though. Unless Matthews lands something big early, it’s hard to envisaging him outboxing the quicker, fresher Crolla over twelve rounds. Crolla, who’s usually patient early on, should be able to pick Mathews apart increasingly as the fight progresses, forcing a mid-to-late rounds stoppage.

The pick of the undercard, and possibly the fight of the night, sees unbeaten Matty Askin take on Jon-Lewis Dickinson for the English cruiserweight title. Askin carries serious power – especially in his right hand, but he’s untested and Dickinson is a good fighter with more experience.

The fight should show us how good Askin is and may answer one or two questions that haven’t been asked before. It’s got all the makings of an intriguing fight. Providing Askin’s chin is solid and his stamina holds up, he should come through a tough test to win on points.

Monday, April 2, 2012

Kansas Jayhawks vs Kentucky Wildcats live streaming NCAA Basketball 2012 Final Four HD satellite coverage on pc

Kentucky-Kansas: Great for the game

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The Kansas Jayhawks will look for one final upset Monday against the heavily favored Kentucky Wildcats as college basketball's national title will be earned.

Kansas was getting blown out by Ohio State Saturday, but rallied in the second half to win. Kentucky meanwhile handled Louisville, turning back repeated Cardinal runs to advance.

The Jayhawks improved their record as an underdog, while the Wildcats faltered for bettors, just failing to cover 8.5 points. The Final Four odds reflect the talent disparity in this game, but Kansas continues to produce scrappy efforts with superior hustle and conditioning.

Over the past 10 games for each team, the stats are almost identical. The average score for Kentucky is 73-62. For Kansas, it's 74-63. The average margin of victory is almost identical.

This game could come down to offensive rebounding where Kansas is ggressive and Kentucky vulnerable. [ Bet Kansas vs Kentucky at PC

If nothing else, it offers Kansas the chance to stay close to Kentucky and to blunt some of their scoring runs.

Kentucky beat Kansas 75-65 in November, but that was a preseason battle with little bearing on this match. In the three previous meetings, Kansas won and covered each time dating to 2005.

The Wildcats sit at 37-2 (16-21-1 ATS) on the season. By comparison, the Jayhawks are currently 32-6 (19-17-1 ATS). Looking to wager on the totals? Kentucky is 16-19-2 OU, and Kansas is 14-22-1 OU.

View Kansas vs Kentucky Odds and Stats.

Betting Line:
The Jayhawks opened as 6-point underdogs at many online sportsbooks and it was bet up to -6.5 quickly at 5Dimes. The total opened at 139.5 at TopBet.

Power Rankings / Prediction:
The Odds Shark Power Rankings have the Wildcats at No. 2 and the Jayhawks at No. 8 heading into this contest. Handicapping models at Odds Shark project a 85-81 result in favor of the Wildcats.

How They Match Up:
Rating these schools in several key categories is important for handicappers and Kentucky has the nation's No. 15-rated offensive output, at 77.6 PPG. The visiting Jayhawks defense ranks No. 42 allowing on average 61.6 PPG. The Wildcats FG% has averaged 49% so far, more than the Jayhawks marksmen have achieved on the year, 47.5% per game.

Defensively, Kansas features the nation's No. 18-rated defense on the road, allowing 61.5 points per game. Kentucky, meanwhile, comes in at No. 25 nationally in scoring at home.

Kansas was a 64-62 winner in their most recent outing at home against Ohio State. They covered the 3-point spread as underdogs. The Jayhawks grabbed a 64-62 win over the Buckeyes on Saturday, behind a 19-point effort from Thomas Robinson at Mercedes-Benz Superdome.

Kentucky was a 69-61 winner in their most recent outing at home against Louisville. They earned a push of the 8-point spread as favorites. The Wildcats grabbed a 69-61 win over the Cardinals on Saturday, behind an 18 -point effort from Anthony Davis at Mercedes-Benz Superdome.

After a disjointed season rocked by scandal and suspensions and an NCAA tournament with limited drama and no buzzer-beaters, we end up on the basketball court-turned-stage with Kentucky and Kansas.

That's Kentucky, with 2,089 wins, good for No. 1 all-time.

And Kansas, with 2,070 wins, ranking second all-time.

It's as if James Naismith and Adolph Rupp got together on St. Peter's court and said, "Enough. Let's give the folks what they want."

[+] EnlargeKansas
Derick E. Hingle/US PresswireFrom James Naismith to Phog Allen, Kansas knows tradition.

This is a national championship built for both the basketball die-hard and the hoops neophyte, a perfect marriage of old-school tradition and current day name branding.

Those reared in the cradle of college basketball will love this game for its history, for a nostalgic past that somehow has gotten mucked up amid NBA age limits that rob the sport of dynasty building.

And the newbies, the ones who don't know Danny Manning from Peyton, will appreciate seeing the best of the best, even if their college tenure is short-lived.

But everyone knows that there are certain places where college basketball matters most.

Two of those places are Lawrence and Lexington.

"Kentucky and Kansas, Rupp and Allen, Naismith and Rupp," Kentucky coach John Calipari said. "It should be an exciting game."

And it's a game that is good for the game.

Sports are best when the best are good.

Does anyone really care if the Marlins win the World Series?

Not really. We are a society that consumes excellence and idolizes greatness.

We embrace upstarts but ultimately, we love the blue bloods and these two blue-wearing schools are as royally blooded as they get.

"I dreamed about [a matchup with Kentucky] as soon as I saw the brackets," Kansas coach Bill Self said. "I said, 'How cool would it be to play Kentucky in the finals?'

"I do think it's pretty neat that you have the two winningest programs of all time hooking up. The bluest of the blue bloods getting a chance to play."

Kansas and Kentucky are sepia-toned history pages come to life, places where you can blow the musty odor off the reference books and practically feel the past seeping through the pages.

There's Wilt Chamberlain and Dan Issel, The Unforgettables and Danny Manning and the Miracles.

From all-time wins to most appearances in the Final Four (Kentucky 15, Kansas 14) to national titles (seven for the Wildcats, three for the Jayhawks), the two programs own the game's history.

Yet neither lives in the past, holding on to their laurels in the hope people will remember them. The two are as relevant today as they were back in the day. Kansas won a national title in 2008 and Kentucky played in the Final Four in 2011.

And while their ardent fan bases might treat their players like rock stars and losses like familial tragedies, their reach extends beyond their alumni bases.

This is what the game needs and craves and, frankly, deserves.

Unfortunately the undercard storyline might dominate the conversation in the immediate afterglow -- whether this national title game will serve as a referendum on how to win in the current college basketball landscape.

[+] EnlargeAnthony Davis
Mark Zerof/US PresswireFor better or for worse, Monday's title game might be viewed as a referendum on one-and-done in college basketball.

There are recyclables that will spend more time in Lexington than most of the current Wildcats roster. Within days of the national championship, most will announce their intention to move on to the next stage of their life, continuing a dizzying turnover that has hit UK since Calipari took over the program.

Calipari won't apologize for capitalizing on the system, nor should he.

It is not like he is the only one who tried to recruit Anthony Davis, Michael Kidd-Gilchrist and Marquis Teague. He merely got them.

All of them.

But if Kentucky wins, plenty of people will decry the end of college basketball as we know it.

Meantime, Kansas is the throwback winner, a team that doesn't count a freshman or sophomore among its starting five.

The Jayhawks came up the old-fashioned way, gaining minutes as they gained experience, getting better as they got accustomed to one another.

That it is by default rather than design will get lost in the shuffle. The truth is, Bill Self lost two freshmen to academic ineligibility early and has had his share of one-and-dones, too.

But his team, should it win, will be lauded as proof that building teams as opposed to assembling rosters is the way to go.

And should all of that overshadow this national championship, it will be a shame. To quote every coach's favorite cliché, the game is what it is.

For better or worse, it's not changing.

So instead of bemoaning what might come, let's embrace what we have here: an epic title game, a rhapsody in blue if you will.

As the song says, the ball goes up.

And delightfully, it is Naismith and Rupp hosting the jump.

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