McDowell fed up with yabba
Golfer Graeme McDowell lashed out at fans who shout out from the gallery following his World Challenge win this week. The classic calls of "You da man!" and "Get in the hole!" have suddenly given way to the bizarre "Mashed potatoes" line. "I'm kind of fed up with all this 'mashed potatoes' and all this rubbish that the crowd are kind of enjoying shouting right now," McDowell said after his win at Sherwood. "Keegan [Bradley] had a guy out there ... after every shot he was 'Yabba dabba doing' and it was just stupid ... It's not a lot of fun, and it's kind of becoming a little bit of a cool thing to do for the spectators. It gives them their two or three seconds of fame. But it gets a little frustrating for everyone."
Power of Hernandez
Manchester United star Javier Hernandez is so popular in his native Mexico that crime rates there drop and more women go into labour when he takes the field. Hernandez has been a super-sub for the Red Devils this season, scoring five goals in the league from just three starts and seven appearances off the bench. Mexico City top cop Jorge Carlos Martinez told the Sun the diminutive striker has a strong effect on crime when he gets on the pitch. "Crimes like car jacking, muggings and robberies go down. It seems even the criminals want to take time off to see our hero play. Also the birth rates go up." For the sake of crime numbers in Mexico, Sir Alex Ferguson might want to consider starting him more often.
Headline of the week
Goes to yours truly, who wrote a column that ran in APN's regional papers last week titled: "Five Reasons why the All Blacks can't possibly lose to England this weekend." Another example of the "arrogant" New Zealand media, as our British counterparts so gleefully put it, talking up the All Blacks. In my defence, they were all sound reasons which, if Steve Hansen had followed, his side would have soundly won at Twickenham.
Unlucky losers
The Carolina Panthers have one of the worst records in the NFL this season with just three wins from 12 games but that's still a better success rate than they have at the pre-game coin toss. Going into last week's clash against the Kansas City Chiefs the Panthers had lost 12 straight coin tosses so they gave their fans a chance to pick the call via a poll on Facebook. Remarkably the poll ended with a 50-50 split so the side had to made the call themselves yet again... and of course it was the wrong decision for the 13th straight time. The odds of that happening are 192 to 1.
Bum note
West Bromwich Albion defender Liam Ridgewell was forced to apologise to fans after an image was posted online of him wiping his backside with a £1000 worth of £20 notes. The 28-year-old admitted the photo was taken at the start of the year after he won a bet against a friend and said it wasn't meant to go public. "I only intended him to see the photo but now it's public, I can understand how it will be viewed. I am sorry for any offence it causes," Ridgewell told the Sun. The picture was sent to the newspaper by an anonymous fan who said: "The people of West Bromwich earn a fraction of what this idiot earns yet he makes a mockery of his good fortune like this. It makes me sick. We've always thought footballers were arrogant, overpaid buffoons and this just proves it."