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England's preparations for their World Cup quarter-final against Australia have been given a significant boost with the news that Billy Vunipola is now "very likely" to be fit to start.

The number eight injured his ankle against Argentina 10 days ago but continues to improve in the build-up to the clash in Oita on Saturday.

England have not won a World Cup knockout game for 12 years.

But they have beaten the Wallabies in all of their last six meetings.

Defence coach John Mitchell told BBC 5 Live: "Billy's doing really well.

"He got through restricted training activity again today, ran with the ball, did some wrestling and boxing and some sprinting on the WattBike.

"He wasn't smiling after the WattBike, but he's in good humour and progressing nicely. At this point it's looking very likely."

Vunipola was likely to be rested had England's final group game against France in Yokohama last Saturday gone ahead as scheduled, rather than being cancelled because of the threat of Typhoon Hagibis.

But the loss of that game has bought him time, even as utility back Jack Nowell once again sat out training with a hamstring injury.

Mitchell said: "Billy is a very important player to us and a very likeable player as well.

"He loves the ball in his hand. He's very good at regaining and retaining momentum. He likes carrying the ball, which is where he has his greatest influence.

"He fits well within the team, but whoever gets the nods within the 31, everyone has a role to play."

England wary of adventurous Aussies

Australia were beaten by Wales in their key pool game and struggled in the first half against both Fiji and Georgia.

But they beat the All Blacks 47-26 in August, and in Michael Cheika have a coach who plotted England's demise in the group stages four years ago before taking his team on to the final.

Cheika has yet to settle on a preferred combination at 10 and 12, but with the form of muscular centre Samu Kerevi, he has one of the stand-out performers at this World Cup at his disposal.

Mitchell said: "The Wallabies are a very clever football team, and they will be clever at the weekend.

"They've always got their ability in terms of surprise, and they love ball in their hands, which is what they thrive on.

"You've got to look at how they attack - they love the ball in hand and they love putting width on it.

"Any one of those possible 10s and nines and 12s fall into that style of football. It doesn't matter who they put there, they can all play that style.

"Kerevi is such a strong character, and they tend to move him around in structured attacks. He looks like he's really enjoying his tournament, so he's a threat we'll need to be aware of.

"But we have our own beliefs in how we want to play, and we want to embrace this opportunity and bring our strengths out."

England's training was watched on Tuesday by Australian rugby league great Ricky Stuart, now the coach of Canberra Raiders.

Stuart will be invited to share his ideas about both coaching and England's shape in the run-up to a game that could do much to define whether the Eddie Jones regime has been a success or failure.

It is 12 years since England last reached the semi-finals of a World Cup, their defeat of a much-fancied Wallabies team in Marseille in 2007 one of their great displays in the tournament.

Takaaki Nakagami Gets Honda Contract Extension

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 15 October 2019 03:54

The Honda Racing Corp. has extended the contact of LCR Honda IDEMITSU rider Takaaki Nakagami through the 2020 season.

In his second year aboard the Honda RC213V at LCR Honda IDEMITSU, Nakagami has earned nine top-10 finishes and a best result of fifth at the Italian Grand Prix in Mugello. The Japanese rider has already amassed more than double the points he scored in his rookie campaign.

After the race in Motegi, Nakagami will undergo an operation on his shoulder to resolve an injury that has troubled him throughout the season. The nature of the operation warrants an extensive recovery period, forcing the Japanese rider to end his 2019 season early.

By performing the operation now, Nakagami is aiming to be fully fit for the first test of the 2020 season in Sepang, Malaysia, on Feb. 7.

“First of all I am delighted to stay with Honda and the LCR Team,” said Nakagami. “I have been able to improve a lot this year and Honda have shown me great support and given me a very strong package. I am sure together we can continue this in 2020. About the injury, after the crash I had in Assen I found myself in some pain and lacking a bit of strength in my shoulder. I went to the doctor to fully understand the situation and while I have been able to ride with the injury, it has not been ideal so we made the difficult decision alongside Honda and the LCR Team to have this operation now.”

“We are proud to continue to support Takaaki Nakagami in the MotoGP class for the 2020 season,” said Tetsuhiro Kuwata, HRC Director – General Manager Race Operations Management Division. “As a rider he has continued to develop and grow throughout all of 2019. He is someone who inspires many young talents in Japan and Asia with his hard work and focus. I wish him all the best in his recovery and look forward to the 2020 season.”

Eckes Takes ARCA Point Lead Into Kansas Finale

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 15 October 2019 05:12

TOLEDO, Ohio – Last year’s ARCA Menards Series finale at Kansas Speedway had little championship drama, as Sheldon Creed needed to only present his car for practice to become the 35th driver to become the series champion in ARCA’s then 67-year history.

This year, it’s a vastly different story.

Christian Eckes leads the championship standings over Venturini Motorsports teammate Michael Self by 15 points heading into Friday night’s ARCA Kansas 150.

Self, with four wins this season, led the standings from the sixth race of the season at Toledo Speedway through the 19th race of the season at Lucas Oil Raceway outside of Indianapolis. He had been chased down by Eckes, who held the lead briefly after the second race of the season but dropped back to fourth after missing the third race of the year at Salem Speedway due to illness.

Eckes didn’t have much luck in his return at Talladega Superspeedway. A crash near the midway point resulted in a 26th-place finish, and leaving him even further back, in seventh place, 180 points behind.

Eckes won the following race at Nashville and began a run of thirteen top-ten finishes in the next fourteen races. Other than an eleventh-place finish at Elko Speedway, where he was spun out of fourth position on the final lap after contact while battling for the position with Self, his worst finish over that stretch was four seventh-place finishes. In the six races since Elko, he’s finished no worse than second with a pair of wins.

The march to the top of the heap wasn’t an easy one for Eckes since Self was also competing at a very high level.

After Elko, where the two contenders tangled on the final lap, Self led by 115 points. A comfortable margin, but not insurmountable. While Eckes was finishing in the top two, Self was right there with him. A pair of third-place finishes at Iowa and Pocono only ceded ten points to Eckes, which was regained when Self won on the dirt at Springfield.

The advantage was again 110 points with four races to go.

Eckes won at DuQuoin and lopped 35 points off of Self’s advantage. He’d need to make up 85 points in three races if he was to be the series champion. He caught a break at Salem when Self dropped out with mechanical problems, a 65-point gift that turned late-season momentum into Eckes’ favor.

A second-place finish in the final short track race of the season at Lucas Oil Raceway, combined with a sixth-place finish for Self, meant Eckes regained the points lead for the first time since the second race of the year.

The 15-point cushion over Self will give Eckes a slight buffer at Kansas. Depending on where Self finishes, he can finish two to four positions behind him and still lock up the title.

For Eckes, the chase to catch Self wasn’t full of tension. Rather, he and his team methodically went about their business and performed the way they knew they could when the season started.

“It’s all one race at a time for us,” Eckes said. “We don’t get nervous because the point situation has gotten closer. We knew we could run this good when the season started. We had some mediocre runs in the middle of the season but we got past those and we’ve been in the top two the last six races. That’s exactly how we felt we should be all season long.”

Despite now holding the upper hand, Eckes knows he has his work cut out for him. Self is a former winner at Kansas, taking the victory in 2017, and is one of the series’ best big-track drivers.

“We have to go to Kansas and race for it. It’s going to be tough,” Eckes said. “Michael is really good at the mile and a half tracks. We’re looking forward to it. It feels good to be in the position we are now. We really haven’t had the pressure on us all year, so it’s definitely a change of pace. At the end of the day, we just need to go do what we do and be perfect at Kansas to finish the job.”

The last lap spin at Elko was a turning point of sorts. Eckes and crew chief Kevin Reed sat down and discussed what they needed to do to get their season turned around. Mistakes were the biggest culprit, and Eckes and Reed figured out a way to eliminate them. The results were immediate and striking.

“After the Elko race we all sat down and realized that we needed to be better,” Eckes said. “We had to cut out the mistakes and capitalize on our opportunities better. It’s taken a lot of hard work and effort to get on this roll but it’s paid off.”

Three Big Races To Close Out PASS Season

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 15 October 2019 06:22

NAPLES, Maine – While the Pro All Stars Series super late model calendar is winding down, there are still three big events left to decide who the champions will be.

The PASS Modified champion will be crowned on Saturday, Oct. 19 at Oxford Plains Speedway as the Maine racing season concludes with the PASS 400 weekend.  The PASS North title will be decided at Oxford Plains and with the season finale at Seekonk Speedway on Saturday, Oct. 26. The PASS National Championship will go down to the wire at Seekonk and the return to racing at Georgia’s Lanier Raceplex.

The PASS 400 weekend at Oxford Plains will see a big Saturday of action featuring the Honey Badger Bar & Grill 150 for the PASS North super late models, plus a $1,000 to win feature for the PASS Modifieds and action for the ACT Flying Tigers, Bandits and Street Stocks.  The PASS Modified season has seen a resurgence in the division with increased car counts and seven different winners so far this year.  The race for the title will come down to points leader Spencer Morse, Jairet Harrison and Mike Carignan.

The battle for the PASS North championship has come down to four drivers, all within 100 points of one another.  New Hampshire’s D.J. Shaw looks to defend his title from a year ago, knowing that a bad finish could prove disastrous with big fields expected at Oxford Plains and Seekonk.  Fellow Granite Stater Derek Griffith has come on strong during the second half of the season and now sits just nine points behind Shaw.  Ben Rowe’s streak of having never missed a PASS North race since the series began in 2001 continues as he seeks his fifth North title. Rookie Gabe Brown is still in contention for his first series championship.

Massachusetts’ Seekonk Speedway will hold the PASS North season finale on Saturday, Oct. 29 and it will double as the penultimate race of the PASS National Championship season which will be decided in November at Lanier.  PASS will be part of a big show at Seekonk which will also feature The Haunted Hundred for the Tri-Track Open Modified Series and a $2,000 to win late model event.

It will all conclude with one of the most anticipated events of the season when PASS brings racing back to Lanier Raceplex for the first time in nearly a decade.  The Lanier National 200 will crown the 2019 PASS National champion and, hopefully, start a new fall tradition at Lanier.

Richmond Raceway winner Mike Hopkins sits 37 points ahead of defending national champion Derek Griffith, while Travis Benjamin, Ben Rowe, Ray Christian III and Jake Johnson still have a shot at the title.

In addition to the PASS Super Late Models at Lanier, Legends cars will return to the three-eighths-mile speedway with Pros/Masters, Semi-Pros and Young Lions, along with Bandoleros.

PHOTOS: Petit Le Mans

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 15 October 2019 07:00

Who said the only good hockey is in the NHL? Prospect teams all over North America offer a good look at the next wave of young talent. There are a few farm, college and junior teams that stand out for their high-end rosters, and I circle and star games on their schedules every season.

For example, Friday's game between Boston College and the University of Wisconsin featured more than 20 NHL draft picks, including five of the first 16 selections from 2019. You're always going to see a higher number of NHL-connected players in the AHL and men's college hockey, and there are few better places to watch upcoming draft talent than Canadian junior. There's an abundance of options across North America to get a glimpse of the future of the game.

Here's a look at five of the most exciting, prospect-packed teams outside of the NHL to watch this season -- and a spotlight game to check out for each team.

1. Grand Rapids Griffins, AHL

Because of the way the Detroit Red Wings have drafted recently, and due to the circumstances of this being a rebuilding year, fans can see five of the organization's past six first-round draft picks in one place. The Griffins' roster includes 2019 first-round defenseman Moritz Seider, 2018 selections Filip Zadina and Joe Veleno, 2015 first-rounder Evgeni Svechnikov and 2017 first-rounder Michael Rasmussen, who spent all of the previous season with Detroit but was sent down to get more reps at his natural position of center.

All of that talent in one place provides a unique glimpse of the organization in its development phase, reminiscent of the traditional Red Wings model of overripening prospects by using all the tools at the team's disposal. Detroit needs pretty much all of these guys to hit in one way or another. Svechnikov is older, and the time for him to maximize his value seems to be dwindling, but the rest are absolute keys to the next era of Red Wings hockey.

In addition to the first-rounders, Grand Rapids is home to the Red Wings' top goalie prospect, Filip Larsson, who spent last season with the University of Denver. Among the other notable prospects currently marinating on the farm are Finnish import Oliwer Kaski, college free agent Ryan Kuffner and recent second-round pick Gustav Lindstrom.

Game to watch: vs. Rockford IceHogs, 7 p.m. ET Nov. 15 (AHL.tv)

Korn Ferry Tour announces 2020 schedule

Published in Golf
Tuesday, 15 October 2019 01:34

The Korn Ferry Tour has announced its full tournament schedule for the 2020 season, a globetrotting slate of 28 events that will include tournaments in 20 states and four foreign countries.

The developmental circuit will once again be the main pathway to the PGA Tour, with 50 Tour cards for the 2020-21 season handed out to top finishers over the regular season and during the three-event Finals. As in previous years, the schedule will kick off with two events in January in the Bahamas – but this time with a slight tweak. With the Abaco Club severely damaged by Hurricane Dorian, Baha Mar in Nassau will serve as host of the Bahamas Great Abaco Classic. Each of the first two events will feature a Wednesday finish.

Four new events were added for the 2020 slate: the Lake Charles Championship in Lake Charles, La., the Veritex Bank Championship in Arlington, Texas, the Huntsville Championship in Huntsville, Ala., and the Live and Work in Maine Open in Falmouth, Maine. Additionally, the El Bosque Championship in Leon, Mexico, will return after a one-year hiatus. Other events outside the U.S. include the Panama Championship and the Country Club de Bogota Championship in Colombia.

Dropped from the 2019 schedule are stops in Prattville, Ala., San Antonio, Findley Lake, N.Y., and Hayward, Calif.

The schedule for the Finals will remain the same, with 25 PGA Tour cards awarded to top money earners across three events. The postseason will start with the Albertsons Boise Open followed by the Nationwide Children's Hospital Championship in Columbus, Ohio. The season will conclude Aug. 27-30 with the Korn Ferry Tour Championship in Evansville, Ind.

Click here for a look at the full 2020 schedule.

Each week on GolfChannel.com, we’ll examine which players’ stocks and trends are rising and falling in the world of golf.

RISING

Bernd Wiesberger (+8%): Few this year have climbed higher than the Austrian, whose third victory (and second Rolex Series title) this season rocketed him all the way to a career-best 22nd in the world. After missing the latter part of 2018 with a wrist injury, he’s now put himself in position for a Ryder Cup berth next year. 

Lanto Griffin (+6%): On a leaderboard that looked like a 2019 Korn Ferry Tour event, it was apropos that the two-time minor-league graduate prevailed, burying clutch putts on Nos. 16 and 18 to earn his first Tour title and alter his career.

Asian swing (+5%): The CJ Cup marks the beginning of a three-week stretch in which the big money (and no-cut tournaments) lure the stars out of their offseason slumber. First up are Jordan Spieth and Jason Day, who can prove this week in Korea how much work they’ve put into their slumping games over the past two months.

Scott Harrington (+2%): How different is life on the PGA Tour for the 38-year-old rookie? His tie for second in Houston was worth $667,500 – or roughly $120,000 less than he made in 195 career starts on the Korn Ferry Tour. Yeah, he can get used to this.

Kevin Na (+1%): After a week to reflect, Na finally decided to open up about the cryptic remarks he made in Korean following his Shriners victory. It was a smart move, for he’s teeing it up in his homeland and no longer wants to hide from his past.

FALLING

Matt Fitzpatrick (-1%): It’s been a year of close calls for the Englishman, who recorded his fourth runner-up of the season at the Italian Open, this time after pumping his tee shot on No. 9 out of bounds and taking double bogey. “It was a bit crap,” he said afterward, and it’s hard to disagree.

Houston (-2%): The expected move to Memorial Park couldn’t come at a better time, after this year’s event attracted just two top-50 players and had the weakest non-opposite-event-field in nearly five years. The involvement of Jim Crane and Butch Harmon, as well as a date change, even a few weeks earlier, could help return this tournament to prominence.

Joint events (-3%): Kudos to the European and Ladies European tours for doing what should have been done long ago on the big circuits: A tournament with men and women competing for the same title and prize money. A PGA Tour-LPGA event has been discussed since the beginning of 2017, if not earlier. Still: No progress. 

Aces (-4%): You know you’re doomed when not even pitching coach Mark Maddux’s two holes-in-one in one round – the odds of that: 67,000,000 to 1 – could boost the Cardinals, as they were rocked in Game 3 and moved to the brink of elimination.

Rules fun (-5%): OK, so follow along here: Jesper Parnevik was penalized two shots last week for NOT taking a mulligan, after his ball lipped out and hit him in the foot. His ball was supposed to be replaced, with no penalty, but because he tapped it in he was deemed to have played from an incorrect spot. Thus, two shots. Golf!

Bulgarian PM urges FA chief to resign amid racism

Published in Soccer
Tuesday, 15 October 2019 03:33

Bulgarian Football Union's (BFU) president Borislav Mihaylov has resigned following racist abuse and monkey chants from Bulgaria fans towards England players during their Euro 2020 qualifier.

Prime minister Boyko Borissov had called for former goalkeeper Mihaylov to step down after the match, won 6-0 by England, was temporarily halted by the referee to tackle abuse from the crowd under a three-step protocol by European soccer governing body UEFA.

BFU spokesman Hristo Zapryanov earlier said that the president would not resign but Mihaylov, who was also a member of the UEFA executive committee, has decided to step down.

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"I urge Borislav Mihaylov to immediately resign as president of the Bulgarian Football Union!" Boyko Borissov had posted on Facebook after the footage of Monday night's match was seen around the world on television and social media.

"It is unacceptable for Bulgaria, which is one of the most tolerant countries in the world, and people of different ethnicities and religions live in peace, to be associated with racism and xenophobia."

A group of black-clad Bulgarian fans, some of whom were making right-wing salutes, were moved from an area behind the dugout at the Vasil Levski national stadium with home team captain Ivelin Popov having tried to appeal to the supporters in a heated discussion at half time.

"[England] heard racist chanting in the first half and told the referee," he told NOVA TV. "I spoke a few times with the security in the South Stand, to try and stop them.

"We are affected by that. At the half time we spoke with the officials and England squad about whether to play the second half. Gareth Southgate thanked me because I tried to do something."

Winger Raheem Sterling backed the prime minister's call.

"A good move credits to you M. Borissov," the Manchester City striker wrote on Twitter.

Earlier, sports minister Krasen Kralev said the government would suspend relations with the BFU, including financial ties.

The BFU was not immediately available to comment. However, after Monday's match, they tried to play down the incidents.

"It's quite disappointing to focus on racism," BFU vice-president Yordan Lechkov said. "It's not serious to concentrate on that if there's a qualifier like this and we're playing against a team like England."

UEFA had ordered the BFU to partially close the Vasil Levski stadium for England's visit after supporters were found guilty of racist behaviour in matches earlier this year.

Racist chanting was heard from the stands and reported by England players to Southgate, with the referee informed and a public announcement made on two occasions.

Most of the Bulgaria players and their coach said after the match they had not heard any abuse of the visiting team.

Coach Krasimir Balakov said there had not been such racial incidents before and blamed England fans for being disrespectful to Bulgarian supporters.

"During the second half they used words against our fans which I find unacceptable," he said.

The BFU and a number of Bulgarian clubs have been fined by for racist abuse several times over the past few years.

BARCELONA -- Lionel Messi looked at Luis Suarez and, in amazement and in unison, they both rose to their feet and applauded what they'd just seen: a tightrope walker pulling out a ladder, placing it on the rope and climbing it with her hands.

The Barca pair were sat, front and centre, applauding a scene that was written to highlight his incredible balance in a Cirque de Soleil show based on his career. Messi's had a dazzling career in football -- Oct. 16 marks the 15th anniversary of his Barca first-team debut -- but how many of his peers, past and present, can boast a spectacle like this?

Welcome to Messi10 by Cirque du Soleil.

Every scene is a nod to Messi, football mixed with the literal circus. Trampolines, diabolos, acrobatics, Icarian games, vertical ropes, lion dances and a portly referee cast in the false jester role, all of it to pay homage to the Argentinian and his incredible longevity. "There's a No. 10 in all of us," runs the show's tagline, splashed across posters all over the city, from Plaza Catalunya to Barcelona's Sant Joan Despi training base.

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If you're a little bit lost, let's rewind two years, when PopArt Music, a production company, first approached renowned Canadian circus company Cirque with the idea of producing a show based on Barca's No. 10. The Beatles had been done previously; Elvis Presley, too. There's a show designed around Michael Jackson, but someone from the world of sport? Someone still active in their field? Never.

"I thought they were crazy," said Cirque's executive producer, Charles Joron, about his reaction when the proposal dropped on his desk in Montreal. "But I said: 'OK, I can't say yes or no, because it's so far away from what we've done that we have to sit down and look at it.' The theoretical numbers were there: a huge following [133 million followers on Instagram], the attraction he has and how much of an icon he is, but we had to feel that if we got involved with this we would come out with a winning composition."

There was quickly a realisation that, as Joron put it, "translating Messi into Cirque-ese" was easier than they thought. A number of words repeatedly appeared in both languages: speed, vision, balance, effort, strength, skill, dedication. All the magic Messi produces on the pitch could be translated into circus acts. Excitement piqued, the ball was rolling. The globe's greatest circus company and the world's best footballer were set for the collaboration you didn't know you wanted to see.

Two years later, the red carpet rolled out for Spanish and Argentinian royalty at Parc del Forum in Barcelona. The setting for the Primavera music festival is now the home of The Messi Show (until December), just over 10 kilometres away from Messi's Camp Nou playground. A huge white construction, 500 metres from the sea, houses two 1500-seater stands, which sandwich a stage representing a football pitch. And on the 10th day of the 10th month -- a nod to Messi's shirt number, if you missed it -- the curtain went up.

Shakira was there to see it. So, too, were actress Paz Vega and some of the cast from Netflix show "La Casa de Papel." Singers Carlos Vives and Nicky Jam were also present, along with Los Cafres, one of Messi's favourite bands. (They also supplied music to the show.) Suarez joined Messi but there was a shortage of footballers in general due to players being on international duty. Barca youngster Ansu Fati attended, as did Barca veteran Jose Pinto. The ex-goalkeeper turned music producer, and one of Messi's close friends, was a valuable go-between for Cirque during the creation process. He also wrote two tracks for the spectacle.

Messi and his wife, Antonella Roccuzzo, were the real red-carpet attraction, though. They even left the kids at home. "They'll come another night," Messi said.

Messi chose not to see anything prior to the premiere, but he had been involved in the development of the show, which isn't biographical but rather celebrates his achievements, his talent, his fans and his family.

"The first thing Messi said to me was, 'I'm glad you're not focusing on my life story, because there are commercials that do that, everyone does that. You've taken a different direction, which even interests me,'" said the show's writer and director, Mukhtar Omar Sharif Mukhtar.

Mukhtar met with Messi another four times after that first meeting.

"As a fan, if you know Messi, you know he's very quiet and doesn't like to talk about his personal life," adds Mukhtar. "My initial thought was that it would have nothing to do with his personal life. It was Messi that said: 'I want my family integrated into the show because they've been important to who I am today.' That took me back a little bit. Then I asked him more about what he wanted us to celebrate. He just said: 'It's great what you're doing, but try and celebrate my achievements more than anything.'

"We don't want to celebrate him like a god, we don't want to worship him and he has the same feelings as well."

So how did Mukhtar, a football fan growing up in England, manage all that?

He used his hip-hop background to fuse football and acrobatics to kickoff. Freestylers juggle balls and Icarian performers incredibly juggle bodies in a dance-off-style scene in a dressing room. Other scenes celebrate Messi's many attributes: The tightrope walker represents his balance, people are flung into nets high above the stage to signify more than 600 career goals to date, an artist climbs a rope ladder toward the sky to visualise the pressure of taking a penalty, a traditional Chinese act of lion pillars are a tribute to Messi's vision and somersaults end with Messi's celebration, index fingers pointing to the sky in memory of his grandparents.

Messi winced as the contortionist performed. After taking a dive, a calamitous medical team repeatedly drops him as they carry him off on a stretcher. He proceeds to twist his body into eye-popping positions, turn his head where he shouldn't and pop bones out of joints. Audience members were peeking through the gaps in their fingers. The scene ended with an ovation from Messi.

There's the referee, a stumpy chap with a squeaky voice and a whistle who knew how to tickle Messi's humour. A ball is nearly always present, as is the No. 10, but the rest is pure surrealism: There's also a streaker, a robot football, a customised six-axis industrial robotic arm and plenty more going on throughout a circus of two halves. Each one is 45 minutes long, of course.

Mukhtar insists the show is unique to Messi, even if some of it can be applied more generally: "Look at, say [Zlatan] Ibrahimovic: His show would be completely different if we were trying to do one, or David Beckham, who has a lot of fashion. With Messi, there was a certain sense of honesty that I had to take from him because that's what I saw when I met him. And even though he is where he is right now, he still feels he has a lot more to accomplish. He's still breaking records, he still feels he's not done enough.

"That's what inspired me the most, knowing that he's still going. I want that to be felt in the show."

Meanwhile, scenes overlap with montages of Messi goals, Messi moments and Messi animation on the scoreboard. Two huge 'Messi 10' shirts suffocate the stands at one stage, a Barcelona one and an Argentina one, La Albiceleste blue-and-white colours falling over Messi's head on the night as "Dia de Partit," a famous Barca chant, rings out. The show ends with Golden Balls dropping from the sky and one final banner carrying that slogan: "There's a No. 10 in all of us."

"It's about idolising Messi's hard work and telling people: 'It's not just him, you can do it, too, if you put in all the effort and work that we see in this show,'" Mukhtar says. "That message is for whatever you do in your life. It's triggering the No. 10 within you, whatever that X factor is. Whether you're a doctor, or a policeman or whatever, you can do it, if you put everything into it."

No Messi story can be totally complete without a Cristiano Ronaldo comparison. Have Cirque positioned themselves in the game's eternal debate?

"My answer is quite simple: [Messi] had the vision to have a show created about him," Mukhtar, a Manchester United supporter, laughs. "He had the vision. Anybody could have come to us and say, 'Let's do a show about Ronaldo,' but they didn't, they came to us and said, 'Let's do a show about Messi.' I am glad to be doing a show for Messi. I like the poetry of Messi's life and I am happy to be celebrating that."

Joron imagines it will be difficult to find someone as worthy as Messi for another sport-inspired Cirque show.

"You have to have something that's at that level," he says. "So once you've done Messi, you start looking around and there aren't many others that can say, 'Do me, do me.'"

While Ronaldo's PR appears much more polished, Messi now has a circus to add to a theme park that will open in China in 2020. Messi's already immortalised on the pitch, but he's now actively embracing the theatrics off it, too.

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O's righty Sugano leaves MLB debut with cramps

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EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsTORONTO -- Baltimore Orioles right-hander Tomoyuki Sugano left his...

Marlins induct Conine before son homers in win

Marlins induct Conine before son homers in win

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsMIAMI -- The Conine family had a very special Sunday.Jeff Conine be...

Sports Leagues

  • FIFA

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    International Table Tennis Federation
  • NFL

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  • FISB

    Federation Internationale de Speedball

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