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Mets strike out 26 in 14 innings to tie MLB record

Published in Baseball
Friday, 23 August 2019 22:13

The New York Mets tied a major league record with 26 strikeouts in Friday night's 2-1 home loss to the Atlanta Braves in 14 innings.

Seven members of New York's bullpen combined to match the effort of ace Jacob deGrom, who spotted the Mets 13 strikeouts before exiting after seven innings with the score tied 1-1.

The Mets are the fifth team to record 26 strikeouts in a game, and they're the second of those five to lose the game, according to ESPN Stats & Information research. The Braves join the 2004 Brewers as the only teams to win a game after striking out 26 times. Milwaukee won 1-0 in 17 innings against the Angels on June 8, 2004.

Mets reliever Jeurys Familia struck out Braves second baseman Ozzie Albies in the top of the 14th to tie the record. It was Familia's third strikeout of the inning but didn't come until after he allowed the go-ahead run to score on a Billy Hamilton single.

Between deGrom's and Familia's appearances, six Mets relievers combined for 10 strikeouts, including four by Seth Lugo, who replaced deGrom and pitched two shutout innings.

DeGrom homered and struck out eight straight batters during one dominant stretch. He finished a punchout shy of his career high -- the righty whiffed 14 and also homered to beat Miami on April 3. DeGrom became the first pitcher since at least 1900 to strike out 13 and homer in a game twice in the same season, per Elias Sports Bureau research.

"Every time out, my God, that guy has got something really special in his back pocket," Braves manager Brian Snitker said.

The reigning National League Cy Young Award winner got a no-decision anyway, the 18th time in his career he has pitched one-run ball or better over seven innings and not gotten a victory. New York is just 7-5 this year when deGrom allows one or fewer earned runs.

The Mets' previous high for strikeouts as a staff was 24, achieved June 2, 2018, against the Cubs during a 14-inning game; deGrom also struck out 13 in that one.

DeGrom's eight straight strikeouts marked the best such streak in the majors this year and tied his career high. He went over 200 strikeouts in a season for the fourth time.

"That little run, I just felt like I was able to locate whatever pitch I was throwing at the time," he said.

DeGrom's homer was the sixth by a Mets pitcher this season, the most in baseball.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

It's Players' Weekend across baseball, which means it is time for MLB stars to show off their style with creative nicknames on their jerseys, customized kicks on their feet, one-of-a-kind bats at the plate and tailor-made gloves in the field.

The start of the weekend has brought some added flair to the games along with some emotional tributes.

Here's a (running) look at the best we've seen -- and keep checking back for more, as we'll be adding to this file all weekend long.

How players are using uniform numbers to break MLB's unwritten rules

Our favorite nicknames

The nicknames

The kicks

The swag

The tributes

Diamond League moves on to Meeting de Paris

Published in Athletics
Friday, 23 August 2019 04:05

Kevin Mayer, Noah Lyles and Elaine Thompson are among the stars in action in the last Diamond League meet before the finals

The IAAF Diamond League heads to Paris on Saturday for the last meeting in the series before the finals in Zurich and Brussels.

Kevin Mayer, Noah Lyles, Elaine Thompson, Christian Taylor and Jakob Ingebrigtsen are among the entries, with the action to be held on a new Mondo track at the Stade Charlety.

France’s world decathlon record-holder Mayer will test his form on home soil in a ‘triathlon’ ahead of defending his title at the IAAF World Championships in Doha, contesting long jump, shot put and 110m hurdles events.

His compatriots Pierre-Ambroise Bosse, making a comeback after hamstring injury, Renaud Lavillenie and Pascal Martinot-Lagarde will respectively compete in the 800m, pole vault and 110m hurdles.

The 200m features 19.50 man Lyles against world champion Ramil Guliyev, while double Olympic champion Thompson goes in the 100m which also features world silver medallist Marie-Josée Ta Lou and world champion Dafne Schippers.

Among Taylor’s competition in the triple jump are Will Claye and Omar Craddock, while the women’s event features Yulimar Rojas and Olha Saladukha.

Both Jakob and Filip Ingebrigtsen contest the 1500m, while their fellow Norwegian Karsten Warholm goes up against Kyron McMaster in the 400m hurdles. Jamaica’s Natoya Goule is the fastest this season in the women’s 800m field.

Kenya’s Olympic and world champion Conseslus Kipruto returns after injury to race against Morocco’s Soufiane El Bakaali in the 3000m steeplechase.

Five athletes to have thrown over 22 metres this season, including Joe Kovacs, Michal Haratyk and Darlan Romani, go in the shot put, while Katerina Stefanidi, Sandi Morris, Jenn Suhr and Eliza McCartney contest the pole vault.

Click here for entry lists and a timetable.

Beth Dobbin building on last year’s breakthrough

Published in Athletics
Friday, 23 August 2019 14:30

Setbacks as severe as a chipped bone in her neck haven’t changed the defending British 200m champion’s aims for another big summer

More than a year on from her breakthrough to win the British 200m title, Beth Dobbin admits that her impressive progress is still sinking in.

The Scottish sprinter says going into this weekend’s Müller British Athletics Championships as a defending champion is a “surreal feeling” but her experiences over the past year have shown her not to put a limit on what she might be able to achieve.

While gaining a GB vest was a dream at the start of last summer – one which ended with her becoming a European finalist – Dobbin now knows that representing her nation on the global stage is well within reach and she intends to secure her spot for the IAAF World Championships in Doha when she returns to Birmingham on Sunday.

“Going in as the defending champion is a surreal feeling but I just know that if I could do it last year, when it was completely unknown to me, I feel like this year I’m in a better position in terms of more experience,” says the 25-year-old.

“Last year I was so nervous. Before my race I remember seeing my friend from work and tears came into my eyes. I went to the toilet and was like ‘don’t cry, don’t cry’ because I was just so nervous. This year I feel like I have matured a lot. I’m going there to qualify for the Worlds and that’s that.

“I still see myself as a 23-mid runner, I’ve not accepted actually the fact that I am running times that my idols are running so it is really weird to get used to.”

In fact, Dobbin is now a whole second quicker than that, having improved her Scottish record to 22.50 to finish third at last month’s Müller Anniversary Games behind double Olympic champion Elaine Thompson and world 100m and 200m silver medallist Marie-Josée Ta Lou.

But Dobbin says that time also came as something of a surprise, given that her winter hadn’t exactly gone to plan and she opened her summer season later than she would have liked.

“I had a bit of a weird preparation into the season,” she explains. “I had a couple of niggles and it was kind of my first experience of this so it was quite tough to deal with.

“My first couple of races, it took me a while to find my rhythm, but by Anniversary Games I felt a lot more like myself. I was rewarded with a PB and I wasn’t expecting that with how the preparation had gone.”

Dobbin is not one to make a fuss, but one of the injury issues experienced was actually a chipped bone in her neck.

“I was having a bit of pain at the back of my knee and no one really knew what it was, so I wasn’t really doing too much running but I could do everything in the gym,” she explains. “I went in the gym one day, was doing an exercise called push press, and a 60kg bar fell on my neck. I ended up in a neck brace, on one of those boards they put you on so you can’t move and do yourself any more damage, and in hospital.

“So I did have a real rough time of it throughout the winter.”

“I went in the gym one day, was doing an exercise called push press, and a 60kg bar fell on my neck”

That put paid to the ambition of going to the European Indoor Championships on home soil as part of the 4x400m squad and that knee niggle also later caused Dobbin to withdraw from the relay at the European Team Championships in Bydgoszcz as a precaution.

“When I ran a PB in London I was really taken aback because I had told myself, because I’d had an injury, that this year might not have been as good as last year,” she admits. “But I think from having such a successful year the year before, and years of training under my belt, missing a couple of months wasn’t the end of the world. After speaking to loads of other athletes, I realised that a lot of athletes go through that and I was worrying for no reason really.”

It was in the June of last year that Dobbin stormed into the sprinting spotlight by breaking Sandra Whittaker’s 34-year-old Scottish 200m record with a time of 22.84 at a UK Women’s League premier division match in Eton.

The Edinburgh AC athlete went on to improve that mark a further three times over the summer, down to 22.59 when winning her British title, and all the while she was also juggling four jobs.

She’s now part of British Athletics’ World Class Programme, so receives funding and support from the national governing body, but still does some shifts as a receptionist at Loughborough University.

“Since I’ve been competing I’ve cut down my shifts at work, but throughout the winter I was doing a couple of shifts a week to bridge that gap from being a full-time worker and training in the evenings to being a full-time athlete,” she says. “I think it would have been silly to just go cold turkey and be a full-time athlete so I was still doing two days a week at work throughout the winter.

“When you’re used to being so busy it is very weird to come home from training and think ‘what am I supposed to do now?’! It’s a great position to be in – I’m definitely not complaining! But I feel like I had to still do something.”

“I still see myself as a 23-mid runner, I’ve not accepted actually the fact that I am running times that my idols are running”

Changes also included a shake-up of her training regime, with recovery playing an important part.

“This year I’ve definitely learned that I’m not the same athlete any more,” says the sprinter, who has been coached by 2010 Commonwealth 200m champion Leon Baptiste since 2012.

“We always did a lot of training and I really pushed myself but this year we’ve had to be a bit more careful because I’m running a lot faster, so there’s more chance of injury.

“I’ve also learned not to stress out if I miss a session. Between 2015 and 2018 I think I missed one session because I had a tight hip and that’s it. So then this year, to miss a couple of months throughout the winter, it has been a learning curve for me and taught me that you can miss sessions if you’re not feeling quite right and still then go on and have a good year. I’ve definitely done a lot of learning this year.”

With the world championships not taking place until late in the season, between September 27 and August 6, Dobbin also benefits from the experience of Baptiste, who claimed his Commonwealth title in the October of 2010.

“I remember thinking of that when we had our pre-season meeting,” she says. “I knew he would do it well and be able to get me in the best shape to have a long season.

“Maybe even me picking up an injury has been a blessing in disguise because we are so fresh now. I feel like I’m itching to race.”

So how will it feel to be back on the Alexander Stadium track this weekend?

“I think it will feel quite emotional,” she says. “It will definitely feel special. I think it will give me that boost and a bit of a buzz that if I could come here last year and do it after everything that was going on with working so much, so there’s no reason why I can’t go this year and do the same.

“The women’s 200m at trials is very competitive so I have to be on my A game.

“Ultimately it is about qualifying for Worlds and finishing in that top two but it would be really nice to defend my title and that would mean a lot to me.

“Because I’m so new to the racing on TV kind of thing, I get a big buzz from that,” she adds. “When the camera comes to my face I get so much adrenaline. My mum has got the whole of my home town watching so it puts a lot of pressure on me but in a good way and I think that’s why my performances improve at races like that.”

Roger Federer says a caravanning holiday around the Swiss countryside has left him feeling the best he has "in years" before the US Open.

Federer, 38, is going for a record sixth Open era men's singles title in New York.

The 20-time Grand Slam champion, who last won at Flushing Meadows in 2008, says the trip helped him process his Wimbledon defeat by Novak Djokovic.

"Overall, if I look back, I'm very happy," Federer said.

"The way I played at Wimbledon is going to give me some extra confidence.

"This is probably the best I've felt in years coming into the US Open which is encouraging."

Federer beat long-time rival Rafael Nadal in a memorable semi-final at the All England Club, then lost to top seed Djokovic in a historic fifth-set tie-break after holding two match points.

"I struggled a little bit the first couple days. At the same time I was caravanning with my kids. I didn't have that much time thinking about all the missed opportunities," Federer, who lost to Australian John Millman in the US Open last 16 last year, said at Flushing Meadows on Friday.

"I was setting up tables and organising my life for my four children, driving around the beautiful countryside in Switzerland.

"Sometimes you have flashbacks, things like 'oh, I could have done that, should have done that'.

"The next day you're having a glass of wine with your wife thinking 'the semis was pretty good, even the finals was pretty good'. You go in phases.

"It took me maybe a couple of days to get those things out of the system, like it takes with everything.

"I've had a great run through the clay, on the grass as well, that I was not going to be too down on myself. I hope it's going to help me for here."

Federer won all five of his US Open titles consecutively between 2004 and 2008, putting him alongside Jimmy Connors and Pete Sampras in terms of victories since the Open era was introduced in 1968.

"I'm not putting extra pressure on myself," the third seed, who will play a qualifier in the first round, said.

"I know it's going to be tough. I'm not coming in as the overwhelming favourite like maybe I did back in 2006 or 2007.

"I'm very much aware of how I need to approach this tournament mentally."

Federer has only played once since his Wimbledon loss, suffering his quickest defeat in 16 years when he was beaten 6-3 6-4 by Russian Andrey Rublev at the Cincinnati Masters.

"It might be a good thing that I lost early, who knows," Federer said.

"Maybe I needed to get knocked down in Cincy, get my act together, train hard. That's what I did. Now I'm ready for the US Open."

Ramos will not umpire Williams sisters at US Open

Published in Tennis
Friday, 23 August 2019 09:19

Carlos Ramos will not umpire any matches involving Serena or Venus Williams at this year's US Open, tournament officials have confirmed

The Portuguese umpire docked Serena Williams a game for verbal abuse in last year's final against Naomi Osaka.

Williams, 37, called Ramos a "liar" and a "thief" having already received a point penalty for smashing her racquet.

She was also handed a code violation for coaching during the final in New York, which she lost in straight sets.

US Open referee Soeren Friemel says the decision is a good one for the tournament, the players and the umpires.

"We have selected the best officials for the 2019 US Open, and there is some flexibility," he told reporters at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Centre at Flushing Meadows

"It's not the first time that we made decisions that is good for the tournament, is good for the players, and is good for the umpires as well to not be on those matches.

"In the end, our goal is to assign the best chair umpire for the right match so in taking all those factors into consideration, the decision was made that he would not do any of the Williams sisters' matches."

In heated exchanges in last year's final, Williams told Ramos "you will never, ever, ever be on another court of mine as long as you live."

But the US Open says the decision has been taken "collectively," and not in response to a request from the Williams sisters.

It is not unusual for umpires to be kept away from players after a contentious match.

The Brazilian Carlos Bernardes did not umpire Rafael Nadal for a significant period after a disagreement about time violations at a tournament in Rio in 2015.

Ramos umpired this year's Australian Open semi-final between Petra Kvitova and Danielle Collins, but has not yet been given the chance to add to his tally of 10 Grand Slam singles finals.

"Carlos has worked all the other Grand Slams," Friemel added.

"He has done Davis Cup, Fed Cup, and he's going to work the Davis Cup final so he's considered still for all high-profile matches."

The US Open is the final Grand Slam of the year, and begins in New York on Monday.

Who is Liu Weishan?

Another emerging young star from the Chinese national set up, 19-year-old Liu Weishan is a right-handed attacking minded player who’s first thought is always to get on the front foot and out-hit the opponent.

Making her first big international appearance at the 2016 World Junior Championships where she achieved a top 16 finish, Liu’s standout moment at Under 18 level saw her seal gold at the 2018 Hong Kong Junior and Cadet Open.

Her exposure to the senior game has been somewhat limited, taking to the ITTF World Tour stage only twice prior to 2019. However, she had since doubled her tally with appearances at the 2019 Korea Open and 2019 Australian Open, the latter of which saw her put in a brave display against Ding Ning, losing out to the three-time World champion in a full distance battle.

Causing a stir in Olomouc

Travelling to the 2019 ITTF World Tour Czech Open with a world ranking of 255, Liu was unseeded for the women’s singles event and was thus required to negotiate two days of qualification action. Untroubled in her opening three encounters, Liu then came out on top against Germany’s Nina Mittelham in a fierce 4-3 contest to seal her spot in the main draw.

Coming through four qualification bouts can be difficult enough but the task was about to become even trickier for Liu with Japanese no.12 seed Miyu Kato awaiting in round one. With the odds in her favour it was Kato who struck first with a strong opening game performance but, all of a sudden, the situation was reversed with Liu winning four games in a row to pull off a major scalp (5-11, 13-11, 11-7, 11-5, 11-4).

A truly mesmerising performance from the young Chinese star and she backed it up with another impressive outing in round two, outpacing the no.5 seed from Singapore, Feng Tianwei to sail through with a straight games victory (11-9, 11-5, 11-8, 11-3).

Next up for Liu is a quarter-final meeting with one of her toughest opponents yet as she prepares to take on World no.10 Miu Hirano in what’s anticipated to be a wild ride.

What’s next?

Regardless of what unfolds next Liu can leave the Czech Republic with her head held high, beating two highly respected seeded players in Miyu Kato and Feng Tianwei. But, what lies ahead on the close horizon following the close of play in Olomouc?

As a member of the Chinese national set up Liu trains regularly with world class athletes, learning key lessons from the county’s finest on a daily basis and will continue to make great strides in her game as time goes on.

Sun Yingsha, 18, is undoubtedly the benchmark when it comes to the Chinese teenage scene having three women’s singles gold medals on the ITTF World Tour and now occupies the no.7 spot in the world rankings list. She still has a long way to go before the comparisons can be made but Liu Weishan is beginning to turn heads and could well be the next in a long line of future Chinese stars.

Golden days in Toronto, aiming for repeat in Lima

Published in Table Tennis
Friday, 23 August 2019 10:53

Notably, Brazil is very much to the fore. Toronto gold medallists, Aloisio Lima, Iranildo Espindola, David Andrade de Freitas and Paulo Salmin alongside Carlos Carbinatti are once again on duty, as is Luiz Guanieri Manara. Likewise the names of their female colleagues, Catia da Silva Oliveira, Joyce de Oliveira and Danielle Rauen all appear on the entry list.

Paulo Salmin starts very much the favourite to defend his title, he is the top seed in men’s singles class 7; similarly Luiz Guanieri Manara is the leading name in class 8. It is not a too dissimilar situation for Carlos Carbinatti; he is the no.2 seed in class 10 but the player who occupies the top seeded spot  is colleague Claudio Massad, the man he beat in the Toronto final.

Rather differently in class 1, Aloisio Lima does not appear amongst the seeded names; neither does Iranildo Espindola in class 2 nor David Andrade de Freitas in class 3. The respective top seeds are Argentina’s Fernando Erberhardt alongside Brazil’s Guilherme Marcio de Costa and Welder Knaf.

However, the Toronto champions can look forward in positive mood. Four years ago Aloisio Lima beat Fernando Erberhardt at the semi-final stage; in a group organised event Iranildo Espindola accounted for Guilherme Marcio de Costa, the eventual bronze medallist. Somewhat similarly, David Andrade de Freitas overcame Welder Knaf at the final hurdle.

Eyes very much on gold, in the women’s singles events, Catia da Silva Oliveira, the class 1-2 champion in Toronto is the top seed in class 2-3; she is listed one place ahead of Mexico’s Edith Sigala Lopez, the class 3 winner four years ago. In a similar vein, Joyce de Oliveira leads the line in class 4, Danielle Rauen, who in Toronto won class 9-10, is the leading name in class 8-10.

Brazil prominent; Chile is also a force with which to be reckoned; Matias Pino Lorca defends his men’s singles class 6 title, he is the no.2 seed, behind colleague Cristian Dettoni. Meanwhile, Cristian Gonzalez is the top seed in men’s class 4; in the women’s singles, Toronto bronze medallist, Tamara Leonelli, heads the class 5 list.

A notable challenge from Chile, it is the same from Argentina; in the men’s singles competition. Elias Romero is the most prominent name in class 5, in the women’s singles Giselle Muñoz is the top seed in class 7. She is one place ahead of Canada’s Stephanie Chan, the player behind whom she finished in second place in class 6-7 winner four years ago. Similarly, in Toronto, Elias Romero was a bronze medallist.

Stephanie Chan aiming again for the top prize but from North America the name to note is that of Tal Leibovitz, he heads the United States bid. Commencing in Brasilia in 2003, the now 44 year old has struck gold in the last four Pan American Games; in Lima he may well make it five.

Lima 2019 Para Pan American Games: Draws and Latest Results

Ireland coach Joe Schmidt believes rookie Ross Byrne will seize his World Cup chance in Saturday's game against England at Twickenham.

The Leinster fly-half will make his full Test debut and win a third cap, with Ireland not risking Johnny Sexton after Joey Carbery's ankle injury.

"Ross has trained really well and it's not his debut, he's had time with us before," said Schmidt.

"We've got a lot of confidence in him - he's built his way through the season."

Carbery could well miss the World Cup after damaging ankle ligaments in the 29-10 victory over Italy in Dublin on 10 August.

Byrne and replacement Jack Carty can now make their case for World Cup selection on Saturday, with head coach Schmidt assessing all his fly-half options.

"I thought Ross was maybe not as impressive as Jack early in the season, and I think those two have become really important to us," he added.

"Joey has done well this week. Johnny, he's fine, but he missed a bit of time with his thumb, so he's a little bit behind and we know how well he plays for us. We don't feel that he needs a lot of time with the experience that he's got.

"So, for us, the guys that need the time are probably Ross and Jack and they've got the opportunity to do that this weekend, that they'll share a bit of time, I'd say, in the middle."

Frontline fly-half Sexton has been recovering from a thumb sprain, and Carbery's ankle injury has whittled down Ireland's playmaking options for their World Cup warm-up encounters.

Ireland have also been handed added motivation ahead of the England clash with confirmation from World Rugby that a win would see Schmidt's men ascend to the top of the world rankings for the first time in their history.

England & Ireland name strong teams for World Cup warm-up

Published in Rugby
Friday, 23 August 2019 11:39

England and Ireland have named near full-strength sides for Saturday's World Cup warm-up match at Twickenham.

Manu Tuilagi starts at outside centre for the hosts while Ireland have made 12 changes to the experimental side that cruised past Italy.

England lost in Cardiff last weekend as Wales moved to number one in the world, but a win for Ireland will move them ahead of the Welsh in the rankings.

Ireland last won at Twickenham in 2018 when they claimed the Grand Slam.

'He's in the best physical shape'

England scrum-half Ben Youngs says Tuilagi is in the shape of his life as the 2003 World Cup winners look to release the powerful outside centre in midfield.

Tuilagi will be making his first start of the World Cup warm-up Tests having impressed off the bench in both matches against Wales.

"He's probably in the best physical shape I've ever seen him," said Youngs of his Leicester Tigers team-mate.

"We saw glimpses of it in the first two games, particularly the first Wales game with his carry, so we'll try to get him into the game early against Ireland."

Inside Tuilagi, England head coach Eddie Jones has named George Ford and Owen Farrell in the same starting side for the first time in more than a year.

Farrell will partner Tuilagi in the centre at Twickenham - something he has never done before from the start of a Test match - as Ford retains his place at fly-half.

Selecting both playmakers served England well in the early stages of Jones' era, but when the heavy duty ball-carrying options of Manu Tuilagi and Ben Te'o became available, the Australian coach changed emphasis.

Elsewhere, Jones has labelled the back row pair Tom Curry and Sam Underhill England's 'Kamikaze kids' because "they hit everything that moves".

"There's no ceiling for them," said Jones.

"Playing two guys who are pretty good at the breakdown might give us an advantage in that area."

Ireland chase top spot without their talisman

Ireland can become the best side in the world for the first time with victory, but they will have to do it without first and second-choice fly-halves Johnny Sexton and Joey Carbery.

Carbery's involvement at the World Cup is threatened by an ankle injury, offering Ross Byrne the chance to cement his place as Sexton's understudy at fly-half.

The 24-year-old from Leinster, who has won two caps, will make his full Test debut with Ireland not risking Sexton after Carbery's set-back.

And Ireland head coach Joe Schmidt says he has confidence the rookie will seize his opportunity.

"Ross has trained really well and it's not his debut, he's had time with us before," he said.

Apart from the selection of Byrne, Schmidt's selection has a much more familiar look about it after an experimental line-up secured victory over the Italians at Aviva Stadium on 10 August.

Rob Kearney, Jacob Stockdale, Bundee Aki, Conor Murray, Cian Healy, captain Rory Best, Tadhg Furlong, Iain Henderson, Peter O'Mahony, Josh van der Flier and CJ Stander are among a number of frontline players to make their seasonal bows.

After Saturday's game at Twickenham, Ireland continue their World Cup preparation games by facing Wales in Cardiff on 31 August and Warren Gatland's side again in Dublin on 7 September.

Teams

England: Daly; Cokanasiga, Tuilagi, Farrell, May; Ford, Youngs; Marler, George, Sinckler, Itoje, Kruis, Curry, Underhill, B Vunipola.

Replacements: Cowan-Dickie, M Vunipola, Cole, Lawes, Wilson, Heinz, Francis, Joseph.

Ireland: R Kearney; Larmour, Ringrose, Aki, Stockdale; R Byrne, Murray; Healy, Best, Furlong, Henderson, Kleyn; O'Mahony, Van der Flier, Stander.

Replacements: Cronin, J McGrath, Porter, Toner, Beirne, L McGrath, Carty, Conway.

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