Michael Lewis and his Jaguar XKR took the 2019 U.S. Majors Tour Southeast Conference GT-1 Championship title. (Mark Weber Photo)
TOPEKA, Kan. – The SCCA U.S. Majors Tour Southeast Conference has concluded its season and crowned champions across 28 divisions.
Nearly 900 racers took part in the Southeast Conference’s 12-round season that held court at six different venues.
A handful of racers claimed their championships by the thinnest of margins. In B-Spec, David Daughtery and his Honda Fit tied with the MINI Cooper of Bradley Davis, both amassing 142 points during the Southeast Conference season. However, Daughtery claims the championship as he managed to garner four victories as compared to the two wins Davis claimed over eight races.
The GT-Lite class was decided by a single point as Paul Mevoli and his Nissan Sentra gathered up 93 points as compared to the 92 points earned by David Stephens and his Datsun 510 machine. Finishing four points behind Stephens was Ted Phenix driving an Austin Cooper S.
The championship in two other classes was decided by only two points. In H Production, Will Perry and his Honda CRX took the top spot by accumulating 150 points with six wins over the course of six races while Michael Miller, driving an Austin Healey Sprite, harvested 148 points over eight races.
In the Touring 3 class, Tomas Ballester and his BMW SE46 collected the championship with 149 points, which was two more points than runner-up Philip Cunningham could manage in his Ford Mustang. Only five points behind Cunningham was the BMW 330ci of Broderick Baugess. Incidentally, both Ballester and Cunningham competed in every Southeast Conference race weekend during the year.
Five points was the margin of victory in GT-1 for Michael Lewis in his Jaguar XKR as they bested Juan Vento’s Chevrolet Corvette, and Touring 2 was decided by nine points with Cooper MacNeil and his BMW M3 claiming the championship over John Logiudice piloting a Chevrolet Corvette.
The two largest classes in the Southeast Conference this year were Spec Racer Ford Gen3 (SRF3) and Spec Miata (SM). Preston Pardus ended up at the top of the chart in SM, beating out nearly 150 other competitors. And of the 113 drivers who challenged for the SRF3 championship, Brian Schofield came out on top.
Conference points are awarded to the top 20 finishers in each class. Winners earn 25 points, and 21 points go to second. Points are then doled out to others starting with 18 and descending to a single point for the 20th finisher. Only the best eight finishes at Southeast Conference races count towards a driver’s point total.
Below are Southeast Conference Champions with Class: Name, Hometown, SCCA Region and Car. -American Sedan: Kelly Lubash; Stanford, CT; New England Region; Chevrolet Camaro -B-Spec: David Daughtery; Fortville, IN; Indianapolis Region; Honda Fit -E Production: Peter Norton; Pelham, NC; North Carolina Region; Caterham Seven -F Production: Ken Kannard; Sebring, FL; Atlanta Region; Mazda Miata -H Production: Will Perry; Sale Creek, TN; Chattanooga Region; Honda CRX -Formula 500: Russell Strate Jr.; Alden, NY; Western New York Region; Scorpion S-1 -Formula 1000: Michael Crowe; Chattanooga , TN; Central Florida Region; Citation -Formula Atlantic: Spencer Brockman; Westport, CT; New England Region; Swift 014 -Formula Continental: Charles Moran; Oakton, VA; Old Dominion Region; Van Dieman RF99 -Formula Enterprises: Ray Mason; Blacklick, OH; Ohio Valley Region; SCCA FE Mazda -Formula Enterprises 2: Scott Rettich; Columbus, OH; Ohio Valley Region; SCCA FE2 Mazda -Formula F: David Livingston Jr.; Nashville, TN; Tennessee Region; Spectrum 14H -Formula Mazda: Robert Noell; Kure Beach, NC; Central Carolinas Region; Star Formula Mazda -Formula Vee: Stevan Davis; Danielsville, GA; Atlanta Region; Racer’s Wedge SB-1 -GT-1: Michael Lewis; Poway, CA; San Diego Region; Jaguar XKR -GT-2: David Tuaty; Miami, FL; Florida Region; Porsche 991 GT3 Cup Car -GT-3: William Wilson; Englewood, TN; Atlanta Region; Mazda RX-7 -GT-Lite: Paul Mevoli; Treasure Island, FL; Central Florida Region; Nissan Sentra -Prototype 1: Jacek Mucha; Highland Beach, FL; Florida Region; JMS016CP Mazda -Prototype 2: Thomas Kaufman; Cheriton, VA; Florida Region; West WXR101 -Spec Miata: Preston Pardus; New Smyrna Beach, FL; Central Florida Region; Mazda Miata -SRF3: Brian Schofield; Lakeland, FL; Central Florida Region; Spec Racer Ford Gen3 -Super Touring Lite: Danny Steyn; Fort Lauderdale, FL; Florida Region; Mazda MX-5 -Super Touring Under: Paul Azan; Miami, FL; Florida Region; BMW 328 -Touring 1: Joe Aquilante; Phoenixville, PA; Philadelphia Region; Chevrolet Corvette -Touring 2: Cooper MacNeil; Hillsdale, IL; Colorado Region; BMW M3 -Touring 3: Tomas Ballester; San Juan, PR; Florida Region; BMW SE46 -Touring 4: Bryan Horowitz; Palmetto Bay, FL; Florida Region; Scion FRS
TORONTO -- Oilers captain Connor McDavid says he's "working towards" being ready for the start of training camp.
The 22-year-old star center injured his left knee in April when he crashed into a post during Edmonton's regular-season finale. X-rays were negative but a subsequent MRI found a small tear in the posterior cruciate ligament.
McDavid appeared Monday at the annual BioSteel camp, a training program for NHL players.
In June, he wore a brace at a charity event. On Monday, he did not skate but appeared to be walking fine. He says he has been skating for a "couple months" and training with former NHL player Gary Roberts.
McDavid was second in league scoring with 116 points last season. The Oilers missed the playoffs for the third time in his four NHL seasons.
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- Jacksonville Jaguars long-snapper Matt Overton has an idea to solve the problem of disgruntled Indianapolis Colts fans wanting refunds on their season tickets: Message him. He'll buy them.
Overton, who played five seasons with the Colts (2012-16), made that offer on Twitter on Monday morning after seeing reports on social media that Colts season-ticket holders, upset over the abrupt retirement of quarterback Andrew Luck, wanted their money back. He said he plans to donate the tickets to Riley Hospital for Children in downtown Indianapolis.
To any angry Colts season ticket holders who are seeking a refund,
I'd be more than happy to buy your season tix off of you & donate them to @RileyChildrens patients & their families. I'm serious.
"Riley Hospital is near and dear to me," Overton said. "It's near and dear to the entire community of Indianapolis and if we can help these kids and families go to a game and cheer on their favorite team, the Colts, let's make it happen."
Overton hadn't gotten any takers on his offer by mid-afternoon, but he did get a lot of positive feedback and support of his tweet.
A Colts spokesman said the team has received only a handful of calls seeking refunds, adding that they've also been selling single-game and season tickets as normal since Luck's announcement.
Overton still lives in Indianapolis in the offseason and said his fiancée is from the city, too, and that he "loves calling Indy home." He knows how devastated the Colts fan base was when ESPN's Adam Schefter broke the news of Luck's decision to retire on Saturday night, but he was upset with the harsh words and criticism Luck got on social media.
"You can obviously tell he's going through a real big struggle and has been for quite some time now," Overton said. "Being former teammates with him and playing alongside him for five years I know the man he is, the competitor he is, the teammate he is and people are questioning his character and his toughness and all that kind of stuff, and I just think it's B.S. The dude is incredibly strong. He's obviously going through some very difficult decisions right now and made a very difficult decision to retire.
"It's hard on the fan base. It's hard on the team. It's hard on the organization. And it's hard for guys like me who played with him and friends to see him going through that. Just hopeful that he finds that peace and joy and his health going forward."
It has played five exhibition games ahead of the 2019 FIBA World Cup, and there are some warning lights going off. The Americans are low on star power and international experience. Their big men can be suspect, their shooters are inconsistent and their lack of chemistry shows up all the time, particularly during wild turnover binges.
This isn't quite the same, but it is reminiscent of the run up to the 2004 Olympics when the Americans leaked oil on an exhibition journey through Europe on the way to the Athens Games. There were more than a few rumblings leading up to those losses and that bronze-medal finish.
Even Monday morning's 84-68 win over Canada in Sydney was not an impressive performance. Their defensive intensity was improved from their loss over the weekend to Australia, but they didn't make a 3-pointer in the second half -- they were just 2-of-14 in the game -- and had more turnovers than assists, among other issues.
At this point, there are probably a handful of countries that believe they can wrestle the World Cup from the U.S., the two-time defending champs, when tournament play starts this weekend in Shanghai. Earlier this month, Team Serbia coach Sasha Djordjevic said: "Let's let [Team USA] play their basketball and we will play ours, and if we meet, may God help them."
The Australians already have beaten the U.S. The Spanish and the French probably quietly harbor belief too. The Greeks will have the tournament's best player in 2018-19 NBA MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo. And in a 40-minute game, anything is possible.
"We've learned," Team USA guard Donovan Mitchell said, "that this is going to be a dogfight."
Here is why Mitchell and the rest of Team USA lack any real margin for error as this unheralded group prepares for its Sunday opener in Shanghai:
Team USA lacks a proven bailout option
Over the past 12 years or so, whenever the Americans were in trouble in an FIBA event, they had a white-hot star (or three) to bail them out. Kobe Bryant played this role, Carmelo Anthony did too. Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving, LeBron James and so on.
The Americans doesn't have that -- at least a guy who has proved it -- to lean on when:
They have a bad shooting night.
One of their heavy hitters is in foul trouble (this happened with Mitchell in the loss to the Aussies).
They have a bad defensive quarter.
The other team gets unusually hot shooting.
This reality requires a sense of urgency the national team hasn't been used to. This is a formula for how gold medals slip away.
This group is good -- here's why they're not great
OK, now that we've said that, it doesn't mean doom. These FIBA games often resemble NCAA tournament games, in which guard play is vital. The U.S. has the best guards in the tournament: Kemba Walker and Mitchell will easily outplay opponents at times; Marcus Smart, when he gets into shape after his calf injury, is going to get in the heads of the other teams; and Joe Harris might be the best 3-point shooter in the event.
But just like in March Madness, often it is one team with less talent but lots of experience together going up against a loaded but unproven roster. The chalk wins a lot, but the upsets happen in one-game scenarios. In the 2016 Olympics, the U.S. guards were Irving, Kyle Lowry, Klay Thompson, DeMar DeRozan and Jimmy Butler. Those are five All-Stars. This team has one All-Star guard in Walker.
There's also the shooting struggles. Before Monday's woeful 3-point effort, this group was shooting over 40% from long range in the exhibition games. There's a lot of firepower from Brook Lopez to Harrison Barnes to Khris Middleton, though Middleton has mostly shot poorly so far. They have an array of dangerous shooters. If they hit 40% in any game, they probably will win with some ease.
But if and when they are off, they don't have interior scoring to count on. Walker and Mitchell are a small backcourt by elite standards, and size can bother them. They also don't have great isolation players, though Jayson Tatum shows flashes.
They've worked to remedy this by creating a high-passing offense, but their sharing and assist output has varied wildly -- so count on there being dangerous moments because of it.
Lack of star power but not clarity
Being around the team in the lead-up to the World Cup, there does seem to be an acceptance to these challenges. In the past, the U.S. lost competitions because it didn't respect its opponents or was haphazard in preparation. That does not seem to be the case here.
Coach Gregg Popovich is dead serious about this job and has spent months in preparation. He and managing director Jerry Colangelo typically operate in different spheres in the world of basketball; but from this viewpoint, they have worked together to build an infrastructure that is giving the U.S. the best chance here.
It's no one person's "fault" this is a team with the lightest star power since the Dream Team started. It's a combination of factors, from schedule changes to new rest procedures to injuries to trends.
After a couple of losses in the 2000s, stars were crawling over each other to be part of righting the ship. Now that the team hasn't lost in a major competition in 13 years, the urgency is diminished. It's not cool right now for the biggest names to play, and they look for reasons to skip it. Players are more concerned about the perception of being cut than the desire to win a spot.
This is reality, and it has strained USA Basketball's operation, which had been platinum-level successful. Often in basketball, defeat is the result of a dozen little things going wrong. If there isn't gold on the Americans' necks on Sept. 15 in Beijing, then that might end up having been the case.
But the flip side also can be true: If the 2019 version of Team USA is able to overcome these curveballs and challenges, then this will have truly been an accomplishment. Winning this one is absolutely not a given, and that alone could make it worth more.
That is something everyone associated with the team is very aware of as they head for China.
CONCORD, N.C. — According to published reports from FOX Sports, NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series competitor Tyler Dippel was arrested last week in New York.
When New York State Police Troopers spoke to Dippel and his unnamed passenger, they offered different stories about where they were coming from and traveling to.
Dippel gave Troopers consent to search the vehicle, which is when the Troopers discovered the drugs, Amphetamine and Dextroamphetamine, in a pill bottle with someone else’s name on it inside a backpack. The drugs are often found in the prescription drug Adderall.
As a result, Dippel was charged with criminal possession of a controlled substance — 7th degree. FOX Sports reported that Dippel’s court date is set for Wednesday, Aug. 28 at 9 a.m. in Middletown, N.Y.
This isn’t Dippel’s only brush with the law this year. The 19-year-old from New York was also charged with reckless driving earlier this year in Virginia according to the FOX Sports’ report, which cited online court records. He was later convicted of the lesser charge of improper driving.
Dippel was in the midst of his first full season in the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series with Young’s Motorsports prior to his suspension. He was replaced in the No. 02 Chevrolet Silverado on Sunday at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park by D.J. Kennington.
Unai Emery's resume is what will likely get him a pass for what Arsenal fans saw on Saturday. A decade at the highest level with Valencia, Seville and Paris Saint-Germain, often succeeding because of his tactical nous and his ability to read opponents and exploit their weaknesses, means that you want to give the benefit of the doubt. But having watched the approach to Liverpool away at Anfield, it's a tough thing to do.
It's not just the midfield diamond that ceded the flanks to Jurgen Klopp's crew (who, for those not paying attention, have two pretty darn good providers in Andy Robertson and Trent Alexander-Arnold). Nor was it the decision to try to keep possession without Lucas Torreira, your second-best passer. Nor was it the insistence on playing out from the back against arguably the best high-press team in the Premier League, just a week after another high-press team, Burnley, had given them fits. And, for that matter, neither was it the reluctance to occasionally mix in the long ball (the two times they did it, it worked well) when you have speedy forwards like Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Nicolas Pepe.
It's that it's really difficult to figure out what pathway Emery sees towards success at Arsenal.
There's nothing wrong with adding Dani Ceballos for a season in midfield, but if you're trying to build something, do you really want everything to hinge so heavily around a guy who's there on loan? And given that it's hard to find a natural home for Mesut Ozil and Henrikh Mkhitaryan in the setups he has used this season, is it really wise to write them off at this stage?
Arsenal finished two points away from third place last season in Emery's first Premier League campaign. They may well hit the target this season, or come close to it, but that has more to do with issues elsewhere. The real goal has to be reducing the 27 points that separated them from Liverpool in second. It's not clear at all that Saturday did that.
As for the European champions, they played with big-game vitality and intensity as Klopp opted to turn in one of his extreme high-press performances. I'm not sure how often we'll see that from him this season. It's extremely taxing on the front men and the midfielders, which is why, incidentally, you should expect more rotation in the middle of the park this year. Not to mention the fact that you're always vulnerable to the ball over the top or teams with enough quality to break the press wide open.
All that said, in one-offs and for shorter spurts during games, it remains a devastating weapon.
Real Madrid still a mess
Against Valladolid, Real Madrid managed to field not just an entire XI without newcomers, but also one where every outfield player was on the club's books since at least 2014. Sure, Eden Hazard is injured (and you assume they'll make room for him when fit) but apart from two Luka Jovic substitute appearances, we haven't seen any of the four new signings. Instead, we're seeing plenty of James Rodriguez and Gareth Bale, two guys with giant "For Sale" tags around their necks for most of the summer.
Zinedine Zidane is doing things his way, and to be fair, the Pep Guardiola-style 4-1-4-1 we saw in the first half Saturday is worth revisiting. Less impressive was the late collapse that left two points on the table. And the fact that Valladolid's equaliser was scored by a guy named Guardiola (Sergi, no relation, although he was once on Barca's books), makes it hurt a little bit more.
I made this point before but it's worth making again: no clean sheets and two points dropped after two games does not mean Real Madrid absolutely need to sign Neymar. Their four new signings have played a total of 34 minutes, and they're already stacked in Neymar's position. (What's more, Zidane is getting those guys on the pitch.)
There may be a price/package at which Neymar makes sense, but most likely, there isn't.
Tottenham's Eriksen problem
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Should Harry Kane have been given a penalty vs. Newcastle?
Shaka Hislop weighs in on Jamaal Lascelles' challenge on Harry Kane that wasn't given as a penalty, in Tottenham's 1-0 loss to Newcastle.
Tottenham knew what they were getting when Newcastle United rolled into town. They were taking on an embattled veteran manager who had lost his first two games and was getting criticised locally. No prizes for guessing what Steve Bruce was going to do: sit deep with a virtual 7-2-1 formation and pray for the best.
Mauricio Pochettino's negativity over Eriksen and his contractual situation -- he recently called it "difficult" and said he "didn't know" if the Dane had played his last game for the club -- is understandable to some degree, and you can find some sympathy too. But equally, that's not a reason to bench him or, for that matter, Jan Vertonghen, the guy who was (and maybe still is?) Tottenham's vice-captain until last season.
You can blame the media for many things but there are legitimate questions to answer about the club's strategy and the degree of freedom which Pochettino has -- or maybe doesn't have -- as manager.
Refs ruin Fiorentina vs. Napoli?
After the wild Magic Mountain ride that was Napoli's 4-3 win away to Fiorentina in Serie A's curtain-raiser, the last thing you want to do is talk referees. But that crew, particularly with the penalty Dries Mertens "won," leaves little choice.
You can understand the mistake in awarding it -- referees are human and Davide Massa isn't just human, he's not particularly good either -- it's harder to accept why VAR didn't ask him to take another look. The whole crew is likely to sit out the next round (and Mertens, reportedly, could face retrospective punishment), which is encouraging.
On the pitch, Fiorentina's young ones (who later made way for the golden oldies, Franck Ribery and Kevin-Prince Boateng) were fun to watch and played without fear. It will be a transition season, but the future is bright. As for Napoli, the Smurf Squad did its thing and with Arkadiusz Milik and Hirving "Chucky" Lozano added to the mix, this is a side that can beat you many different ways.
PSG might need Neymar after all
Last season it was the teeny, tiny senior squad: a direct result of financial fair play. This year, Paris Saint-Germain have more bodies, but they're dealing with injuries. Against Toulouse they lost Edinson Cavani, Abdou Diallo and Kylian Mbappe in one fell swoop, which rather muted the celebrations for their 4-0 win.
None of the injuries looked season-ending, God forbid, and we'll get an update soon, but with Neymar out of the squad pending the final days of the transfer window, it's looking like an uphill ride for Thomas Tuchel. What does appear clear (despite the naysayers) is that if the transfer deadline comes and goes and Neymar is still there, he'll be a professional and quickly slip back into the lineup. For Tuchel, that won't come soon enough.
What does Solskjaer want Man United to be?
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Overraction - Will Solskjaer be gone by Christmas?
ESPN FC's Craig Burley reacts to some of the hottest takes from the weekend's football action around the globe.
Aside for a few episodes -- think the Marcus Rashford missed spot-kick, some strong penalty appeals -- Manchester United could easily have beaten Crystal Palace. And while they weren't stellar, they didn't play particularly badly either. But they remain a frustratingly one-dimensional team: fine on the counterattack and toothless with the ball, unless Paul Pogba invents something or Rashford picks out that little pass for Anthony Martial that seemingly nobody can cope with.
That's what is disconcerting here. We know Ole Gunnar Solskjaer can do that reasonably well, but what else can he do? Is there an alternative way of playing -- one that actually works -- that he can turn to? That bit isn't clear at all.
It's not just about personnel (although it's pretty clear he would have liked a few more signings) which, to some degree, is out of his control. It's about what he can affect: the way United play and right now, it seems to be in transition only. That has to change if they're going to finish top four.
Mihajlovic is inspiring
Six weeks after telling the world he was battling a severe form of leukemia, Bologna coach Sinisa Mihajlovic slipped out of the hospital and took his place on the sideline for his team's opening fixture, a 1-1 draw at Verona. Doctors had initially advised against it but relented when they saw his mind was made up. And anyone who has followed his career as a manager and a player will tell you that once he's determined to do something, there's no stopping him.
The players themselves only found out a few hours before kickoff. He wore a baseball cap and a large bandage on his neck. He was gaunt and had clearly lost a lot of weight. It obviously was a struggle, but in case you hadn't noticed, whatever else Mihajlovic is, this man is a warrior. He'll fight cancer the way he lived his life: no retreat and no surrender.
Lewandowski keeps carrying Bayern
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How many more years does Lewandowski have at the top?
ESPN FC's Stewart Robson and Alexis Nunes discussed what Robert Lewandowski needs to do to in order to remain a top class striker for years to come.
Robert Lewandowski's hat trick overshadowed Philippe Coutinho's debut (he came on as a substitute) on Saturday in Bayern's 3-0 win over Schalke, and it's as good a time as any to remind ourselves of his everyday brilliance. He has scored every single Bayern goal this season. He has 197 in 246 appearances in all competitions, and since 2010, he has missed just 16 league games for Bayern and Borussia Dortmund.
Appearing on the Gab + Jules podcast last week, Jan Aage Fjortoft said "they must go to church every day in Munich praying he doesn't get injured." He's right. He carries the can on his own up front, and for most of his tenure, he's had no credible back-up.
It's not surprising, then, that Bayern are about to extend his contract by another two seasons, taking him up to 2023. When you've been that consistent for that long, doing otherwise would be madness.
Griezmann proves himself for Barca
With Lionel Messi, Ousmane Dembele and Luis Suarez unavailable, Ernesto Valverde conjured up a new front three for the visit of Real Betis Sunday night. Alongside Antoine Griezmann were Rafinha (who had played once since November 2018) and Carles Perez, who had played 35 minutes of top-flight football in his entire career. (He was later replaced by Ansu Fati, who is only the second-youngest debutant in the club's history.)
Having gone a goal down, they stormed back to win 5-2, and a lot of the credit has to go to Griezmann. It wasn't just his two goals: it was the leadership, drive and personality he gave the side (evidently qualities seared into his DNA after years with Diego Simeone), which, at times, had you forgetting that you-know-who wasn't there. Critics will fault Rubi's top-heavy Betis side for failing to manage the lead but the way Barca's second half unfolded, there was no containing them.
As with Real Madrid, they'll want to think long and hard about whether they really need/want Neymar...
Business as usual for Juventus
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Why didn't Matthijs de Ligt start for Juventus?
ESPN FC's Steve Nicol wonders why Juventus didn't start their big money signings in their season opening win over Parma.
There wasn't much new or interesting in Juve's seasonal debut, a 1-0 win over Parma. None of the new signings started, and, in fact, the new manager Maurizio Sarri, battling pneumonia, wasn't there either. Leading the line was Gonzalo Higuain, who resurrected his old Real Madrid partnership with Cristiano Ronaldo.
Might he end up doing so all season long for Juve? It's increasingly looking that way, if only by default. Of the club's three potential center forwards, he's the least likely to leave, and he's the one who knows Sarri best.
Milan get a little too creative
Milan boss Marco Giampaolo said that his formation didn't work in the opening day 1-0 defeat to Udinese. Kudos for honesty, even though he did sound like Captain Obvious after a game that saw his team fail to record a shot on target and his center forward, Krzysztof Piatek, get just 18 touches.
Giampaolo is an "outside-the-box" type of guy who likes to get creative, so he's entitled to be unconventional. But playing a midfield three of Fabio Borini, Hakan Calhanoglu and Lucas Paqueta plus Suso in the hole behind the Piatek-Samu Castillejo partnership is waaaaayyyy outside the box.
It's simply lining up without recognised central midfielders. To paraphrase Billy Joel, do that and you walk away a fool or a king. He was no king on Sunday.
A former Penn State team doctor is suing the school, football coach James Franklin and athletic director Sandy Barbour, claiming he was ousted after complaining to school officials about being pressured to clear players to return from injuries.
The lawsuit filed Friday by Dr. Scott Lynch in Dauphin County was first reported by Penn Live. Lynch was removed from his position as director of athletic medicine in March and replaced by Dr. Wayne Sebastianelli, who had previously held the position until 2013.
Lynch is seeking $50,000 in damages.
Penn State Health and the Milton S. Hershey Medical Center in Hershey, Pennsylvania, where Lynch is still employed, also are named as defendants.
In the lawsuit, Lynch claims Franklin attempted to interfere with the doctor's authority on "multiple and repeated occasions." Lynch said he reported Franklin's "wrongdoing" to Barbour and associate athletic director Charmelle Green, who is also named as a defendant. Lynch claims in the lawsuit that on or about Jan. 24, Barbour and Green communicated to Dr. Kevin Black of Penn State Health that Lynch be relieved of his assignment of football team orthopedic physician and director of athletic medicine.
Requests for comment from Franklin and Barbour were directed to Penn State Health. In a statement, Penn State Health said the transition was made with the "best interests of student-athletes in mind..."
"While we reject Dr. Lynch's claims and will vigorously defend our program and its representatives, we remain grateful to him for his five years as director of athletic medicine for Intercollegiate Athletics and for his continued association with Penn State Health," the statement said.
Lynch claims Penn State violated whistleblower laws by removing him and Big Ten and NCAA rules by Franklin infringing on the autonomy of the medical staff.
INDIANAPOLIS -- The post-Andrew Luck era got underway for the Indianapolis Colts on Monday with head coach Frank Reich saying the team is in "good hands with Jacoby Brissett as our quarterback."
The day began with a team meeting where Reich and general manager Chris Ballard spoke passionately about where the franchise is headed after the shocking announcement Saturday that Luck, the No. 1 overall pick in 2012, is retiring after seven years. Luck's locker, which sat in the middle of the locker room, was empty with all of his belongings gone, including his nameplate.
"On one hand, we can respect and honor the player and the teammate (Luck) was," Reich said. "At the same time, we can share an excitement and an enthusiasm about the team we have going forward and the journey ahead of us. Ultimately, it's not how good any one player is, it's not. It's about how good we are as a team."
The Colts are about to find out how good of a complete team they are with Brissett, who has taken nearly all the first-team snaps since last spring, as their new starting quarterback. The team was expected to take a step forward from last season's 10-6 record and AFC divisional round playoff appearance. Reich joked on Monday that they'll gladly go back to taking on the underdog role again now that Luck has retired.
"It's been a roller-coaster of emotions," Brissett said. "Main thing is not being able to see Andrew every day. Ups and downs, but it's on the way up now... I was shocked (at Luck's retirement). Then we had a long conversation. It was emotions going back and forth. You sit down with him and you understand his decision. He's one of my good friends. It's tough. He was like smiling at the end. That's what helped me gain clarity and understand the situation. Seeing him smiling. I wish him the best. We'll talk long after our football careers."
Brissett, receiver T.Y. Hilton and offensive lineman Anthony Castonzo were some of the few players who knew before others that Luck was retiring after suffering what the former Stanford quarterback termed Saturday as a "cycle of injury, pain, rehab, injury, pain, rehab." Luck endured shoulder problems, bruised ribs, a lacerated kidney, a calf strain and then, most recently, pain in his ankle. He missed 26 games since the 2015 season.
Many of the Colts found out about Luck's plan to retire during or immediately after their preseason game against Chicago once ESPN's Adam Schefter broke the news Saturday. Luck spoke to his now-former teammates and coaching staff in the locker room after the game. Players said there was complete silence as Luck spoke.
"It was tough," receiver Chester Rogers said. "That was probably one of the toughest speeches I had to endure in my career. You hate to see someone go out. It's sad, but also happy for him because he's going out when he wants to."
Hilton, who was in the same 2012 draft class as Luck and was the quarterback's favorite target throughout their time together, posted a heartfelt message on Twitter about what Luck meant to him. "It's been very tough, that's my best friend," Hilton said. "It hurt me. Not going to lie. I was able to have the heart-to-heart with him. I was cool with the decision. He'll always be with me."
Brissett said it "sucked" that fans booed Luck as he walked off the field at the conclusion of Saturday's game.
"You don't want to hear that, especially for a guy like that who has done as much as he's done, what he's been through," Brissett said.
The Colts will miss Luck, but the reality is they have to move forward with Brissett under center. He started 15 games during the 2017 season when Luck missed the entire year due his right shoulder injury. The Colts were 4-11 with Brissett that season, but the roster and situation are drastically different now. Brissett is in his second season in Reich's offense, and the Colts return the same starting offensive line and key skill position players from an offense that finished seventh in the NFL last season.
Brissett, according to Reich, has taken about 1,200 reps with the first team since the spring.
"You can just feel his presence in the huddle and on the field," Reich said. "The confidence that he's had, the chemistry with his receivers. We all know Andrew and T.Y. had a unique chemistry and connection. I can feel that developing. That's been very important that Jacoby has taken all those reps."
Russian fifth seed Daniil Medvedev is through to the second round of the US Open after a routine 6-4 6-1 6-2 win over India's Prajnesh Gunneswaran.
The 23-year-old, who has reached three consecutive tour finals, took just 85 minutes to win.
Medvedev will face South Korean Kwon Soon-woo or Bolivian Hugo Dellien in the second round - both ranked outside the world's top 80.
Gunneswaran, ranked 88th, was playing in the main draw for the first time.
Elsewhere, Japanese seventh seed Kei Nishikori raced into the second round when he took a 6-1 4-1 lead before Argentine opponent Marco Trungelliti, 29, retired with a back problem.
"It's a little bit sad to see. He's a great player," said Nishikori, who faces 108th-ranked American Bradley Klahn in the next round.
"I played great tennis from the beginning and I'm happy with the way I played. But honestly, I wanted to play a little more because I was feeling good on the court and I wanted to get a little more confidence."
Britain's Andy Murray recorded his first singles victory since hip surgery in January with a 6-0 6-1 win over teenager Imran Sibille in Mallorca.
Playing on the Challenger Tour for the first time in 14 years, Murray needed only 43 minutes to win his first-round match at the Rafa Nadal Open.
The 32-year-old outclassed Sibille, an alternate entry 15 years his junior and making his professional debut.
Moving freely, Murray won five of his seven break-point chances.
Three-time Grand Slam champion Murray won the doubles title at Queen's Club in June, but in the past fortnight lost 6-4 6-4 to Richard Gasquet in his first singles match for seven months in Cincinnati and 7-6 7-5 to Tennys Sandgren in the Winston-Salem Open.
However, he lost only three points in the first set against 17-year-old French player Sibille, a trainee at the Rafa Nadal Academy in Mallorca, sealing his first break with an emphatic smash.
Murray, who has slipped to 328 in the rankings because of his injury problems, faces world number 115 Norbert Gombos of Slovakia in the second round on Tuesday.
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