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TT Postscript: Thanks to trusty putter, Tiger salvages 70

Published in Golf
Thursday, 13 June 2019 15:50

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – Tiger Woods shot 1-under 70 in the first round of the 119th U.S. Open at Pebble Beach. That’s the good news. Bad news is that he played alongside Justin Rose, who shot 6-under 65 and leads the championship.

Here are a few nuggets from a stroll with the legend around these hallowed grounds:

• It was a weird day. Seems like if Tiger hit a good drive, he’d hit a poor approach shot and if he hit a poor drive, he hit a better approach shot. The only thing that was constant was his putting, which bailed him out several key times.

• Final stats: 10 of 14 fairways, nine of 18 greens and 25 putts. He had 11 straight pars to close his round.

• That Tiger struggled with his irons and still shot 70 has to be a good sign for the next three days. I think. Doesn’t it? If he can shoot under par without what has been the best part of his game that’s a good thing. 

• Par at the par-5 14th hole looked like a double bogey the whole time, until it wasn’t. Tiger’s second shot was in the greenside bunker, but he blasted his third out into the thick rough beyond the green. His fourth shot was chopped onto the green more than 30 feet from the hole. He drained the long putt for par and that was that.

• Speaking of double bogey, he made one of those – a real one – on the par-3 fifth hole when he hit an atrocious tee shot long and left of the green. He was lucky it didn’t bounce out of bounds. Tiger’s second was long, his third was 8 feet by the hole and he two putted from there for double-bogey 5.

• Tiger parred Nos. 1, 2 and 3 then the last 11 in a row. On Nos. 4-7 he went birdie, double bogey, birdie, birdie.

• Back to putting. It bailed him out more than just on the 14th hole. Tiger made a 20-footer for par on the second, a 25-footer for birdie on the par-3 seventh hole and made a terrific two putt from 60 feet on the par-4 15th.

• In his own words: “I didn’t hit my irons as crisp as I’d like. I tried to miss the ball in the correct spots, and a couple of times where I had wedges in my hand I was just dumping, center of the green, move on, get my 30-, 40-footer and move on about my business and take my medicine when I was in a bad spot.”

• Looking ahead, Tiger gets back out there in the morning at 8:24 a.m. PT (11:24 a.m. ET) but he starts his round on the 10th hole. After his first round he noted that he’s zeroed in on the first seven holes as the place to “make hay” this week. So, on Friday it means he’ll try to hang on over the first nine holes before he starts to go for it more once he makes the turn.

Despite shaky finish, Koepka in good shape for three-peat

Published in Golf
Thursday, 13 June 2019 15:57

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – The twisting and picturesque fairways of Pebble Beach weren’t supposed to be Brooks Koepka’s brand of vodka.

This wasn’t Bethpage Black, where Koepka powered his way to his fourth major in his last eight major starts, or Erin Hills, where he won his first major on wide, welcoming fairways. Yet after an eventful first round there he was perched just four strokes off the lead.

Maybe this is the ultimate chip for a player who relishes the role of being the overlooked superstar. Although he’d mentioned a promotional spot for this week’s championship that didn’t include him as a perceived slight, perhaps the real fuel comes from the idea that this wasn’t supposed to be his kind of course.

It certainly didn’t look that way early in his round when the two-time defending champion birdied four of his first six holes to move to within a stroke of the early lead.

There were hiccups coming in – a missed green at No. 8 that bounced hard and into the hay, a wayward drive at No. 13 and a tee shot at the iconic 17th hole that airmailed the green. They all led to bogeys and added up to a 2-under 69 that was four shots off the pace set by Justin Rose.

“It's a battle if you're not going to hit fairways. If you're not going to hit greens, it's going to be tough,” said Koepka, who hit just seven of 14 greens in regulation. “I'm actually quite pleased.”

If that doesn’t exactly sound like the guy who is on the verge of becoming the first player in over a century to win three consecutive U.S. Opens, it’s yet another indication that Koepka is not a machine despite his often-stoic demeanor.

The best evidence of this came at the par-5 closing hole when Koepka pushed his 3-wood off the tee well right of the fairway and opted to play his second shot off a cart path. As he made his way to the green a group of fans cheered from one of the palatial homes along the fairway.

“I was trying to hit your house,” he said with a smile.

Koepka has learned in an amazingly short amount of time the ebb and flow of major championship golf and that if your worst day is under par, particularly at a U.S. Open, you’re doing fine.

“I would have liked to have shot a couple more. But considering how I hit it coming in, I'm pretty pleased,” he said. “I didn't shoot myself out of it. I'm right there. I feel like if I get out tomorrow and get off to a good start, I'm right back into it.”

He’s earned this calmness honestly. He was tied for 33rd after Day 1 last year at the PGA Championship and tied for 46th after his first 18 at the ’18 U.S. Open on his way to victory at both. By comparison his tie for 16th at Pebble Beach probably feels like a reason to sleep easy.

He might not have started his week like some would have expected, but he’s still on pace to finish exactly where one would imagine.

Golf Channel’s Brandel Chamblee marveled over the ball-striking display Rickie Fowler put on Thursday in the first round of the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, but he wondered if Fowler’s flat swing makes it tougher for him to win a major.

Fowler opened with a 5-under-par 66, one shot behind the leader, Justin Rose.

“What he did today, I would dare say, was something we may never see again,” Chamblee said on "Live From the U.S. Open". “I don’t know that I have ever seen it. He led the field in driving accuracy, and he was second in driving distance. He led the field in greens in regulation.

“It was brilliant. He averaged 321 yards off the tee missing just one fairway.”

Chamblee, however, said he believes Fowler’s flat swing may be the reason he has struggled to break through and win his first major. Fowler, 30, is making his 39th start in a major. He has eight finishes of T-5 or better in majors with three of those second-place finishes.

“Why his path to a major championship victory has to come from the fairway is because, unlike some of the players we have talked about, Brooks Koepka, Justin Rose or Tiger Woods, who have been good out of the rough on the way to winning major championships, this is where Rickie Fowler struggles,” Chamblee said. “He has a very flat golf swing. As a matter of fact, maybe the flattest golf swing I have ever seen. Certainly, the flattest on the PGA Tour. Subsequently, a very shallow angle of attack with a little flip.”

Fowler ranked 168th on the PGA Tour in proximity to the hole from the rough two seasons ago, 151st last season, and he is 132nd so far this season.

“You need to be able to dig it out of the rough at major championships, where it’s a little thicker than in regular tour events,” Chamblee said. “He typically hasn’t been very good out of the rough.”

Sources: United still keen on Newcastle's Longstaff

Published in Soccer
Friday, 14 June 2019 05:09

Manchester United remain interested in signing Sean Longstaff despite the midfielder saying he is happy at Newcastle, sources have told ESPN FC.

Longstaff has been targeted by United manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer as he looks to bring in the best young British players in a squad revamp.

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In an interview with Newcastle's TV channel the 21-year-old stated his intention to remain at St James' Park, but sources told ESPN FC United were still confident of convincing him to move if a fee could be agreed.

"I'm massively flattered to have my name even mentioned in those conversations, but I'm 100 percent focused on Newcastle," Longstaff said.

"I've always wanted to play for Newcastle and I've only had a little taste of that, so for me it's about getting fit [after a knee injury] as soon as I can and getting back on the pitch for Newcastle."

United's pursuit of Longstaff has been complicated by uncertainty at Newcastle.

Billionaire Sheikh Khaled bin Zayed Al Nehayan is in negotiations to buy the club from Mike Ashley, while the future of manager Rafael Benitez is up in the air with his contract expiring on June 30.

Longstaff, who has only made eight Premier League appearances for his boyhood club after loan spells at Kilmarnock and Blackpool, was given his first-team debut by Benitez in December.

Meanwhile, United are pushing ahead with a move for Crystal Palace right-back Aaron Wan-Bissaka.

An opening bid of around £35 million was knocked back, but United are prepared to up their offer for the 21-year-old.

Sources: Sarri to leave Chelsea for Juventus

Published in Soccer
Friday, 14 June 2019 03:42

LONDON -- Maurizio Sarri is set to leave Chelsea and take over at Juventus after the Italian champions agreed to pay around £5 million in compensation, sources have told ESPN FC.

The two clubs have been in talks over Sarri for more than a week, with Juve hoping to avoid paying to release him from his contract but Chelsea adamant that they want to be compensated.

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After Juventus sporting director Fabio Paratici travelled to London for further discussions with Chelsea director Marina Granovskaia, the Serie A club agreed to pay the amount needed to enable Sarri to become their new coach.

Sarri is expected to be confirmed as Juventus coach in the next 24 hours, and Chelsea will now turn their attention to securing his replacement.

Frank Lampard is widely regarded as the front-runner for the job despite having only one season of managerial experience with Derby, who he led to the Championship playoff final.

Sarri took Chelsea to third place in the Premier League and won the Europa League, but had difficulty implementing his possession-based style and attracted hostility from some supporters.

In an interview with Vanity Fair in Italy earlier this month, the coach said he had grown homesick and wanted to return to Italy in the summer.

Real Madrid sign 'Japanese Messi' Takefusa Kubo

Published in Soccer
Friday, 14 June 2019 04:29

Real Madrid have announced the signing of FC Tokyo midfielder Takefusa Kubo.

Kubo, who has been described as "the Japanese Messi," was once on Barcelona's books and made his debut for the Japan senior team earlier this month. The 18-year-old will represent his country at the Copa America in Brazil.

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In a statement, Madrid said Kubo would play for their Castilla youth team in Spain's third tier next season.

"Real Madrid will have one of the most promising young players in world football, an attacking midfielder of excellent technique and very skilled," the statement said.

Marca reported that Madrid would pay €2 million to FC Tokyo and had offered the player a five-year contract worth €1 million a year.

Kubo will train with Zinedine Zidane's senior side while playing for Castilla, following the policy set with the signings of Martin Odegaard and Vinicius Junior.

South African middle-order batsman Rassie van der Dussen was "not surprised" to hear AB de Villiers wanted to play in the 2019 World Cup but believes it would have set a "difficult precedent" if the former captain was included. It would also likely have meant van der Dussen himself would not be at the tournament.

ALSO READ: AB de Villiers revelations could bring South Africa World Cup squad closer - Faf du Plessis

"It's not necessarily the best question to ask to me because I am involved in it but had he not retired it definitely would have influenced me directly," he said. "But you can't, on the day before the announcement and a team that's been working for something for year and even longer than a year, come and say, 'I want to make a comeback now'. I am not saying he was wrong or he was right; so don't misquote me. But it would have set a difficult precedent - not necessarily a wrong one, because it's still AB, he is still one of the best players in the world - I just think it was handled maybe not in the correct way from his side."

South Africa's squad was informed of de Villiers' desire to come out of retirement at their pre-tournament team camp, which included scaling the Table Mountain and training at the High Performance Centre in Pretoria. Though some, like Kagiso Rabada, have given little away about their opinion on the matter, van der Dussen explained de Villiers had been given options to make a comeback, which he refused.

"As I believe it, Ottis [Gibson, the head coach] and Faf [du Plessis, the captain] gave him opportunities to, say, 'Let's manage your workload going into the World Cup because we want you to play a World Cup'. He had a fair chance to manage that and he said no and that he is happy to retire and that's fair enough. And Faf accepted it, Ottis accepted it and they stood by it," van der Dussen said.

ALSO READ: Did de Villiers want to have his cake and eat it too?

Zondi, Gibson and du Plessis have all confirmed they told de Villiers he could have time off but would need to play some part in the series against Pakistan and Sri Lanka which took place earlier this year to stay in contention. Van der Dussen made his ODI debut in the series against Pakistan and impressed. Van der Dussen scored five half-centuries in his first nine ODI innings to earn his place in the World Cup squad and, at the tournament, has so far been South Africa's most convincing performer with the bat.

"Do I have to replace him? I don't feel I have to. Can I play match-winning innings for my country? I believe I can"

Van der Dussen is South Africa's second-highest run-scorer with 113 runs from his three innings, one run behind Quinton de Kock. He has labelled the tournament the ultimate test of a player's ability, which is why he understood de Villiers' interest in coming back.

"I wasn't surprised [that he wanted to come back]," van der Dussen said. "The media and the press reports quite a lot on AB and the things he's said and how his last year has gone. I wasn't surprised that he would want to make a comeback on the world's biggest stage. That's the thing all the biggest players in sport have in common. They want to perform when the pressure is on and when the stage is at its biggest."

Despite knowing he may have missed out if de Villiers had been accommodated, van der Dussen does not think the situation has put extra pressure on him to put in de Villiers-esque performances but hinted that if the situation demands it, maybe he could do just that.

"In terms of did it affect me? No. I am quite happy to be mentioned in the same sentence as AB. He is obviously one of the best there has ever been," van der Dussen said. "So do I have to replace him? I don't feel I have to. Can I play match-winning innings for my country? I believe I can. Is that what he did? Yes, he did. It didn't have as big an effect as I think people would like to believe it had."

Warner's hundred another stage of the homecoming

Published in Cricket
Thursday, 13 June 2019 23:07

When does a cricketer feel at home in a team? Some get that sense within the minutes of their first match for a side, others may go seasons without ever quite feeling a part of it, whatever their performances or how things look in all the on-field backslapping.

The Australian team can be an unforgiving place. One former opening batsman confessed some years ago that when he was first called up, days went by before any other team-mate spoke to him by way of welcome. Another called a Cricket Australia official during an early spell in the team to say he was lonely away from home, and to ask for something to do.

No-one, though, has quite had an experience quite like that of David Warner, banished from the Australia side in the wake of the Newlands scandal last year and, unlike the former captain Steven Smith, left very much isolated by his identification as the ringleader of the ball tampering plot, if not its subsequent cover-up.

In those desperate hours and days following Warner's ban, accompanied by a lifetime suspension from ever holding a formal leadership position in the team, he was seen to be at odds with the rest, even more so than Smith or Cameron Bancroft. There was, in the game's highest circles, widespread acknowledgement that he may never be selected again. Warner, for his part, said as much in an otherwise legally constrained return home press conference at the SCG.

A little more than a year on, it should be noted that the first leadership figure in Australian cricket to offer a more welcoming word to Warner was Justin Langer, when he was appointed national team coach in May 2018. While Langer was not without his own reservations, wanting to get a stronger sense of where Warner and the team were at before a lengthy reintegration process began, he offered far more carrot than stick to the ex-vice-captain.

"He's a really good young bloke and he made a mistake," Langer said at the time. "I love the way he plays his cricket. The way he runs between the wickets, the way he fields, the way he bats - they're things that for the less-trained eye, you might not respect as much."

So it was that Warner and Smith were reintegrated, by way of net sessions in Australia, a team visit in the UAE, a World Cup preparation camp in Brisbane, and innumerable phone calls, text exchanges and coffee catch-ups. Warner all the while kept a commendable silence, not seeking any platform for self-justification, and grinding out runs wherever he was permitted to play.

Even so, his return to Australian ranks had been halting prior to the century against Pakistan that underlined his exceedingly rare ability, turning a bowler-friendly day into a head start of 146 without loss that was still standing when Australia finally secured victory in the Taunton twilight. A pair of scratchy innings against Afghanistan and India, either side of a brief one against the West Indies, suggested he was not yet at home. The hundred, Langer now reckons, will be remembered as the knock that sealed his return.

"You can see in his eyes how determined he is to be back playing for Australia," Langer said. "When you score a hundred, it is almost like there is no better feeling in the world. I listened to the press conference you had with him, he can only explain how he felt, but for us if you score a hundred it's almost like, 'righto, I am back, I am back'. And that's a good thing.

"That's a nice feeling I am sure for him and it's a nice feeling for us that you can score some runs. Hundreds, they are the milestone, they are the reward. In a lot of ways, that's a really great reward for him."

Recognition, both for Warner and team-mates, that his singular match-winning skills remain very much intact, was distinct from regaining respect. This, Langer argued, had been generated long ago by the way Warner set about the time he had away from international cricket.

"Honestly, when you pay the price that he has paid for 12 months, and see him come back with a smile on his face and super fit, he didn't have to earn back any respect," Langer said. "Everyone knew what he has been through the last 12 months. They also know what a great player he is. He has always had the respect as a player. He is a really good young bloke and he has come back with a smile on his face, he is fit, he had respect as soon as he came in."

Langer has observed Warner's batting with optimism but also realism. He is looking for Warner the batsman, not Warner the hitter, perhaps with half an eye towards the Ashes. The Taunton century was Warner's first international hundred in England or Wales after also touring in 2012, 2013, 2015 and 2017. He has some ground to make up in the UK.

"There is a bit of talk about how he was going. He has done an unbelievable job for the team in all games we have played so far," Langer said. "You saw how emotional he was and how much it meant to him. It meant a lot to all of us as well."

If there was a criticism of Warner from Langer it was this: from where he set the team's platform, a far bigger score was in the offing against Pakistan, and Australia's subsequent decline needed to be seen as falling at least somewhat in his lap.

"I think we probably left 50 or 60 runs. It was a really very frustrating last 15 overs for us with the bat with the way Aaron and Davey started. We had a perfect platform and went a bit away from our game plan there," Langer said. "I remember Brian Lara used to always say, if you have a good day, have a great day because you have a lot of bad days in cricket. As very, very good as it was for Davey, he probably missed out on having a great day for himself and for the team and great players are frustrated about that."

But like Australia, with three wins from four games without having played particularly well, there is plenty more to come from Warner's bat. "It's a fickle game. You never want to mess with mother cricket," Langer said. "He will just keep preparing well and we'll make sure he stays nice and relaxed and enjoying his cricket because people with talent like that, when they are relaxed and well prepared, they perform. He has done that his whole career and hopefully he continues to do that."

Warner, having messed up before, is unlikely ever to do so again.

Live Report - England v West Indies

Published in Cricket
Friday, 14 June 2019 01:19

Chatter, analysis and some silliness from the World Cup 2019. If the blog doesn't load, please refresh the page. Also, ball-by-ball commentary can be found here.

The Papua New Guinea cricket board has suspended 10 of its Under-19 players for a year for bringing the game into disrepute. The sanction is in relation to their conduct in Japan, where they were favourites to win a qualifying tournament for the Under-19 World Cup in 2020; however, 10 players missed a crucial game against Japan and the team had to forfeit the game because they didn't have enough players to field an XI.

Cricket PNG chief executive Greg Campbell said: "The behaviour of our players is not what we would expect from international cricketers of any age. The players have expressed sincere regret at their actions and in addition to their suspension from cricket, they will undertake a comprehensive rehabilitation programme over the next 12 months."

ICC General Counsel and COO Iain Higgins added: "This has been a highly unusual incident by a group of young players and I would like to thank Cricket PNG for acting swiftly and decisively. It sends out a clear message that the sport will not tolerate this sort of behaviour at ICC events.

"We are obviously extremely disappointed with the behavior of the players, but we are satisfied that Cricket PNG has delivered a suitable and proportionate sanction and programme for rehabilitation. Therefore, the ICC will not take any further action against any of the players."

In addition to being suspended, the 10 players will take part in 60 hours of community service and also attend a counselling programme.

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