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Essex 148 for 6 (Westley 36, Bopara 36*) beat Worcestershire 145 for 9 (Harmer 3-16) by four wickets

Eight hours earlier, Wayne Parnell had successfully defended Notts' requirement of a single off the final ball to take Worcestershire into the final of the Vitality Blast. Now, at the end of English cricket's longest day, with Edgbaston once again a sea of delirium, he had to do it again. This time Simon Harmer beat the off-side field and Essex had seen off the defending champions to win the tournament for the first time.

It was fitting that Harmer had the last word. In Essex's semi-final stroll against Derbyshire and this narrowest of victories, he returned the combined figures of 7 for 35, the best ever recorded on T20 Finals Day. He was perfectly served by a surface that turned substantially throughout the day and perhaps, just perhaps, gave Essex a little added zip with a hint of dew in the closing overs.

"It's a lottery," decry the critics of Twenty20. Don't tell that to Worcestershire. In successive seasons, their nerveless, intelligent cricket under the brilliant stewardship of Moeen Ali (is there a better captain in the country?) had made them the most resilient side in the land. They had defended 147 against Notts; now it was 145. But this time they had to reckon with Ravi Bopara.

For much of the climax to this riveting final, it had felt like Bopara versus Worcestershire, and for his most zealous admirers (and there are many) Bopara versus The World. County cricket's most reluctant finisher, who has gently carped all summer long about batting at No 6, fashioned a super-cool 36 from 22 balls to hold together an Essex chase that, when they lost their fifth wicket at 82, needing 64 from 41, was so patently down to him.

This was Essex's fifth Finals Day appearance and the first time they had won a semi-final. With two wins from their first 10 in the South Group it has been win-or-bust ever since and Bopara has been at the heart of it. "It's the one trophy I don't have in my cabinet and we finally have it," he said. He has been trying since a T20 debut, batting at No 9, against Surrey at East Molesey in 2003. His international career ended in 2015 just as England adopted a new approach to limited-overs cricket and that his reputation was tarnished by association with their previous failings is his misfortune.

Bopara's six over long off from Moeen's penultimate ball was a key moment, leaving Essex 39 short with four overs left. He then clattered Pat Brown's slower ball over midwicket as that rate fell to 23 from two.

When Brown bowled Paul Walter, Essex were still 17 short with eight balls left. Harmer drove Brown down the ground to cut the last-over requirement to 12 - but 11 for the tie, and victory by virtue of losing fewer wickets, was likely to be enough. Harmer drilled Parnell down the ground to reduce the trophy-winning requirement to one off the final ball. Parnell looked distraught and close to exhaustion. Moeen offered calming words. Harmer whistled the final shot to the cover boundary.

Essex's Powerplay had yielded only 36 for the loss of Cameron Delport, who was strangely subdued in making a single off seven balls in an innings that came to grief when he clipped Parnell to backward square. Adam Wheater, a No 5 all season, came in at three, and no doubt to orders provided a decorous run-a-ball 15 until he was bowled attempting a reverse lap at Daryl Mitchell. Essex appeared composed enough at 63 for 2 at midway, with 83 needed from the second half of the innings, but Moeen had retained nine overs from himself, Parnell and Brown for the second half of the innings.

The strength of Worcestershire's batting line-up, one that seems full of bit parts from as high as No 4, is that it finds a way. And, in making 145 for 8, it appeared to have found a way again. But Worcestershire could not subdue Harmer. He followed his 4 for 19 against Derbyshire in the semi-final with 3 for 16, a comparable return despite the sense that Worcestershire were playing him with rather more nous.

Moeen and Riki Wessels provided the substance with a second-wicket stand of 56 in 48 balls. Moeen's presence was enough to persuade Harmer not to bowl in the Powerplay, as he had in the semi-final, Sam Cook's pace was as unthreatening as that of Jamie Porter, who had been preferred to him in the semi.

Harmer intervened with wickets in successive balls at the start of his second over. Moeen's first boundary had been an uppish slice against Lawrence through backward point, but he smoothed his way to 32 in 26 balls with another exercise in cricketing meditation.

But Harmer's turn defeated his work to leg whereupon the bowler, one of the best slippers in the country, plunged forward to hold an excellent low catch. Ben Cox, who had guided Worcestershire to the trophy a year ago, was lbw next ball as he tried to sweep, but even the president of the Respect for Umpires Association would have deemed this a terrible decision, because Cox was well outside the line and got a big inside-edge on the ball too.

Parnell fell to Harmer's penultimate ball, bowled by a faster arm-ball, and at 90 for 4 with the 14th over about to begin, Worcestershire promoted Mitchell above Whiteley. In Western terms, the peace-loving sheriff had been preferred to the local gunslinger, and Mitchell duly provided a cautious 19 from 15 balls to edge Worcestershire to a realistic total.

Wessels was a figure of realism, too, with 31 from 34 balls;. Once a square-of-the-wicket adventurer, he still has those qualities but increasingly in this Worcestershire side, a successful side at that, he finds himself pushing singles to hold the innings together. It might have been enough. Instead, he became a support act in a wonderfully entertaining day.

Pats activate first International Pathway player

Published in Breaking News
Saturday, 21 September 2019 16:04

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- Fullback Jakob Johnson became the first player to enter the NFL through the International Pathway Program to make a 53-man roster when he was promoted from the New England Patriots practice squad on Saturday.

The International Player Pathway Program was instituted in 2017 and aims to provide international athletes the opportunity to compete at the NFL level, improve their skills, and ultimately earn a spot on an NFL roster.

Johnson was born in Stuttgart, Germany and played in 47 games at the University of Tennessee, initially as a linebacker before switching to tight end. In 2018, he appeared in 12 games for the Stuttgart Scorpions of the German Football League.

The Patriots were assigned Johnson as part of the International Pathway Program on April 8. The three other teams in the AFC East were also assigned players as part of a random draw, and none of them counted against the 90-man roster limit.

In 2018, Efe Obada became the first player from the International Pathway Program to make a 53-man roster with the Carolina Panthers, but he didn't initially enter the NFL through the program. He had signed as a free agent with the Cowboys in 2015 after playing only five games of amateur football with the London Warriors, then was on the Cowboys practice squad before spending time in the 2016 offseason with the Chiefs and Falcons. In 2017, Obada was part of the first class of players in the International Pathway Program, which gave him additional time to develop with the Panthers.

During the season, teams can carry an International Pathway Program player as an extra 11th member of the practice squad, but because of the roster exemption, the clubs could not promote the player to the active roster during the season. In the case of Johnson, the Patriots elected to forgo that option and make him a regular member of their 10-man practice squad, which gave them the option of promoting him.

"Jak came in with a great attitude this offseason," offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels said a few weeks ago. "He really put his head down and worked hard through our offseason program, and then continued to do that in OTAs and into training camp -- good attitude. He's been out there every day, toughness, willing to do the things that you need to do to play that position on offense, smart kid, studies hard, prepares well, knows what to do and is ready to go. And he's competitive, so I think there's nothing more you can ask of each player than to give your best and be ready to go when your number's called."

The 6-foot-3, 255-pound Johnson steps in for injured starter James Develin, who has already been ruled out for Sunday's game against the New York Jets with a neck injury.

The Patriots are one of the few teams in the NFL that still features the fullback, as Develin has played 41.5% of the offensive snaps through the first two weeks of the season. Develin also has an important role on the team's punt coverage unit, which Johnson could also fill.

Burrow slings LSU-record 6 TDs in rout of Vandy

Published in Breaking News
Saturday, 21 September 2019 14:28

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- LSU always has played stingy defense. Now the Tigers have a high-octane offense and no plans at all to slow down anytime soon.

"Score, be aggressive," LSU coach Ed Orgeron said. "That's our mentality. We're going to be aggressive. We're going to go get it. We're not slowing down for anything."

The Tigers' aggressive approach paid off Saturday as Joe Burrow tossed four of his school-record six touchdown passes to Ja'Marr Chase and threw for 398 yards, leading No. 4 LSU to a 66-38 romp over Vanderbilt.

"They told me when it happened," Burrow said of his TD record. "I was more focused on going to get another one."

LSU (4-0, 1-0 Southeastern Conference) beat Vanderbilt (0-3, 0-2) for the eighth consecutive time. This marked the first meeting between these SEC charter members since 2010.

The Tigers scored their most points this season and most ever in regulation against an SEC opponent. The 104 combined points tied South Carolina's 65-39 victory over Mississippi State in 1995 for the fourth-highest scoring total in an SEC game that didn't go into overtime.

They needed 2 minutes, 11 seconds, or less on each of their first seven scoring drives. LSU also scored 4 seconds after Micah Baskerville returned an onside kick 46 yards to open the third quarter on Burrow's fifth TD pass.

Baskerville later blocked a punt he recovered for a score.

Burrow had a game for the record books.

He became both the first LSU quarterback to throw for 350 yards or more in three consecutive games. His 357 yards passing by halftime also was the most in school history.

Burrow hit 13 of his first 14 passes for 244 yards before throwing his second incompletion at 9:19 in the second quarter. He finished 25-of-34 and left the game early in the fourth quarter.

"It's good," Orgeron said. "I think that there's more to come. I really do. I think Joe is a fantastic player. He has a fantastic coach in [offensive coordinator] Steve Ensminger. We have a great plan, and as long as we protect the quarterback we're going to make big plays here at LSU."

And Burrow kept throwing to Chase. The sophomore caught TDs of 64, 25 and 51 yards in the first quarter and adding a 16-yarder in the third. He finished with 10 receptions for 229 yards, most by an LSU receiver since Odell Beckham Jr. had 204 against Furman in 2013.

"I'm just happy I played today," Chase said after not seeing the field against Northwestern State last week in a coach's decision.

Vanderbilt had never before played two of the nation's top five teams within the first three weeks of a season. At least the Commodores scored on their first drive, which they didn't manage in an opening defeat to No. 3 Georgia or a loss at Purdue. They scored their most points yet this season but had two turnovers.

"We were playing with house money, man," Vanderbilt coach Derek Mason said. "We had a chance to really take some chances, try to force some things to happen. Those things didn't necessarily go our way. But what I can tell you is the early part of the season, man, has been a difficult stretch."

LSU led 28-7 after the first quarter, 38-17 at halftime and 59-31 after the third.

THE TAKEAWAY

LSU: The Tigers entered the day second in the SEC defending the run, giving up just 80.3 yards a game. They gave up a 41-yarder to Ke'Shawn Vaughn on Vandy's first offensive play. Vaughn also broke loose for a 52-yard TD run in the third quarter -- the longest run this season for the SEC's top returning rusher. Vaughn finished with 20 carries for 130 yards.

Vanderbilt: The Commodores came in as the only FBS team without a sack this season, and the closest they came to hitting Burrow early was on a roughing-the-passer penalty in the first quarter. Then Jaylen Mahoney sacked the LSU quarterback early in the second quarter, a play after Burrow had plenty of time to roll to his right before finding Stephen Sullivan on a 30-yard completion. Kenny Hebert also got a sack, and Elijah McAllister recovered an Edwards-Helaire fumble for a touchdown in the final minute of the first half.

INJURIES

LSU receiver Terrace Marshall Jr., who came into the game with six touchdown catches to tie for the FBS lead, was on crutches after four receptions for 75 yards. Orgeron said it didn't look good. LSU middle linebacker Michael Divinity Jr. hurt an ankle and was seen in a walking boot. Orgeron said it "looked pretty significant."

UP NEXT

LSU: Open date before hosting Utah State on Oct. 5.

Vanderbilt: Hosts Northern Illinois on Sept. 28.

Gators QB Trask stars in 1st start in seven years

Published in Breaking News
Saturday, 21 September 2019 16:20

GAINESVILLE, Fla. -- Kyle Trask never once wavered in his belief that one day he would get his chance to start at Florida.

When that day came on Saturday against Tennessee, he put together a career day that showed major promise for a Gators team that has its toughest stretch of games to come. Trask threw for 293 yards in the 34-3 win, the highest single-game total for a Florida player since Austin Appleby had 296 yards at Tennessee on Sept. 24, 2016.

Trask went 20-of-28 with two touchdowns and two interceptions, becoming the first Florida quarterback to throw for more than 290 yards in less than 30 attempts since John Brantley in 2011.

What made his performance all the more remarkable? It was his first start since his freshman year in high school, nearly seven years ago.

Trask didn't lose the starting job at Manvel (Texas) for a lack of talent. He just happened to be in the same class as D'Eriq King, who now starts at Houston. Manvel ran an offensive system more suited for a dual-threat quarterback like King. But former Manvel coach Kirk Martin made sure to get Trask into games whenever possible. Even though Trask wasn't a starter, he still got his opportunity to make plays and build a highlight tape. Florida was the first Power 5 school to offer him, and he never wavered in his commitment, signing in 2016 -- the same class as Feleipe Franks.

"I've been waiting for my number to get called, and I knew I was going to be ready when my number was called," Trask said.

Florida coach Dan Mullen said he was not surprised with the way Trask led the Gators to a comeback win last week against Kentucky in relief of the injured Franks, out for the season with a dislocated ankle. And he was not surprised with Trask this week, either.

"I thought he was relaxed," Mullen said. "You never know. He hasn't been in that situation in a long time. I was always joking with him, make sure you're having fun. You prepared for this. If you're really nervous, we can fix the nervous problem. Go out there, throw a bunch of picks and play terrible and you won't be nervous because you won't play anymore. He prepared the right way. He's been preparing the right way. And so he got his opportunity, and it's what I would have expected."

Trask, wearing the No. 11 that Steve Spurrier wore en route to his Heisman Trophy winning season in 1966, led a nearly perfect opening touchdown drive -- with Spurrier and the 1994 Florida SEC championship team watching from the sideline.

He was not perfect -- he lost a fumble and threw two interceptions -- but Mullen believes the mistakes are correctable. On both interceptions, Trask told Mullen he saw what the defense was doing, but he thought he could squeeze the ball into the tight windows.

In the huddle, teammates said Trask was no different than the player they watched come ready to practice day after day, week after week, waiting for his chance.

"It's like a movie," said receiver Trevon Grimes. "He's been through so much and had to overcome so much adversity, but he's still strong and shows why he is who he is today."

Trask has said repeatedly he never once considered entering the transfer portal. He came closest to starting last season after playing well in relief of Franks against Missouri, but a foot injury after the game ended that chance. Franks took command of the job, but even then, Trask never thought about leaving.

"I get asked that question a lot because the transfer portal is a huge thing, and is still a huge thing but this is a top 10 academic university, and I have great friends, great teammates here. I never wanted to leave one time," Trask said.

That decision is paying off for both Trask and the Gators. Florida plays Towson next week before entering the most crucial stretch of the season in October, with games against Auburn, LSU, South Carolina and Georgia.

"He's played a bunch, came in and made big plays," Mullen said. "When his number was called, he was ready to go. He's done that since the day I got here."

'Out-coached' Harbaugh, U-M looking for identity

Published in Breaking News
Saturday, 21 September 2019 15:40

MADISON, Wis. -- Michigan suffered one of its worst losses under Jim Harbaugh on Saturday after Wisconsin beat the Wolverines 35-14 in Camp Randall Stadium.

In what was supposed to be a game that would help answer questions about Michigan's struggling offense and thrust Michigan toward the conversation of Big Ten-championship contention, more questions were posed as Harbaugh and his team are left searching for a solution.

"We were outplayed. Out-prepared, out-coached, the whole thing," Harbaugh said. "Both offensively and defensively, it was thorough. You know, we knew it about their team, and they have the ability.

"They're good enough, if they play good enough, they are good enough to beat you thoroughly, and that's what happened today."

The Wisconsin defense shut out Michigan's offense in the first half and took a 28-0 lead, which was the first time the Wolverines trailed by 28 or more at halftime since Oct. 18, 1958, when they trailed Northwestern 43-0. The Wolverines only had nine yards rushing, and quarterback Shea Patterson couldn't find the time to make an accurate throw, with pass-rushers in pursuit all game.

Patterson was replaced by backup Dylan McCaffrey after the first half, but McCaffrey left the game in the third quarter with what Harbaugh said was a concussion, after taking a hit to the helmet that was called a targeting penalty.

"I won't comment on it," Harbaugh said. "But it seemed like it was clearing up for him [after the game]."

The offense had a bye week to prepare itself for this game after struggling with turnovers and issues moving the ball in Week 2 against Army. The bye week was supposed to help iron out those problems, but it was evident they are long-term issues rather than easy fixes.

So much so that tight end Nick Eubanks believes the team, including the offense, has yet to find its identity.

Four weeks into the season and two poor performances, the offense that lacks an identity finished this game against Wisconsin with 40 rushing yards and 259 passing yards. The Wolverines ran the ball only 19 times, with nine yards as the longest run of the game.

"I believe our offense is not as consistent as we hoped it would be," Eubanks said. "But through the next few practices, we'll find that identity and find that rhythm."

It isn't just the offense the needs to find that identity, though, as the defense allowed Wisconsin running back Jonathan Taylor to run all over the field, racking up 143 rush yards and two touchdowns in the first quarter alone.

play
2:05

Wisconsin dominates on the ground in win over Michigan

Led by star RB Jonathan Taylor, the Wisconsin Badgers jump out to a 28-0 lead en route to a dominant win over the Michigan Wolverines.

Defensive end Aidan Hutchinson was visibly upset in the postgame news conference after the defense's performance and vowed the team would improve.

"Right now, we're at the point in the season, we had our first Big Ten game, we lose it, so now we got our backs against the wall," Hutchinson said. "We just gotta fight to get out of this position we're in, and we'll do it. I'm confident."

Michigan has a tough slate ahead with Iowa, Michigan State, Penn State, Notre Dame and Ohio State still on the schedule and will have to put up more than a fight to get through that gauntlet.

The Wolverines are now 4-11 against top-15 teams under Harbaugh after this loss, including 0-8 in road and neutral site games. To finish the way this team is hoping, Michigan is going to have to find the answer and find it quickly.

"It's up to us to find our identity, even though we have a game coming up next Saturday," Eubanks said. "We have to find it quick. We know the type of season, it's a long season. It's a gut check, but we have to be able to capitalize on it."

'Animated' Boone ejected for arguing strike zone

Published in Baseball
Saturday, 21 September 2019 12:25

NEW YORK -- Yankees manager Aaron Boone clashed Saturday with another rookie umpire, and this time, veteran crew chief Joe West stepped in.

Boone was ejected by West, umpiring at third base, for arguing balls and strikes during a 7-2 win over the Toronto Blue Jays.

New York slugger Giancarlo Stanton struck out looking at three low strikes from rookie T.J. Zeuch for the final out of the first inning. Stanton argued briefly with plate umpire Jeremie Rehak -- an injury replacement from Triple-A -- before heading back to the dugout.

Boone, meanwhile, shouted profanities from the bench, and West signaled his ejection from across the field. Rehak also booted Yankees hitting coach Marcus Thames during the exchange.

"I was just upset within an at-bat where G's coming back and I felt like there were a few in there in his at-bat where it kind of got taken away, so I just got animated," Boone said. "The bottom line is I probably wasn't going to get thrown out from Jeremie. I was starting to walk away and the confrontation happened with Joe."

Boone's interactions with umpires have been well-documented this year, and he's been tossed five times. The most notable was an exchange with rookie ump Brennan Miller in July when TV mics capture Boone repeatedly calling his players "savages." That tirade went viral, and New York players routinely wear T-shirts commemorating the rant.

"I like to think I'm always in control of my emotions," Boone said. "There's times that I'm going to fight and I think it's necessary. As hard as we are on our guys about controlling the strike zone and how much we demand of them in that regard, it's something I'm passionate about and I'm going to fight. I don't want our guys leaving the strike zone."

New York was also peeved with West over his strike zone Friday night, when Brett Gardner argued forcefully after a called strike in the ninth. Boone said that disagreement wasn't a factor Saturday.

Braves' new world: Loftier goals than NL East title

Published in Baseball
Saturday, 21 September 2019 16:58

ATLANTA -- One year ago, just winning the NL East was enough for the rebuilding Atlanta Braves.

Now manager Brian Snitiker and general manager Alex Anthopoulos expect more.

Even as players celebrated their second straight division title with beer and bubbly on Friday night, focus shifted.

"Our first goal was to win the East and we did, and I think now that's not good enough," Snitker said Saturday. "I think our guys know they're capable of a lot more than that. The goal now is the big prize. We feel like we have a team that can do that. We are deep enough, strong enough. I think that is a realistic goal, not just to want to get in but to win the whole thing."

After Friday night's clinching 6-0 win over the Giants, Anthopoulos stood outside the clubhouse doors while the rowdy celebration continued inside.

The GM didn't allow himself to be sprayed. He was looking ahead to the Division Series starting Oct. 3.

"Kind of by design," Anthopoulos said when asked how he stayed dry. "Hopefully we're doing this after the DS and that's when I'm going to be wet."

The Braves haven't won the World Series since 1995 at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium, two ballparks ago. They have lost nine straight playoff series since sweeping Houston in the 2001 NL Division Series, including last year's four-game loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Atlanta's only regulars in Saturday night's lineup were Ronald Acuna Jr., Josh Donaldson and Dansby Swanson. Others, including Freddie Freeman and Ozzie Albies, were rested.

Donaldson likely will not start on Sunday. Snitker acknowledged it may be more difficult to hold out Acuna, who is chasing a 40-40 season.

Swanson, however, feels he needs at-bats after missing a month with a foot injury.

"I need to play," Swanson said. "I missed enough time. I'm still looking for ways to kind of find that groove and get back to where I was before. Each day I'm working to get better and I need the at-bats to continue to boost myself in the right direction."

"I told the guys I feel like we knocked on the door last year. Now we're going to try to kick that sucker in." Brian Snitker, Braves manager

Swanson said the offseason additions of Donaldson and catcher Brian McCann plus re-signinh Nick Markakis put the Braves in position to be a more viable postseason contender.

"I think as soon as the season was over last year everyone was excited to come back and get to work," Swanson said. "With the additions of J.D. and Mac and having Nick come back really put us in a good position to really win consistently and to be able to do it in a multitude of ways."

Acuna (41 homers), Freeman (38) and Donaldson (37) have led Atlanta's deep lineup. Freeman's 120 RBIs led the majors entering Saturday's games. Acuna led the NL with 126 runs and 37 stolen bases.

"I told the guys I feel like we knocked on the door last year," Snitker said. "Now we're going to try to kick that sucker in."

British para-athletes ready for Dubai

Published in Athletics
Saturday, 21 September 2019 11:36

World Para Athletics Champs in Dubai is an ideal stepping stone for Tokyo Paralympics, says GB head coach Paula Dunn

British para-athletics head coach Paula Dunn is confident with the squad selected for the World Para Athletics Championships in Dubai in November and believes the event will act as a “good stepping stone” toward Tokyo next summer.

The 43-strong team features a mix of more experienced athletes with those making their senior international debuts and Dunn believes that meeting the UK Sport target of 24 to 28 medals would put the squad in good stead ahead of the Paralympic Games in Japan nine months later.

“We’ve gone for a smaller team size knowing that we’re really in the run in now to Tokyo,” the former sprinter explains. “There are 43 athletes selected – a mixture of established athletes, current world champions and some new athletes.

“I see the championships being so close to Tokyo as yes, we want to go out and do well, but it’s definitely a stepping stone toward Tokyo as opposed to this is the final event.”

READ MORE: GB team named for World Para Athletics Championships

While 11 world champions from London two years ago are set to defend their titles – including Jonnie Peacock, Hannah Cockroft and Sophie Hahn – their team-mates Dan Greaves and Georgie Hermitage are missing through injury.

“We made a decision based on where they are in terms of their rehab that Tokyo should be the focus,” Dunn says, as she also highlights the return of 100m and 200m champion Libby Clegg, who will race the T11 200m alongside guide runner Thomas Somers, following the birth of her first baby in April.

“She has come back quicker than we were all anticipating,” adds Dunn on Clegg, “but she wanted to do the championships, again as part of her preparations going into Tokyo.”

Multiple Commonwealth medallist Dunn is also looking forward to the performances of rising stars such as T38 sprinter Thomas Young and T13 long jumper Zak Skinner in Dubai.

“Thomas Young got double gold in Berlin and this is his first world champs so he will be one to watch,” she says.

“Zak Skinner, again, is jumping really well this year. He sustained a bit of an injury so he had to cut his season short but is looking good to go and compete in November.

“We’ve got some exciting young talent and established talent as well. I’m looking forward to seeing them all compete and hopefully achieve their own personal goals.”

England will start their World Cup campaign desperate to improve on the disappointments of the last two tournaments as they take on Tonga on Sunday.

Four years on from becoming the first host nation to go out of a World Cup at the group stage and eight from a scandal-hit campaign in New Zealand, Eddie Jones' team begin this one with a semi-final place as the minimum expectation.

Jones took Australia to the final in 2003 and helped coach South Africa to glory in 2007, his four years of coaching England culminating in the next month and a half.

He said: "World Cups are always emotional. You get to do something that is pretty special.

"To coach a nation and to be responsible for a nation at a World Cup, where you know it's not just rugby fans watching.

"Families watch World Cups, that's the difference. It becomes an event for the country, rather than an event for rugby followers.

"It becomes an event for this country here. To be involved in that is a real honour.

"That's the amazing thing about World Cups. You are playing seven rugby games so it's no different than anything else, but it is in extraordinary circumstances."

Jones has opted to pick George Ford at fly-half and Owen Farrell at inside-centre for the game in the Sapporo Dome, with the team's next fixture against the USA in Kobe just four days later.

He has also gone for the youthful combination of Tom Curry at blind-side and Sam Underhill at open-side, a pairing he described as England's "kamikaze twins" during their World Cup warm-up matches.

Farrell, who will captain the side as scrum-half Ben Youngs wins his 90th cap, played at 10 during this season's Six Nations but says he is happy to reignite his old partnership with Ford.

Farrell told BBC Radio 5 Live: "It's not like you change a player completely by putting a different shirt number on.

"I've obviously known George for a long time, but I've known a lot of these lads for a long time.

"We feel like we've got a brilliant squad here, with a lot of talent and a lot of cohesion - hopefully we keep growing and we keep improving right up to Sunday and beyond."

England supporters have been pouring into Sapporo over the last few days, the weather in the most northern of the tournament's venues becoming warmer and drier as the match has approached.

The game is being played indoors at the Sapporo Dome, where Australia came from behind to beat Fiji on Saturday and where, at the football World Cup in 2002, David Beckham's penalty helped England beat Argentina.

It will be an emotional occasion in particular for England's number eight Billy Vunipola, whose father and uncle both played for Tonga the last time the two nations met in a World Cup.

Tonga have won only one of their past seven Tests heading into this clash and, having shipped 14 tries in a warm-up match against the All Blacks, will begin as rank outsiders.

But Jones, who as Japan coach in 2015 plotted the famous defeat of the Springboks, is taking nothing for granted.

"Tonga will have that ferocious pride - they are playing for more than just a game of rugby," he said.

"They are playing for a small country that fights against the odds and players there are fighting for their livelihoods, we know it means a lot for them.

"We understand how much emotion and intensity will go into the game and we have to match that.

"But we want to take them on. We are England and we want to take them on up front so no one will come out of there guessing."

England will meet Argentina and France to complete their group stage, the winner of Pool C playing the team that finishes second in Pool D, which contains both Wales and Australia.

Teams

England: Daly, Watson, Tuilagi, Farrell (c), May, Ford, Youngs; Marler, George, Sinckler, Lawes, Itoje, Curry, Underhill, Vunipola.

Replacements: Cowan-Dickie, Genge, Cole, Kruis, Ludlam, Heinz, Slade, Joseph.

Tonga: Halaifonua, Pakalani, Piutau (c), Vuna, Lolohea, Morath, Takulua; Fisiihoi, Sakalia, Tameifuna, Lousi, Fifita, Kalamafoni, Kapeli, Vaipulu.

Replacements: Maile, Talakai, Fia, Faleafa, Manu, Fukofuka, Faiva, Tu'itavake

Leclerc Storms To Third Straight F-1 Pole

Published in Racing
Saturday, 21 September 2019 09:40

SINGAPORE – Charles Leclerc’s impressive Formula One qualifying pace continued on Saturday at the Marina Bay Street Circuit, as the Monégasque driver earned his fifth pole of the season.

Leclerc lapped the 3.146-mile, 23-turn layout in 1:36.217 with his SF90-Ferrari to top qualifying for the third straight race, tying Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas for the most poles this year.

“It was quite a crazy lap,” Leclerc said. “The first one I compromised it — I started the lap too close to Lewis. I compromised the second sector, so then there was quite a bit of pressure to perform on the last lap.

“I gave it (my) all; there were quite a bit of mistakes. I lost the car a few times and I could see myself in the wall at least two or three times in the lap. But it felt amazing,” Leclerc added. “The car was great. Friday was a very difficult day for me, so to come here and do the pole position feels absolutely amazing.”

Joining Leclerc on the front row will be five-time and defending F-1 champion Lewis Hamilton, who turned a lap of 1:36.408 in Q3 to earn the second starting position, just edging out Leclerc’s teammate Sebastian Vettel.

Hamilton is a four-time winner in Singapore, tied with Vettel for the most in event history.

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen starts fourth on Sunday, with the front two rows covered by less than six tenths of a second on the time sheets.

The second Mercedes of Valtteri Bottas completed the top five.

Starting sixth will be Alexander Albon in the sister Red Bull entry, ahead of McLaren’s Carlos Sainz, the Renault pairing of Daniel Ricciardo and Nico Hulkenberg, and the second McLaren of Lando Norris.

The two Haas F1 Team cars struggled mightily on Saturday, both failing to make Q3. Kevin Magnussen grids up 14th and Romain Grosjean starts 18th for F-1’s only night race.

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