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Lapthorne loses in his second round-robin match

Published in Tennis
Friday, 06 September 2019 18:25

Andy Lapthorne lost in his second quad wheelchair singles round-robin match at the US Open as Australian Dylan Alcott came from behind to win.

Alcott, who beat the Briton to win the Wimbledon title in July, prevailed 0-6 7-6 (7-3) 6-3 in New York.`

Lapthorne defeated David Wagner on Thursday and will play American Bryan Barten in his final round-robin match.

The top two after the completion of the round-robin tournament will advance to Sunday's final.

Lapthorne will also team up with Alcott in Saturday's quad doubles final, having won together at Wimbledon.

Elsewhere at Flushing Meadows, defending champion Alfie Hewett's wheelchair singles quarter-final against Japanese second seed Shingo Kunieda was suspended because of the poor weather in New York on Friday, with the Briton leading 4-1 in the first set.

Serena Williams says she has not thought about her controversial defeat against Naomi Osaka in last year's US Open final as she again goes for a record-equalling 24th Grand Slam title.

American Williams, 37, called umpire Carlos Ramos a "thief" and a "liar" as he docked her a game amid extraordinary scenes on Arthur Ashe Stadium.

She meets Canadian Bianca Andreescu, 19, in this year's final on Saturday.

On last year's final, Williams said: "It hasn't really crossed my mind."

Williams is competing in her 10th US Open singles final, 20 years after her maiden victory in New York, while Andreescu is playing in her first Grand Slam final on her main-draw debut at Flushing Meadows.

Andreescu was not even born when Williams won her first Grand Slam title here in 1999.

"I remember watching her when I was about 10. I watched her win most of her Grand Slam titles," Andreescu, seeded 15th, said.

"I'm sure she's going to bring her A game. I'm going to try to bring my A game, too. Hopefully, I guess, may the best player win."

Williams feeling 'more relaxed' as she aims for 24

Twelve months ago, Williams was at the centre of one of the most controversial moments in tennis history on her way to a two-set defeat by Japan's Osaka.

The home favourite launched a furious tirade against Portuguese official Ramos after he punished her for receiving coaching from Patrick Mouratoglou and smashing a racquet as she grew more frustrated at the start of the second set.

That led to Ramos, who has not chaired a match of Williams' since, docking her a point and issuing the further punishment of a game's penalty for a tirade questioning his integrity.

A poisonous atmosphere developed on Ashe as the New York crowd turned on Ramos with deafening boos.

Williams has refused to speak in detail about the incident publicly since, although said she felt "disrespected" by the sport she loves in a first-person piece published in American fashion magazine Harper's Bazaar in July.

That meeting against Osaka, who was left crying with sadness after clinching her first Grand Slam win, was Williams' first US Open final since returning to the sport after the difficult birth of daughter Olympia a year earlier.

Williams also lost last year's Wimbledon final against Angelique Kerber and was beaten again in this year's final at the All England Club by Simona Halep.

Now she has a fourth opportunity to win that elusive 24th major - her first since becoming a mother - and says she is ready to dispel any doubts about her ability to win another major final.

"There's a lot of things that I've learned in the past, but I just have to go out there, above all, most of all, just stay relaxed," she said.

"I think being on the court is almost a little bit more relaxing than hanging out with a two-year-old that's dragging you everywhere. I think that's kind of been a little helpful."

Williams is aiming to equal Australian Margaret Court's all-time record of 24 Grand Slam singles titles by beating Andreescu, which would then give her the opportunity to become the leading major winner at the Australian Open in January - where a stadium is named after Court.

Williams has not won a major since the 2017 Australian Open when she was eight weeks pregnant.

After losing to an inspired Halep at Wimbledon, Williams said she was not feeling burdened by the weight of history as she chases Court's tally.

"It seems like every Grand Slam final I'm in recently it has been an unbelievable effort to get there," Williams said.

"It would be interesting to see how it would be under different circumstances."

Williams struggled with a knee problem going into Wimbledon but has been injury-free at Flushing Meadows, looking sharp and as powerful as ever while dropping just one set on her way to the final.

A brutal quarter-final win against China's 18th seed Wang Qiang lasted just 44 minutes, while Ukrainian fifth seed Elina Svitolina - expected to provide a tough test - was also overwhelmed in straight sets.

Early bloomer Andreescu aiming to join select group

While Williams might expect to be competing in another Grand Slam final, her opponent Andreescu says it is "crazy" that she will be playing in Saturday's showpiece.

Twelve months ago she lost in the first round of qualifying at Flushing Meadows and was ranked outside of the top 200 in the world.

But she has become the most talked about young player on the planet following a remarkable rise this year.

Andreescu, whose Romanian parents Nicu and Maria emigrated to Canada in the 1990s, had only played six tour-level matches at the turn of the year.

Since then she has won prestigious WTA Premier titles at Indian Wells and Toronto, rising to 15th in the world as a result and raking in £1.79m of her £1.97m career prize money.

Asked what her reaction would have been if somebody told her a year ago she would be facing Williams in the US Open final, she said: "I don't think I would have believed them. It's just crazy what a year can do.

"If someone would have said that a couple weeks ago, I think I would have believed them."

Belief is not something Andreescu has in short supply, her confidence exuding in a marvellous all-round game which has the variety to pull opponents apart, as well as having a killer forehand already rated as one of the best in the game.

That fearlessness also shone through in her semi-final win over Swiss 13th seed Belinda Bencic where she saved six break points in the opening set and fought back from 5-2 down in the second to win 7-6 (7-3) 7-5.

"I think it's just inside of me somehow. I think it's just my passion for the game, as well," she said.

"I expect a lot from myself, so I think that pressure also helps me do my best in matches."

Andreescu has already earned six wins over top-10 players this year - Caroline Wozniacki, Svitolina, Kerber (twice), Kiki Bertens and Karolina Pliskova - while she also led by an early break before Williams retired from their Rogers Cup final in Toronto last month with a back injury.

This run to the US Open final means she has won 13 straight matches and an extraordinary 44 of her 48 matches this season.

One more win will see her become the first teenager to win their first Grand Slam singles title since Maria Sharapova won Wimbledon aged 17 in 2004.

She would also match Monica Seles' record of winning a major in the Open era on only her fourth appearance in a Grand Slam main draw.

"I've always dreamt of this moment ever since I was a little kid. But I don't think many people would have actually thought that it would become a reality," Andreescu said.

"Being in the final is really special. Hopefully I can play a little bit better than I did in the semi-finals."

Analysis

Marion Bartoli, 2013 Wimbledon champion on BBC Radio 5 live

I think Serena has been feeling that extra bit of pressure since coming back from giving birth to Olympia which she didn't have before, necessarily.

For me it comes down to the extra pressure she puts on herself, on her own shoulders.

We are very close friends and we talked about it at length after she lost to Sofia Kenin at Roland Garros and for some reason she just can't get that extra pressure out of her mind.

She just feels she has to win this one, and it has to be that one that she's going to get to 24 and then to 25.

I think she'll be able to realise that it's not the correct mindset to have and that she should feel confident that she is the better player.

PHOTOS: World Stock Car Festival

Published in Racing
Friday, 06 September 2019 17:00

Matos Nabs Watkins Glen TA2 Pole

Published in Racing
Friday, 06 September 2019 18:38

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. – With the Trans-Am Series presented by Pirelli TA2 season winding down, every lap matters, even in qualifying.

The TA2 presented by AEM class drivers felt that urgency on Friday afternoon as the field of American muscle machines were flat out from the drop of the green flag.

By the time the checkered flag flew on the 20-minute session, the top-five drivers were only separated by seven tenths of a second with the front three rows claimed by a mix of  TA2 class veterans and rookies.

Not only fighting against his competitors, Rafa Matos was also fighting off an illness, but the defending champion didn’t let that keep him down as he captured his fourth pole of the 2019 season. Driving the No. 88 3Dimensional Services Group Chevrolet Camaro, Matos was able to  eclipse TA2 points leader Marc Miller by seven hundredths of a second with a fast time of 1:51.197 seconds on his third flying lap.

“I had a rough night trying to recover from this sickness,” Matos said. “We are doing everything we can to recover points from Marc (Miller). We are getting better every day. Every point counts. We need to get pole position point, the fastest lap of the race point and the win, all while hoping that Marc doesn’t have a good result, but this thing is far from over.”

Feeling the pressure from other drivers right from the start, Miller in the No. 40 Prefix/Stevens-Miller Racing Dodge Challenger drove hard from the green to the checkered in qualifying, but stayed focused on the big picture to claim another front row start, just 0.070 of a second adrift of Matos.

“Qualifying is one of those times where we should be spread out and not around each other, but today that just wasn’t the case,” Miller explained. “I got passed more in qualifying than I did in any of the three sessions just on the out lap. Things got a little haywire out there. Guys were really trying to push themselves and the track limits.  While a lot of the guys were racey, we were a little bit more methodical and got a couple good laps in and were just shy of pole position.”

The 2016 NASA Eastern States Spec Miata National Champion Tyler Kicera is making his professional motorsports debut  in TA2 class competition, wheeling the No. 4 Carbotech Brakes Kicera Motorsports Ford Mustang. While Kicera is new to the TA2 class, he has a lot of experience on the 3.4-mile, 11-turn circuit. Kicera claimed the track record at Watkins Glen in a Spec Miata on his way to his 2016 title.

Kicera’s first outing in TA2 was bittersweet. The Pennsylvania-native set the third fastest time of the day on the opening lap with a time of 1:51.500-seconds, but incidental contact with another car in Lap 2 wrecked his front end and his chance of taking pole.

“The opening lap was pretty full on,” said Kicera. “I thought we would go out and warm the car, but the other guys ahead of me kind of went, so I figured I probably needed to follow suit being the new guy. I got a really good first lap in and then got mixed up with some people, and ruined my shot at pole. It’s frustrating that we sit P3 on the grid and have to spend a lot of time this evening to try to make the race tomorrow.”

Sharing second row is another top contender, Thomas Merrill. Returning to the No. 81 Skip Barber Ford Mustang, Merrill slid into a P4 start his first time driving the Big Diehl Racing prepared TA2 car at Watkins Glen.

“These things are awesome to drive around Watkins Glen,” Merrill said. “This place is super fast, super smooth and flying these things through the chicane is a special experience.”

Scott Lagasse Jr. in the No. 92 SLR/Fields Racing/M1 Racecars Chevrolet Camaro rounded out the top five.

Outfitted in a BC Race Car, 17-year-old Kent Vaccaro made his mark in the TA2 class, driving the No. 25 BC Race Cars Chevrolet Camaro. Piloting a car with a roof for the first time, the open-wheel young gun finished just outside the top-five in sixth place with a fast time of 1:52.302.

“It was a tremendous day,” Vaccaro beamed after his first qualifying session. “I got comfortable with the car pretty quickly. My coach told me today to lick the stamp and send it, and that’s exactly what we did. BC Race Cars gave me a fast car this weekend, and I was able to showcase that in qualifying. I’m used to running open wheel cars for around 30-minutes per session. The heat and extended track time in the car are things that I’ve had to get used to, but the Cool Shirt really makes a difference.”

NASCAR K&N Pro Series East driver Ty Gibbs session was cut short after breaking a right lower ball joint on his No. 26 Mike Cope Racing machine entering the first turn of The Loop, placing him in Row 4 for Saturday’s 100-mile race.

“Breaking the ball joint ruined our qualifying session,” Gibbs said. “We only got two laps in and will start seventh. Mike Cope Racing gave me a really good car and we will kill it in the race tomorrow.”

Golf has seen all sorts of weird rulings throughout the years, and Paul Casey was nearly involved in one on Friday at the European Open.

Casey was called in to take a second look at one of the putts he made on during his second-round 73, after it was determined it rolled directly over a bug before diving into the left edge of the hole.

As Casey explains in the video tweeted out by the European Tour, if you knowingly hit an animal - including a bug - while taking a stroke, you have to replay the shot.

In this case, the 13-time European Tour winner escaped a rules infraction since he didn't "knowingly" putt over the bug.

Casey enters the weekend six shots off the lead at Green Eagle Golf Course. He'll need to make some birdies, and avoid any other weird rules infractions, if he's got any chance to take home the hardware.

LIVE: Pulisic and U.S. take on rivals Mexico

Published in Soccer
Friday, 06 September 2019 18:23

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Duke probe finds no evidence Nike paid Zion

Published in Breaking News
Friday, 06 September 2019 19:31

Duke officials said outside investigators spent five months looking into attorney Michael Avenatti's claims that Nike funneled money to players, including former Blue Devils star Zion Williamson, to steer them toward college basketball programs it sponsored and found no evidence supporting his allegations.

Duke said it found no proof that Williamson, the 2019 ACC Player of the Year as a freshman and the No. 1 pick by the New Orleans Pelicans in June's NBA draft, received improper benefits that would have made him ineligible to play for the Blue Devils last season.

"As soon as Duke was made aware of any allegation that might have affected Zion Williamson's eligibility, we conducted a thorough and objective investigation which was directed by individuals outside the athletics department," Duke spokesman Michael Schoenfeld told the News & Observer, which was first to report results of the investigation. "We found no evidence to support any allegation. Zion thrived as both a student and an athlete at Duke, and always conducted himself with integrity and purpose."

In a statement to ESPN on Friday, Avenatti said the people conducting Duke's outside investigation never contacted him.

"I never heard from anyone associated with Duke in connection with my allegations or any investigation," Avenatti said. "I was never asked a single question. I was never asked what information or documents that I was aware of. Who the hell conducted this investigation? Inspector Clouseau?

"The documents and the hard evidence do not lie. Zion Williamson was paid to attend Duke. [Coach Mike Krzyzewski] has made and facilitated payments to players for years. And when the truth comes out -- and eventually it will -- Coach K and Duke's reputation will forever and rightfully be tarnished.

"And if what I'm saying is untrue, I challenge Coach K and Duke University to file a defamation lawsuit against me tomorrow and we can let the chips fall where they may."

Last month, Avenatti's attorneys filed a court motion that alleged a Nike employee at least approved under-the-table payments to Williamson and former Indiana star Romeo Langford when they were still in high school in February 2017.

The alleged offers -- $35,000 or more for Williamson and $20,000 for Langford -- were purportedly discovered among "text messages, e-mails and other documents from 2016-17 ... proving that Nike executives had arranged for and concealed payments, often in cash, to amateur basketball players and their families and 'handlers,'" according to the motion filed in U.S. District Court in New York.

Federal prosecutors charged Avenatti in March with attempting to extort up to $25 million from Nike by threatening to expose the shoe company's alleged improper payments to high-profile players in its grassroots basketball league, the EYBL.

Avenatti has pleaded not guilty, and last month his lawyers asked a federal judge to dismiss the charges on grounds of vindictive and selective prosecution.

Divac kicks off Hall of Fame induction ceremony

Published in Basketball
Friday, 06 September 2019 18:23

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. -- Vlade Divac is leading off the festivities at the Basketball Hall of Fame's 2019 enshrinement ceremonies.

The former Los Angeles Lakers star was the first to be inducted Friday night at Springfield's Symphony Hall. He would be joined later by Jack Sikma, Sidney Moncrief, Paul Westphal, Bobby Jones, Al Attles and Teresa Weatherspoon.

Chuck Cooper and Carl Braun were inducted posthumously, and Bill Fitch was unable to attend for health reasons.

Divac, born in the former Yugoslavia, was one of the first Europeans to star in the NBA, playing seven-plus seasons with the Lakers and six with the Sacramento Kings. He was presented by Jerry West, the Lakers executive who drafted him. West, who was inducted in 1980, received the Presidential Medal of Freedom on Thursday.

Harper plunked by Matz; exits with hand injury

Published in Baseball
Friday, 06 September 2019 18:57

NEW YORK -- Philadelphia Phillies right fielder Bryce Harper exited Friday night's game against the New York Mets with a right-hand contusion after he was hit on the right hand by a pitch from Mets starter Steven Matz in the third inning.

Harper, batting with one out and a runner on third, was ahead in the count 1-0 when Matz's 93 mph fastball sailed up and in on him. Harper recoiled and the ball ricocheted off his hand.

The 26-year-old fell to his knees and gripped his hand in pain before getting to his feet and walking back to the plate, where Mets catcher Wilson Ramos appeared to ask Harper how he was doing. Harper put his head on Ramos' shoulder before Ramos, a former teammate with the Washington Nationals, patted him on the shoulder.

After a brief visit from a trainer and manager Gabe Kapler, Harper trotted to first base. He was retired at second on an inning-ending double play by Rhys Hoskins, after which Sean Rodriguez trotted out to replace Harper in right field.

Harper's plunking might be the latest chapter in what has become a volatile rivalry this season. The Mets have been hit by a pitch 14 times in 16 games against the Phillies, who have been hit by a New York pitcher eight times.

Hoskins took offense to a pair of up-and-in pitches from Jacob Rhame on April 23 and punctuated his displeasure by taking a 35-second home run trot after going deep off Rhame the next night.

On July 6, Phillies right-hander Jake Arrieta hit three Mets batters. Todd Frazier, the second batter plunked by Arrieta, was ejected for arguing after home plate umpire Tripp Gibson warned both teams. Two batters later, Arrieta wasn't ejected after hitting Amed Rosario with a changeup, though New York manager Mickey Callaway was tossed for arguing. After the game, Arrieta said if Frazier was unhappy about being hit, "he can come see me and I'll put a dent in his skull."

Harper, in the first year of a 13-year contract worth $330 million, is batting .254 with 30 homers and 100 RBIs in 136 games.

Cubs' Baez to get MRI on thumb, remains out

Published in Baseball
Friday, 06 September 2019 18:15

MILWAUKEE -- Chicago Cubs shortstop Javy Baez will get an MRI on his left thumb Saturday as he continues to remain out of the lineup after jamming it on a headfirst slide last Sunday.

"When he came in today [Friday] he tried to swing," manager Joe Maddon said. "It still didn't feel right. As opposed to continually waiting, we just want to find out what we're dealing with."

Baez will miss his fourth consecutive game Friday and will miss Saturday's contest against the Milwaukee Brewers as well. He was a late scratch Thursday after attempting to take batting practice.

The Cubs won't have a timetable for him until after they see the results of the MRI.

Meanwhile, pitcher Yu Darvish was cleared to start his game Saturday after missing his previous outing with tightness in his right forearm. Darvish said he's been dealing with the injury for over two months, having first felt something during a game July 3. It hasn't affected his performance, as the right-hander has compiled a 2.93 ERA in nine starts since that appearance, but it might have limited some outings.

"Every time in the fifth or sixth inning, I start feeling tightness," Darvish said. "That's why Joe [Maddon] sometimes pulls me."

play
1:40

Yu Darvish discusses forearm issue

Watch Yu Darvish discuss the forearm issue that forced him to miss a start. He says he's fine for Saturday's outing against Milwaukee.

Cubs closer Craig Kimbrel said he is optimistic he'll have a short stint on the injured list as he recovers from elbow inflammation. He hasn't pitched since Sunday.

"We were pleased with what we saw on the MRI," Kimbrel said. "Take a few days off, let it rest and crank it back up."

Kimbrel isn't sure if his June signing with the Cubs has led to the two different injured-list stints for him, including one for a sore knee.

"We'll never know," the right-hander said. "I've been pitching in the big leagues for a few years. You don't go through a season without ups and downs."

Kimbrel is available to come off the injured list Thursday.

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