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CHICO, Calif. — Tim Kaeding found himself in the right place at the right time and capitalized to score round two of the King of the West by NARC Fujitsu Sprint Car Series Fastest Four Days in Motorsports at Silver Dollar Speedway.
He pocketed $5,000 for his efforts.
Kaeding, started the 30-lapper in the fourth spot aboard Rod Tiner’s Shark Racing Engines Helix sprint car and watched the race unfold in front of him. He motored past fast qualifier Andy Forsberg on the second circuit for the runner-up spot and then had a front row seat when race leader Shane Golobic’s engine blew on lap six.
At the same time that was happening, the race came to a screeching halt when Stephen Ingraham took a nasty barrel roll down the back chute. He suffered a knee injury but limped away from his destroyed race car under his own power.
Kaeding inherited the lead for the restart, but had to fend off a tailgating Kyle Larson and the freight train that included Forsberg, Mitchell Faccinto, Bud Kaeding and Colby Copeland. Larson began to challenge the leader as the pair zigged and zagged through slower traffic.
However, Larson charge ended when he jumped the cushion and spun on lap 17, bringing out the caution.
The two-time King of the West champion continued where he left off and survived two more caution periods on his way to his 67th series victory.
The battle for the runner-up position was a classic open wheel battle that saw the next three drivers swap positions on a corner by corner basis. Pole Shuffle winner Mitchell Faccinto ultimately won that battle in the TSG Recycling Disposal KPC.
Forsberg settled for the show position aboard his own A & A Stepping Stone sprint car. Bud Kaeding drove the Alviso Rock Maxim from 14thto finish fourth. Colby Copeland finished fifth.
“This one feels real good,” said Kaeding. “I don’t know how many of these wins I have left in my career so I’m enjoying everyone! I can’t say enough about Rod Tiner and this team who gave me a great race car. This one was a lot of fun.”
The finish:
Tim Kaeding, Mitchell Faccinto, Andy Forsberg, Bud Kaeding, Colby Copeland, Nathan Rolfe, D.J Netto, Dominic Scelzi, Kyle Larson, Rico Abreu, Jonathan Allard, Geoff Ensign, Ryan Bernal, Sean Watts, Heath Hall, Chelsea Blevins, Michael Ing, Gary Paulson, Shane Golobic, Stephen Ingraham, Cole Macedo, Willie Croft, Sean Becker.
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MANSFIELD, Ohio — Scott Bloomquist and Jonathan Davenport claimed feature victories during Thursday night’s preliminary program for the second annual Dirt Million presented by Arizona Sport Shirts.
Bloomquist, a three-time Lucas Oil Late Model Dirt Series National Champion won the first 30-lap Duel of the night in the new format instituted for this year’s race.
Davenport, the two-time and defending series champion held off a trio of drivers in a furious finish in the second 30-lap Duel. Both feature races went caution-free.
Bloomquist took the lead at the start of the first feature and sprinted away to easily pick up the win. The win marks his all-time leading 95th Lucas Oil Late Model Dirt Series career win.
Both Josh Richards and Brandon Sheppard tried to track down Bloomquist, but the boss of Team Zero went to Victory Lane for the first-time at Mansfield.
With the win, Bloomquist cemented himself into Saturday’s 100-lap Dirt Million main event. Richards held off Sheppard to earn the runner-up spot with Michael Norris and Darrell Lanigan rounding out the top five.
“The car has felt great after we found out what was wrong with it. We put in on a jig last week and it was pretty far off,” Bloomquist said. “We had a pretty good car last week at Batesville. I hope it feels as good here Saturday night. We hot lapped fast tonight, we qualified a little off, and we changed a few things that we didn’t like. I want to dedicate this race to Chris [Madden]. I hate it that he got hurt earlier in the week. He should be back in a few weeks.”
“He [Bloomquist] was in a league of his own,” said the runner-up Richards. “There was one time we got caught up in lapped traffic that we were gaining on him just a little bit and that was only because of the lapped cars. We needed to be better. Me and Sheppard had a good race for second. We need to be a little better tomorrow night. This place has always been good to me.”
The second duel feature saw Davenport take the lead from Mike Marlar on lap five and hold off a trio of drivers before he could go to victory lane for the 11th time this season with the Lucas Oil Late Model Dirt Series.
Davenport got caught up in lapped traffic and that allowed Chase Junghans, Bobby Pierce, and Ricky Weiss all to close on him in the final ten laps of the race. Junghans passed Weiss for second with four laps to go as Pierce followed topside two laps from the finish.
As the four drivers came off of turn four Davenport had traffic on front of him, but he held off a furious charge from the other three competitors for the win.
“I was hoping to see the checkered flag sooner. I was looking around and I couldn’t really tell if anybody was underneath me. I was trying the bottom and the top. They were two-wide in front of me. I couldn’t make the middle work like I could the bottom and the top. I saw Stormy [Scott] down there on the bottom and he was pretty good, so I just tried to stay focused on what I was doing.”
Junghans came close to scoring his first career Lucas Oil victory with his runner-up finish after starting sixth.
“The only way we were going to win was if JD missed his marks. It was a hornet’s nest down there with those lapped cars. I felt good around the bottom in three and four. The track was great once it cleaned off. Hopefully we will get one spot better tomorrow night.”
The finishes:
First feature: Scott Bloomquist, Josh Richards, Brandon Sheppard, Michael Norris, Darrell Lanigan, Dennis Erb Jr., Tim McCreadie, Tyler Erb, Gregg Satterlee, Rick Eckert, Shanon Buckingham, Earl Pearson Jr., Jared Landers, Max Blair, Brian Shirley, Kent Robinson, Doug Drown, Mike Benedum, Billy Moyer Jr., Gordy Gundaker.
Second feature: Jonathan Davenport, Chase Junghans, Bobby Pierce, Ricky Weiss, Mike Marlar, Dale McDowell, Hudson O’Neal, Steve Casebolt, Chris Ferguson, Jimmy Owens, Devin Moran, Brandon Overton, Billy Moyer, Shannon Babb, Shane Clanton, Kyle Bronson, David Scott, Mason Zeigler, Stormy Scott, Eddie Carrier Jr.
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BECHTELSVILLE, Pa. — Aaron Reutzel won the Ollie’s Bargain Outlet All Star Circuit of Champions presented by Mobil 1 visit to Grandview Speedway for the second consecutive year Thursday night.
Reutzel led all 35 laps aboard the Baughman-Reutzel Motorsports/Folkens Brothers Trucking/Fischer Body Shop/No. 87 to become the first winner of the Hodnett Cup at the third-mile race track.
It was Reutzel’s eighth All Star victory of the season and pushed him two points ahead of Dale Blaney in the battle for the series championship.
Before Reutzel could march his way to victory against the infamous Pennsylvania Posse, Mother Nature intervened just after qualifying resulting in a lengthy delay. Suffice it to say, track and Series officials held their ground and allowed the weather to pass.
“I just want to thank all of the fans, as well as all of the officials for sticking this one out and not throwing in the towel. We all really appreciate their efforts,” Reutzel said. “It was definitely a hard call to make, but I’m glad they did it. The track was really fast tonight because of the rain. We were really lucky to draw the one [during dash redraw]. That was a pretty big deal.”
Despite starting from the pole position and earning the initial jump, the path to victory was not paved easy for Reutzel.
After a pair of cautions, one resulting in red-flag conditions, disturbed competition during the first six circuits, a long green followed, thus creating periods of dense traffic around the Grandview bullring.
As traffic started to intensify, so did the pressure on Reutzel for the lead. By lap 20, Paul McMahan, who battled in the second position the entire distance up until that point, was all over Reutzel for the top spot.
Danny Dietrich, a 13-time winner in 2019, soon threw his hat into the ring creating a three-car battle for the lead. The lead trio raced nearly nose to tail until a yellow sign of relief waved for Reutzel on lap 27. The caution allowed Reutzel to restart in clean air, and that is where he dominated.
McMahan held on to finish second at the final checkers, followed by Dietrich, Ryan Smith and Ryan Taylor.
“There were a lot of lapped cars that were not cooperating,” Reutzel explained. “In clean air I was really good, but in dirty air I struggled a little bit. Hats off to my guys. Night in and night out, they bust their butts and it really shows.”
The finish:
Feature (35 Laps): 1. 87-Aaron Reutzel [1]; 2. 13-Paul McMahan [2]; 3. 48-Danny Dietrich [4]; 4. 72-Ryan Smith [5]; 5. 20-Ryan Taylor [3]; 6. 11-Dale Blaney [11]; 7. 98H-Dave Blaney [6]; 8. 14-Tony Stewart [13]; 9. 70-Brock Zearfoss [7]; 10. 26-Cory Eliason [9]; 11. 51-Freddie Rahmer [14]; 12. 91R-Kyle Reinhardt [15]; 13. 88-Brandon Rahmer [16]; 14. 39M-Anthony Macri [22]; 15. 5-Jeff Halligan [18]; 16. W20-Greg Wilson [20]; 17. 99-Skylar Gee [19]; 18. 73B-Brett Michalski [21]; 19. 91-Anthony Fiore [17]; 20. O7-Gerard McIntyre [8]; 21. 87K-Alan Krimes [12]; 22. 40-George Hobaugh [23]; 23. 70X-Justin Peck [10] Lap Leaders: Aaron Reutzel (1-30)
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KOKOMO, Ind. — Driving his second car in as many nights, Thomas Meseraull cruised to his first USAC AMSOIL National Sprint Car Series victory of the season on night one of Sprint Car Smackdown VIII at Kokomo Speedway.
On Wednesday Meseraull led laps aboard the No. 23s Simon Racing entry. Thursday night he was aboard Tom Eades’ No. 47, giving the first-year car owner his initial USAC triumph.
Meseraull knew he had to put together a complete night to provide himself his best shot to collect a USAC AMSOIL National Sprint Car win for the fifth-straight year, something accomplished only by five other drivers: Brady Bacon, Justin Grant, Chase Stockon, Kevin Thomas, Jr. and Chris Windom over the same time span since 2015.
“After (Indiana) Sprint Week, we got our ass handed to us, flat out,” Meseraull admitted. “We just got beat. It was a little unexpected. I had to qualify a little better tonight, and I did, which put us up front. Track position in these deals is everything. It’s everything.”
Meseraull began his journey from the outside of the front row, but it was Bacon who took control early on, sliding from his pole starting position to the top in turn one to lead the opening seven circuits with Meseraull in tow, trailing the two-time series champ a couple car lengths behind.
The first stoppage of the night came on lap seven when the night’s ProSource Hard Work Award winner and 19th running Josh Hodges flipped upside down in turn four.
Once racing resumed, Meseraull stuck right with Bacon, and on the ninth lap, made his bid for the lead, dipping to the bottom of turn one and sliding up in front of Bacon for the top spot. With tension high and the competition at a peak level, Meseraull knew there was no time to putt around in second.
“It was so slick to the curb, and the curb was on the wall. It was as tall as me, I swear,” Meseraull recalled. “It was so big out there, I knew I couldn’t waste any time. After the red flag, we ended up parking there right off of three and realized that it wasn’t slick to the curb. It had a big hole before the curb, like the track had gotten ate up and it had this big dip and my car was evil up there. I’d hit it and it’d get up on two wheels. I just started going in above it in three and cheating across it and driving to the slick. That hole got Brady one lap, and I knew I had to just bomb it in there and hope to God that it would stick, and it stuck.”
Meanwhile, as the battle for the lead switched hands, fourth-running C.J. Leary biked entering on the bottom of turn one. The series point leader miraculously saved his mount without flipping or making contact, but the landing is what got him, flattening his left-rear tire before slowing to bring out the yellow.
On the 10th lap restart, Bacon went to work on the bottom underneath Meseraull for the lead in turn one, however Meseraull retained the momentum on the high side as did Courtney back in third. While Bacon trekked the low line, Courtney stuck to the top and raced around the outside to nip Bacon at the line for second and nail down the position exiting turn two.
Courtney put the chase on Meseraull, diamonding off the third turn as well as following him on the top shelf to find a way to close the gap. On the 12th lap, though, Courtney got in above the cushion a bit off turn four, allowing Meseraull to jump away and build his lead to nearly a full straightaway (2.729 seconds) just after the midway point.
On the 17th lap, Logan Seavey slowed to a stop on the bottom of turn one, erasing Meseraull’s substantial advantage just prior to hitting lapped traffic.
It hardly seemed to make a difference to Meseraull once the green flag dropped on the restart with 13 to go where he once again utilized the high line to break away from Courtney, holding a half-straightaway advantage down the stretch with only lapped traffic to contend with in the final five-lap push.
Meseraull skimmed the outside concrete in turn two with two to go, with no tiptoeing around the outside of the lappers occurring whatsoever, as he closed out a sterling performance with a 1.339-second victory over Courtney, Justin Grant, Brady Bacon and Chase Stockon.
To see full results, turn to the next page.
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Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang has said Arsenal can match Liverpool up front by starting him alongside Alexandre Lacazette and Nicolas Pepe when the two sides meet at Anfield in the Premier League on Saturday.
Liverpool's attacking trio of Mohamed Salah, Sadio Mane and Roberto Firmino combined for 69 goals and 19 assists in all competitions last season, and Aubameyang labelled them "one of the best trios in the world."
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"As we've seen from last season, Liverpool play with three up front and they play very well. Why not us? I think we can do it," Aubameyang told Sky Sports.
"I see a lot of similarities. Pepe and me, we are quick players like Mane and Salah, while 'Laca' is a player who can keep the ball and is really good with his feet like Firmino. So yes, we can say we are close enough."
Pepe, who cost Arsenal a club record £72 million, scored 22 league goals and provided 11 assists for Lille last season and Aubameyang is looking forward to seeing what he can bring to the attack when the three link up on the pitch.
"First of all, he speaks French so it will be easy for him to settle in and play with us," he added. "He only started training with us a few weeks ago but it's good to have him with us. He's started well.
"Last season he was amazing. He'll bring us speed and excellent finishing."
Accommodating all three in the starting lineup would require a change in formation but Aubameyang has no qualms about moving from the striker role to play out wide.
"I've played a lot of times on the right and the left during my career, so I'm used to it. It's a bit of a different job," he said.
"When you are a striker you have to keep hold of the ball and you have to score goals. When you are out wide you have to run and defend a bit more than if you are playing as a striker through the middle. But it's not a problem."
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Hungarian shock for Allegro-Lambiet
The Belgian pairing of Martin Allegro and Florent Lambiet were in for a shocker as they faced Hungarians Nandor Ecseki and Adam Szudi for a place in the semi-finals.
Ecseki-Szudi started strong and that itself seemed to shake up the Belgian duo. The match lasted barely 25 minutes in which the Hungarians claimed a deserved victory (11-5, 10-12, 11-6, 11-7). Over at Table 1, Austrians Robert Gardos and Daniel Habesohn knocked out Hong Kong’s Ho Kwan Kit and Wong Chun Ting in a fairly similar manner (11-8, 10-12, 11-2, 11-3).
“We are very happy to win this game. We lost against them last two or three matches but today we were well prepared. We tried to open the game more not to play too much short. And also we moved really well today. But it was very close we were 1-0 and 9-7 up and we lost the game so it was 1-1. But after we played really concentrated we didn´t make almost any easy mistakes and that was the key to the victory. We also had many lucky balls which are very important in table tennis. In doubles it is going really fast it is very important to start the set well then you have more confidence. We had a really tough draw in the 1st round we won 3-2 against strong Chinese pair so we are happy that we survived.” – Robert Gardos and Daniel Habesohn
Not a “Guten Tag” for Dang-Nina
After coming back from the jaws of defeat yesterday, the morning game between German duo of Qiu Dang and Nina Mittelham and their Brazilian opponents was one to look forward to.
Qiu and Mittelham sadly could not channel yesterday’s energy as they lost in straight games (11-8, 11-8, 11-7). Meanwhile, China’s Ma Te and Wu Yang – the conquerors of top seeds Lee Sangsu and Jeon Jihee – lost out to their Korean compatriots Cho Daeseong and Shin Yubin in a close encounter (4-11, 11-4, 11-8, 11-7).
And the action continues!
Follow the action live by keeping up to date on the match schedule for the day:
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Mallinder quits England set-up to become Scotland's performance director
Published in
Rugby
Friday, 23 August 2019 00:20

Jim Mallinder has left his post with the England set-up to become Scottish Rugby's new performance director.
He replaces Scott Johnson, who returned to his native Australia this summer to take a similar role with the Wallabies.
Mallinder, 53, took charge of England's young player pathway system in June 2018 after spells as head coach of Sale Sharks and Northampton Saints.
He is relishing his "exciting" new role and is "really impressed with the set-up in Scotland already."
"It was clear that this was an outstanding opportunity to really set the direction of travel for Scotland's high-performance ambitions," Mallinder added.
He will oversee the pathway from the feeder system into Scotland's two professional teams, the national men's and women's 15-a-side and sevens teams.
"I am delighted to have secured Jim in what is a pivotal and vital role within our high-performance structure," said Scottish Rugby chief executive Mark Dodson.
"He has a proven track record of developing players across a range of different career stages."
Mallinder, capped twice by England, led Sale to European Challenge Cup victory in 2002 in his first coaching role, before steering England Under-21s to the Six Nations title four years later.
He guided Northampton to promotion to England's top flight, winning the title in 2014. Saints also reached the 2011 European Cup final and won the European Challenge Cup and Anglo-Welsh Cup during his 10-year tenure.
'It looks a very good appointment'
BBC Scotland chief sports writer Tom English
He's very experienced. It looks like a very good appointment. He has an excellent track record in coaching at Sale and Northampton, where he won a Premiership title.
He has been a director of rugby before, so he knows the job. He was mentioned as a possible successor to [England head coach] Eddie Jones, so this will be seen as a bit of a blow for the RFU that he's leaving.
It could be considered a coup for Scottish rugby but we'll wait and see.
'England facing age-grade coaching crisis'
BBC rugby union correspondent Chris Jones
Mallinder's departure leaves the RFU facing an age-grade coaching crisis.
The RFU's head of international player development Dean Ryan and Under-20s head coach Steve Bates have also quit their roles in recent months.
And long-standing Under-18s coaches John Fletcher and Peter Walton were sacked by Ryan last June.
It leaves RFU bosses desperately needing to establish a completely fresh coaching set-up to support the senior side and help develop players through the age-groups.
Chief executive Bill Sweeney has already stated his intention for Eddie Jones to continue as head coach after the forthcoming World Cup even if England don't reach the semi-finals.
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Pogba, Rashford can share penalty duties - Solskjaer
Published in
Soccer
Friday, 23 August 2019 03:50

MANCHESTER, England -- Ole Gunnar Solskjaer says he will continue to let Marcus Rashford and Paul Pogba decide on the pitch who takes Manchester United's penalties despite a costly miss from the spot against Wolves.
Pogba saw his kick saved by Rui Patricio to deny United victory at Molineux after the Frenchman, who has missed four penalties in the last year, pulled rank on Rashford.
The on-field debate drew criticism from former United player Gary Neville but Solskjaer insists he has not changed his policy ahead of Crystal Palace's visit to Old Trafford on Saturday.
"I'm sure you're going see Paul Pogba score a pen for Manchester United again," Solskjaer told a news conference on Friday.
"We're practising [penalties] still and Marcus and Paul are still on them.
"Don't be surprised if Marcus or Paul scores the next one. There was absolutely no fighting amongst them.
"We've nominated two [takers] and throughout the season you'll have games where they are not playing and it's good to know they're there and trusted to take pens.
"It's not like anarchy and they can do whatever they want, we have a few. Last year we had Marcus, Jesse [Lingard] and Paul, it's not just left to them."
Pogba was subjected to racist abuse on social media following his penalty miss, prompting the club to brand the behaviour of those responsible as "disgusting".
Solskjaer has spoken to the midfielder since the incident on Monday night and insists the 26-year-old is ready to play against Palace.
"Paul is fine," Solskjaer said.
"He's a strong character and it makes him stronger. When you speak to him he's fine and I just cannot be believe we're still here in 2019 talking about these instances."
Meanwhile, the United manager has refused to hit back with Romelu Lukaku after the Belgium international said he "didn't feel protected" during a summer of speculation about his future.
Solskjaer, however, did suggest again that Alexis Sanchez could leave Old Trafford before the European transfer deadline on Sept. 2.
Talks are continuing with Inter Milan over a potential loan deal although sources have told ESPN FC that an agreement is not yet close.
"There are still talks with some clubs," Solskjaer said.
"He played [behind closed doors against Sheffield United] and played well. He's working hard and let's see in September what's going to happen."
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Will Liverpool change style vs. Arsenal to help Adrian?
Published in
Soccer
Friday, 23 August 2019 01:30

Two games in and there are already a handful clubs out of form, amid injury crisis, or just plain bad. Here are the the storylines to look out for ahead of matchday three.
Jump to: Where is Lucas? | Chelsea need Rudiger | Watford can't afford loss | No VAR, please
Will Liverpool have to change their approach?
It's the weekend's big game, an encounter between two clubs who sit atop of the nascent and entirely irrelevant Premier League table with 100 percent records. Liverpool vs. Arsenal has proved a slightly low-key but nonetheless spicy rivalry in recent years, providing thrilling games and occasional moments of brilliance.
Liverpool look to have started this season from where they left last term, with two wins so far and a couple of very satisfactory performances against Norwich and Southampton, but you wonder whether they might have to alter their style in the absence of Alisson, purely because of how the Brazilian uses his feet.
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In some respects it's unfair to expect any replacement to play as Alisson does, but his absence will surely alter the way Liverpool approach the game. With their first-choice in goal, they know that he will smartly play out from the back, and that his footwork in general compares to many outfield players, and the reassurance that he brings allows them to play with their standard intensity.
However, with the ball at his feet, Adrian -- the aforementioned replacement -- sometimes looks like he has been presented with a spherical explosive for some reason, treating it with the utmost suspicion and tries to get rid of it as quickly as possible. All of which in turn obviously creates uncertainty with everyone else. He has already given away one calamitous goal, laughed off by Jurgen Klopp, but you suspect another similar incident is more than possible.
Ultimately, Klopp must decide which of the two following options is least risky: Carry on in their current style and hope Adrian gets things right, or change things up and trust the rest of the team will get things right?
Why hasn't Lucas been in the Spurs team this season?
No player at a top six club can feel entitled to a place in their team every week, but can feel they're more deserving than others.
Take Lucas Moura for example: Hero of Tottenham's win over Ajax in last season's Champions League semifinal, he was left out of the final in favour of Son Heung-min. It was an understandable, if not harsh, call given how good Son has proved himself to be.
But with Son suspended for the first few games of the season, logically you would think that Moura would step in, but he's yet to start any of Tottenham's big games thus far. The question you would have to ask is: Why?
With Son out, Lucas would logically seem to be the Spurs forward who provides the closest sort of threat to the South Korea international, but he's been left on the bench in favour of Erik Lamela so far.
Why Mauricio Pochettino has not called upon the Brazilian winger is a mystery to which he will only the answer, but you can't help but feel that Spurs would be a much more threatening with him in it.
Will Lucas get a chance against Newcastle this weekend?
Rudiger return key for Chelsea
If you were to run a poll last season to identify Chelsea's most important player, Antonio Rudiger would have been a long way down the list. However, he might have been bumped a long way up the ladder after Chelsea's opening games of the season.
At times during their 1-1 draw with Leicester last Sunday, it felt like Chelsea were playing kamikaze football, attacking and attacking but leaving acres of space on the counter, and ultimately they were fortunate their opponents didn't take more of the chances that presented themselves.
There has been an element of chaos to the Chelsea defence under Frank Lampard, which you could put down to a certain amount of inexperience, or simply a lack of quality in their defenders. Rudiger, fit again after missing the opening weeks of the season with a knee injury, could help solve both of those problems, and having a top class central defender in the side will be even more important if Lampard's Chelsea carry on playing as they have been.
2:06
FIFA Predicts - Liverpool vs. Arsenal
David Luiz and Matteo Guendouzi's similar hairstyles are causing all sorts of confusion in The Exploding Heads' Liverpool vs. Arsenal preview.
Watford need a win to calm some nerves
Among the clutch of clubs gathering at the edge of the big six, ready to pluck the weakest from the pack if one drops away, Watford were at the very least outside contenders. Leicester, Wolves and Everton all have their chance, but the steady improvement of Javi Gracia's side over the past couple of seasons means the Hornets are surely one candidate to make a step up this term.
They might be slightly concerned therefore to have lost their opening two games of the season, and not to the most fearsome opposition the Premier League has to offer, either. A narrow away defeat to Everton is forgivable, but even Gracia admitted there was no excuse for the abject 3-0 loss to Brighton on the opening day.
These are still absurdly early days, but it will at the very least calm a few nerves at Vicarage Road if they can beat West Ham at home on Saturday. If not, alarm bells will be ringing.
Allow us just one VAR-free weekend
If there is some sort of football deity up there, an all-powerful force who controls everything that happens in the game, can we please ask this, just one time; please, no VAR incidents this weekend. Please. We beg of you.
We are only a couple of weeks into the new season and already the debates are circular and tedious, two sides of the argument unable or unwilling to see the other side's point, discussions about what this huge change is doing to football.
We are realistic. We know this is here to stay. We know the coming years will be broadly dominated by this one subject. This is inevitable. But we just need a little break, one weekend where we can concentrate on the football, and only the football. Please. We don't ask for much. But please give us this one, small thing.
Please.
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Boult, Southee double-strikes make it New Zealand's morning
Published in
Cricket
Friday, 23 August 2019 01:16

Lunch Sri Lanka 144 for 6 (Dhananjaya de Silva 32*, Dilruwan Perara 5*, Boult 2-33, Southee 2-40) v New Zealand
Two double-wicket maidens by New Zealand's seam-bowling duo of Trent Boult and Tim Southee headlined an opening session that left Sri Lanka struggling on the second day of the second Test.
Sri Lanka had resumed on a fairly steady 85 for 2 after overnight rains delayed the scheduled start by 45 minutes, and with captain Dimuth Karunaratne gliding a single to third man to bring up a 23rd Test half-century early on, they looked in good shape. Then Boult struck.
In his third over of the day, Boult had Angelo Mathews as Victim No. 250 in Test cricket, caught down the legside trying to pull a short ball that didn't come on as quickly as he expected. Four balls later, Boult got one to jag back in from a length to Kusal Perera, who completely misread which way the ball was travelling. He shouldered arms as the ball thudded into his pads. Not offering a shot and with the ball hitting him right in front, he wisely opted not to take a review and walked off.
From a steady 93 for 2, Sri Lanka were a wobbly 93 for 4, with only Karunaratne's continued presence at the crease offering some succour. The captain built a steady stand with a skittish Dhananjaya de Silva, who was fortunate to survive when he lobbed a leading edge off Boult before he was into double figures. Boult, whose ever-growing gallery of breath-taking catches on the boundary often sends social media into a tizzy, saw an absolute dolly pop in and out of his hands.
Dhananjaya was still living on edge, with the ball not always meeting the middle of the bat and one inside edge whizzing past the stumps to the boundary. But he hung on to survive the session.
Karunaratne's solidity at the other end meant Sri Lanka looked like they were climbing out of the hole Boult had dug for them, only for Southee to push them right back in. Southee kept angling the ball across the left-handed Karunaratne, varying his movement and lines subtly. Dragged across by Southee's lines until one was pitched on the perfect length, he was tempted into the drive, and edged into BJ Watling's gloves.
Three balls later, a leaden-footed Niroshan Dickwella was caught on the crease as another edge went to Watling, and Sri Lanka were in fresh trouble. Dhananjaya held on till the lunch break, while Dilruwan Perera copped a blow on the glove of his bowling hand which needed treatment, a potential further cause for worry for the home side.
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