Top Ad
I DIG Radio
www.idigradio.com
Listen live to the best music from around the world!
I DIG Style
www.idigstyle.com
Learn about the latest fashion styles and more...
I Dig Sports

I Dig Sports

Stanton back in N.Y., calls layoff 'very frustrating'

Published in Baseball
Tuesday, 18 June 2019 18:31

NEW YORK -- While Giancarlo Stanton is ready for what he hopes will be a dramatically healthier remainder of the season, the New York Yankees outfielder acknowledged Tuesday that his recent two-month-plus injured list stint was "very frustrating."

A trio of injuries, one more serious than originally disclosed, made for a challenging return.

Shelved since April 1, Stanton came off the Yankees' IL on Tuesday after three separate injuries derailed him. Twice during his rehab he had false starts, thinking he was nearly over one injury when another would appear.

"I was so close. Had a buildup and had to stop three times," Stanton said.

Stanton, who was scheduled to bat fifth and play right field in Tuesday's game against the Tampa Bay Rays, spoke to reporters at Yankee Stadium before the game.

As he returned to the Bronx, Stanton was all smiles, saying he was "excited" to finally be back in pinstripes.

"It's been a long time. It feels longer than it has been, for me," Stanton said. "The boys have been fun to watch while I've been gone, so it's going to be good to file in and battle."

The Yankees have gone from being in fourth place in the American League East the day before Stanton was hurt to holding a 1½-game lead on the division entering Tuesday's game against the second-place Rays.

Initially, Stanton was placed on the IL with a left biceps strain. He had appeared in only three games, batting .250 (2-for-8) with one run scored, and no homers and no RBI. Stanton said Tuesday that the injury was a little more serious than a simple strain.

"I tore my bicep muscle," he said.

Nearly three weeks later, the Yankees were preparing for his return. As they went on a West Coast road trip, he tagged along.

And then the first setback occurred.

"The bicep connects to your shoulder in two places, and when I was getting back swinging and getting moving around again, my shoulder started acting up," Stanton said. "So we had to shut it down, get a cortisone shot, let that ease for a little bit."

When the Yankees traveled to San Francisco following a four-game series at the Los Angeles Angels, Stanton stayed back in his native Southern California. He received the cortisone shot there and had to completely stop baseball activity.

Then, nearly a month later, in an extended spring training session at the Yankees' complex in Tampa, Florida, he was hit by a pitch in his left knee. Again, he got shut down. That time, it was a left calf strain.

"I probably should have took some more time than I did, and that set me back because my knee wasn't stable and my calf strained there," Stanton said.

Three weeks after that, Stanton was back in the batter's box, going through a minor league rehab assignment with the High-A Tampa Tarpons and Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders. Through six games with both teams, he hit five home runs, and had a .286 average with 10 strikeouts.

"It's just having the quickness and getting the barrel there," Stanton said. "Obviously, the homers are the ultimate goal, but even if I just squared up a couple balls, that's what you're looking for."

Stanton's addition makes the deepening Yankees lineup that much better, manager Aaron Boone said.

"We've got a lot of dynamic players and hitters, and certainly Giancarlo is one of those," Boone said. "Hopefully the length that we have in that lineup makes it difficult on the opposing team, on the opposing pitcher."

Along with Stanton's return, the Yankees last weekend traded for 400-homer hitter Edwin Encarnacion. The 36-year-old will move into the designated hitter role Stanton had previously occupied, forcing Stanton to more regularly play in the outfield. In terms of taking on a more defensive responsibility, Stanton said he was fine with that.

Outfielder Aaron Judge also is expected back sometime this week as he wraps a rehab assignment at Triple-A due to a left oblique strain.

"People are saying [it'll be] like 'Murderers' Row,'" Yankees first baseman Luke Voit said. "It'll be an intimidating lineup, especially because you get one guy out, you're going to have to face the next guy.

"It will finally be nice to see some big dudes coming back in this locker room."

Voit isn't the only one looking forward to seeing the Yankees' lineup at full strength once Judge arrives.

"We were already dangerous, and now it's another icing to the cake," Stanton added. "Once we're at all full force, it's going to be a lot of fun, and I'm just glad to be back."

Nats' Scherzer breaks nose during bunting drill

Published in Baseball
Tuesday, 18 June 2019 17:43

WASHINGTON -- Washington Nationals pitcher Max Scherzer suffered a broken nose when he took a ball off his face during batting practice on Tuesday.

Scherzer was injured while attempting a bunt. The team said a CT scan was negative.

The three-time Cy Young Award winner was scheduled to start one of the two games of Washington's day-night doubleheader against Philadelphia on Wednesday. The Nationals said Scherzer's status -- as well as the team's pitching plan for the doubleheader -- was still to be determined.

Scherzer is 5-5 with a 2.81 ERA.

White Sox plan to extend netting to foul poles

Published in Baseball
Tuesday, 18 June 2019 14:40

The Chicago White Sox will extend protective netting to both foul poles this summer, the team announced Tuesday, committing to additional safety measures a week after a woman at Guaranteed Rate Field was struck in the head by a foul ball and hospitalized.

White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf spearheaded the plan, sources told ESPN, and high-ranking officials from other teams expect it to have a cascading effect, with teams around the league pledging to extend netting.

One source with knowledge of installing netting believes other teams could retrofit their stadiums before the end of the 2019 season.

Players have been outspoken about increasing safety measures after multiple foul-ball injuries in recent weeks.

After a foul ball by Cubs center fielder Albert Almora Jr. injured a young girl in Houston, Chicago star Kris Bryant told ESPN every team should extend netting to the foul poles. "I think any safety measure we can take to make sure that the fans are safe, we should do it," he said.

Almora saluted the White Sox's move Tuesday.

"Obviously that's a positive step in this sport,'' he said. "I don't think anybody should go home with bumps or bruises or even worse. So whatever they got to do to take care of that, I'm glad they're taking procedures.''

While the impetus for the White Sox wasn't necessarily the June 10 incident in which an Eloy Jimenez screaming line drive went into the stands and hit a woman, it accelerated their plans to extend the netting at Guaranteed Rate Field. The woman was released from Mercy Hospital and Medical Center last week.

Major League Baseball has left the decision of increased netting up to teams.

Before the 2018 season, every team committed to extending netting to the end of both dugouts after a spate of highly publicized foul-ball injuries. Commissioner Rob Manfred said recently he expected the extended-netting conversation to "begin and continue into the offseason."

Protective netting was not expected to be a priority discussion topic at the owners meetings that begin Wednesday, according to sources. The White Sox's decision, however, could change that.

Cubs' Kimbrel throws 1-2-3 seventh in Triple-A

Published in Baseball
Tuesday, 18 June 2019 18:38

CHICAGO -- New Chicago Cubs closer Craig Kimbrel took his first step toward returning to the majors Tuesday afternoon, throwing a 1-2-3 seventh inning for Triple-A Iowa. Kimbrel threw eight pitches total -- four fastballs and four curves.

"I heard that he did really well," Cubs manager Joe Maddon said from Wrigley Field. "It's just about health. If the guy is healthy and he's ready to rock n' roll, you put him in the ninth inning."

Kimbrel induced a fly out and groundout before striking out his last batter, reportedly reaching 95 or 96 mph on the radar gun.

The Cubs still won't put a timeline on him coming up. The team will know more as he recovers from each outing.

Kimbrel will pitch again on Thursday or Friday, according to general manager Jed Hoyer.

"He's felt good, but we're not going to rush to judgment on any one outing," Hoyer said.

Kimbrel signed a 3-year, $43 million deal earlier this month and will take over closing duties as soon as he's ready. An eight-pitch outing on Tuesday was a good sign, but perhaps it went too quickly.

"It's one of the challenges when these guys go down on these rehab assignments, actually getting enough work in," Hoyer said with a smile. "Good first outing in a real game."

This is the moment Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and Benoit Paire started playing foot-tennis during their first-round match at the Halle Open.

Paire lost his racquet while serving in the third game of the second set, so instead kicked the ball over to his opponent.

Tsonga went on to win the match 6-4 7-5.

Roger Federer will meet Jo-Wilfried Tsonga next after beginning his grass-court season with a 7-6 (7-1) 6-3 win over Australia's John Millman in Halle.

Federer, 37, lost to Millman at last year's US Open and was given a thorough work-out by the world number 57.

Neither offered up any break points in the first set and, after Federer had swept the tie-break, the Swiss secured the only break of the second set.

Tsonga beat Federer in an epic five-set comeback at Wimbledon in 2011.

The French world number 77, who overcame compatriot Benoit Paire 6-4 7-5 in his own first-round match, also beat Federer in the pair's two most recent matches.

In total, Federer leads their head-to-head record by 11 wins to six.

"It is always important to win your first game on grass, because otherwise the grass season can be very short," said Federer, a 20-time Grand Slam champion, after his win.

German Alex Zverev, who hurt his knee in his win over Robin Haase on Monday, has withdrawn from the tournament's doubles draw.

The second seed however remains in the singles and will take on American Steve Johnson on Thursday.

Defending champion Borna Coric coasted to a comfortable 7-6 (7-2) 6-3 win over Spain's Jaume Munar and will play Portugal's Joao Sousa next.

VIDEO: Bubba Wallace Returns To His Roots

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 18 June 2019 11:00

Returning to his roots, Bubba Wallace is racing the entire Bojangles’ Summer Shootout this year at Charlotte Motor Speedway in his Legend Car. Why commit to all 10 rounds of racing, and what drew him to come back?

Video Courtesy of Legends Nation.

Roush & Stenhouse Honoring Darrell Waltrip

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 18 June 2019 11:08

CONCORD, N.C. – Sunday’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race at Sonoma Raceway will mark the end of an era in the sport, with legendary driver/announcer Darrell Waltrip hanging up his microphone after 19 years in the TV booth.

In honor of Waltrip’s last call, Roush Fenway Racing and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. will pay homage to the former driver and Hall of Famer with a special chrome numbered paint scheme on the No. 17 Ford Mustang.

“Darrell Waltrip has meant a great deal to our sport as both a competitor and a member of the broadcast media,” said Jack Roush, a fellow member of the NASCAR Hall of Fame. “The thing that stands out to me about Darrell is that after I just announced I was starting the team with Mark Martin, I was invited into a driver’s meeting that season. Darrell Waltrip was one of the first to welcome me into the fold and say ‘come on in Jack, we are going to have a lot of fun with you’ and we sure have over the years.”

Waltrip piloted the No. 17 car in NASCAR’s premiere series from 1987 to 1998, sporting some of the most iconic paint schemes in the sports history.

Current No. 17 driver Ricky Stenhouse Jr. has long been a fan of Waltrip and this will mark the third time he has paid tribute to Waltrip on the No. 17, the first two coming at the Darlington throwback events.

“With as much as he’s done in the sport on and off the track, Darrell will definitely be missed,” Stenhouse said. “I have enjoyed all the sit-downs and seeing his passion that he has for the sport. I’ve gotten to pay homage to him with two Darlington throwback schemes so it will be extra special to drive his iconic paint scheme for his last appearance in the booth.”

In 2016 Stenhouse sported an orange and white Ford, with blue numbers that gave nod to Waltrip’s first winning car from 1975. The second came in 2017 with a car carrying the paint scheme from Waltrip’s 1997 NASCAR Cup season; one of Stenhouse’s favorite paint schemes along with the all-chrome variety Waltrip also ran that same season.

The Ford will also feature Roush Performance on the hood and Stenhouse’s primary sponsor Fastenal on the quarter panel and decklid.

PHOTOS: NASCAR Trucks M&M’s 200

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 18 June 2019 12:00

Eastbound Dragway Renews With IHRA

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 18 June 2019 12:30

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — Eastbound Dragway, a true showplace in the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador, has entered into a multi-year sanctioning agreement with the International Hot Rod Ass’n

The eighth-mile dragway is part of Eastbound Int’l Speedway and Concert Park, a state-of-the-art, 55-acre Motorsport Park. In addition to drag racing, the complex features NASCAR and INEX-sanctioned racing on a three-eighths-mile asphalt track, Monster Trucks, motocross and a world-class musical entertainment venue.

Located 1,200 miles northeast of Maine in Avondale NL, the picturesque community is named for the meeting of the waters. At Eastbound, there is often the meeting of the racers who compete in everything from dragsters and stock cars to motorcycles and snowmobiles.

Among the most popular events has been the “take it to the track” program to get racing off the streets.

“Every year, we’ve seen an increase in people involved,” Eastbound Park Director of Events Mike James said. “We worked with the local police who were concerned about the safety of street racing. We had burnouts on the oval and we opened up the drag strip. Thousands of people showed up, people who had never been on the drag strip before. They got a really good feel of what it’s like to be on the drag strip. It was incredible to see cars stretched all the way down the 1/8-mile.”

The history of drag racing in the area dates back to the 1960s, starting on an old U.S. Air Force strip.

Eastbound first opened in 2014 with a major Nashville-style music festival. Since then, the facility has hosted such acts as Rascal Flats, Lynyrd Skynyrd and Little Big Town.

However, racing is first on the marquee and James does a tour educating school children about math and science in the sport. He has 26 scheduled visits to school which introduces the sport to over 10,000 students.

“We’re a new track, only around five years,” James said. “Some tracks have been around 50-60 years. They have grandparents, fathers and so on. We were like, ‘Let’s go educate the kids because they don’t have anyone educating them about racing.’ We go in explain to them the simple aerodynamics, air flow and such. The kids are blown away with the simple math and science used in racing. We’ve had so many requests to do this at schools.”

One of his inspiring stories is that of 2017 track champion Darien Legge, then 11 years old, making it to the championship round in Junior Dragster at the IHRA Summit SuperSeries World Finals.

“The whole story of a little boy turning the drag racing world upside down, an 11-year-old to be able to take down the best junior drivers in the world, you should see their reaction,” James said. “We look to see some of them in the junior dragster ranks the next couple of years.”

Legge repeated as Eastbound track champion for the IHRA Summit SuperSeries in 2018 as did the Top division champion Dave Anthony. Curtis Mitchell was the Mod division champion.

Soccer

Enzo Fernández: Mastantuono has future in Europe

Enzo Fernández: Mastantuono has future in Europe

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsChelsea midfielder Enzo Fernández believes River Plate teenage sens...

Vardy to leave Leicester: 'Our greatest-ever player'

Vardy to leave Leicester: 'Our greatest-ever player'

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsJamie Vardy will leave Leicester City at the end of the season, the...

Kane set to end trophy drought as Bayern eye title

Kane set to end trophy drought as Bayern eye title

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsBayern Munich will secure the Bundesliga title on Saturday with a w...

2026 FIFA


2028 LOS ANGELES OLYMPIC

UEFA

2024 PARIS OLYMPIC


Basketball

Sources: Bucks, Horst reach multiyear extension

Sources: Bucks, Horst reach multiyear extension

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsThe Milwaukee Bucks and general manager Jon Horst have agreed to a...

Bad Boys and 'Detroit energy': What's behind this record-setting turnaround for the Pistons

Bad Boys and 'Detroit energy': What's behind this record-setting turnaround for the Pistons

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsTHE DETROIT PISTONS' team plane has often turned into dance parties...

Baseball

Crow-Armstrong stays hot vs. hometown Dodgers

Crow-Armstrong stays hot vs. hometown Dodgers

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsCHICAGO -- Most players are happy to be done facing the Los Angeles...

Twins say Oliva, Hrbek recovering from strokes

Twins say Oliva, Hrbek recovering from strokes

EmailPrintMINNEAPOLIS -- Two Minnesota Twins greats are recovering from strokes suffered days apart,...

Sports Leagues

  • FIFA

    Fédération Internationale de Football Association
  • NBA

    National Basketball Association
  • ATP

    Association of Tennis Professionals
  • MLB

    Major League Baseball
  • ITTF

    International Table Tennis Federation
  • NFL

    Nactional Football Leagues
  • FISB

    Federation Internationale de Speedball

About Us

I Dig® is a leading global brand that makes it more enjoyable to surf the internet, conduct transactions and access, share, and create information.  Today I Dig® attracts millions of users every month.r

 

Phone: (800) 737. 6040
Fax: (800) 825 5558
Website: www.idig.com
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Affiliated