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Pakistan have not quite hit the panic button yet, but in adding Wahab Riaz to their World Cup squad two years after his last ODI and a year after Mickey Arthur seemingly signalled the end of the pacer's career, they have indicated growing alarm at the steep decline in their bowling performances.

On Monday, chief selector Inzamam-ul-Haq announced Wahab's surprise return, as well as the slightly less surprising additions of Mohammad Amir and Asif Ali, to Pakistan's 15-man squad for the World Cup. Junaid Khan, Faheem Ashraf and Abid Ali are the players culled from the provisional squad announced a month ago.

Why Wahab?

Wahab's last ODI appearance came as far back as on June 4, 2017, in the group stage game against India in the Champions Trophy, when Pakistan suffered a heavy defeat. He wasn't a part of the playing XI for Pakistan in their run to the trophy following that reversal.

He has played 17 List A games since then, taking 27 wickets at an average of 28.40 with an economy rate of 5.18. Ten of those wickets have come in five games this year, at an average of 20.70 and economy of 4.60, in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa's title run in the Pakistan Cup 50-over tournament.

More than those numbers, it seems to have been Wahab's ability to generate reverse swing - and Pakistan's poor form with the ball in England - that has swayed the selectors' opinion.

"Whatever you plan, you keep the room to review it as well," Inzamam said in Lahore. "I don't compromise on the team's requirements. If he (Wahab) wasn't originally picked in the squad, it didn't mean that he had been discarded forever.

"I understand he wasn't close to the 23 probables named for the World Cup, but no one is in the squad without a reason. The rationale behind bringing him back is his ability to reverse swing the ball. Nobody expected the pitches in the UK to be flat even in the early season there (during the recent ODI series against England). So we have realised that and reviewed our selection.

"We need to have bowlers who are good with the old ball and can defy the conditions and also have experience under their belt. Wahab has played in Tests recently and he was dropped on the basis of his form. But he did well in domestic cricket," explained Inzamam. "But it was the requirement of the team and the conditions there in England, which have changed drastically.

"Bringing him in doesn't reflect any panic, but it's a decision purely based on the requirement."

The comeback of Amir

Amir didn't - or couldn't - take part in any of the ODIs against England. He missed four of the five games with chickenpox but such has been the sense of worry following Pakistan's bowling in the series, it was almost certain that Amir's experience would see him return.

Pakistan conceded 373 for 3, 359 for 4 (in 44.5 overs), 341 for 7 (in 49.3 overs), and 351 for 9 across the four completed games. Mickey Arthur, the coach, pointed to the fielding lapses as the team's biggest concern after the series, but added that "our bowling has been average at best."

That has come on the back of a longer-term slip in bowling form, paralleling Amir's own dip since the Champions Trophy two years ago. In his last ten ODI appearances, Amir has picked up just two wickets at an unflattering average of 148.50, though he has usually kept things tight. In 14 ODIs since the final of the Champions Trophy, his economy rate has been an excellent 4.58, though if games against Zimbabwe and Hong Kong are taken out, it goes up to 5.28.

"If you analyse the series, if the Pakistan bowlers were punished, so were the England bowlers," Inzamam said. "So whatever the conditions, we need experienced bowlers, and Amir is very much ahead of every bowler we have. He was originally never discarded either, but we kept him with the team for the England series."

On the two pacers who were left out, Inzamam said, "Junaid and Faheem are dropped but that doesn't mean they are not good. But we think players like Amir and Wahab are more suitable for these conditions, which is why we have preferred them."

Pakistan did utilise the 30 days the teams had been given - April 23 to May 23 - to make changes. They had named a 17-man squad for the England series and also carried Mohammad Hafeez while he was still recovering from injury. Hafeez missed the initial games but played the last two ODIs, scoring 59 in the first of them.

Pakistan are, however, missing a reserve wicketkeeper behind captain Sarfaraz Ahmed, but Inzamam confirmed that Mohammad Rizwan would stay on in England and fill in in case of an injury.

"I see my team at No. 1," Inzamam said. "I am sure all teams are working hard for the World Cup, but I think Pakistan have the capability to win the World Cup."

Umar Farooq is ESPNcricinfo's Pakistan correspondent

© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.

Bereaved Asif Ali to play in World Cup

Published in Cricket
Monday, 20 May 2019 02:05

Asif Ali will play in the World Cup despite the death of his daughter on Sunday. Asif was called up to Pakistan's 15-man squad for the World Cup on Monday, having missed out on the original squad a month ago.

He was selected on the back of some impressive performances during the England series, where two fifties contributed to a total of 142 runs (in four innings) but, more importantly, at a strike rate of 131.48. Those runs, and the speed at which they came, filled a gaping hole in Pakistan's middle order, which has long cried out for a power-hitter of Asif's capabilities.

But the joy of his selection would have been drowned out by the tragic news of his 19-month-old daughter passing away in the United States of America on Sunday, after a fairly long battle against illness.

Asif will exit the squad for now, and arrangements are being made for him to travel to the US if needed. But at the moment, he is scheduled to be back for Pakistan's World Cup campaign, which begins with a game against West Indies on May 31 at Trent Bridge.

"Dropping Abid Ali [to make way for Asif's selection] was a very difficult decision," Inzamam-ul-Haq, Pakistan's chief selector, said on Monday. "But we needed a power-hitter at number 6 or 7 and Asif has done very well for us in this England series so we need him.

"He is scheduled to be back in time for our warm-up games where we intend to play our full-strength XI, but if he cannot make it back in time for those, we will wait for him whenever he does return."

Abid was the third opener in the provisional World Cup squad, back up for Imam-ul-Haq and Fakhar Zaman, but Inzamam said that with either of Mohammad Hafeez or Haris Sohail - who are both in the squad - could also be options if another opener was needed.

TORONTO -- These are the nights when Giannis Antetokounmpo frets.

Through the first three quarters of Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals, Antetokounmpo scored just six points. He finished with 12 total. He missed two key free throws in the first overtime and fouled out less than a minute into the second overtime. He committed eight turnovers in all.

The Milwaukee Bucks lost to the Toronto Raptors 118-112. The Bucks now lead the series 2-1. Antetokounmpo doesn't accept performances like that. He is as allergic to losing as teammate Khris Middleton is to pine nuts.

"It is a culture we've built as a team," Antetokounmpo told ESPN after the game. "We don't like losing. We know we are two games away from the NBA Finals. We cannot jump steps. We have to do it a game at a time, a play at a time, a day at a time."

A younger Antetokounmpo would not have taken a shower after a game like this. Rookie Antetokounmpo would've stormed out of the locker room -- still dressed in his soiled, sweaty uniform -- and returned to some gym somewhere to practice his missed shots.

But that was then.

Now, Bucks coach Mike Budenholzer has made it clear to his star player that he must save his body. So, instead of replaying each mistake on the court after a poor performance, he does a mental replay. He stares at the stat sheet in silence, reliving the turnovers and air-balled 3-pointers. He skips going to the media room podium to speak after playoff losses -- preferring to address reporters in front of his locker. Sunday was no exception.

Antetokounmpo gazed at the stat sheet, his phone and the wall for more than 15 minutes as his feet soaked in a tub of icy water.

"It is good -- that means he is hungry," Bucks guard Eric Bledsoe said. "If you don't feel bad when you play bad, you don't need to be playing this game."

The trouble for Antetokounmpo started early. In the first quarter, he committed two turnovers, he scored just two points and the Raptors jumped out to an early double-digit lead. It didn't get prettier in the second quarter. Antetokounmpo coughed up the ball two more times, and at the half, the Bucks were down by seven. Every time Milwaukee cut into Toronto's lead, the Raptors would go on a run. The Bucks couldn't catch up.

There was a flurry of excitement late as the Bucks tied the game and forced overtime. Then another overtime.

Antetokounmpo watched the majority of the second and final overtime from the bench after fouling out. When Toronto star Kawhi Leonard laid the ball in off the glass with 32 seconds left to give the Raptors a four-point lead, Antetokounmpo sauntered over to the bench with a towel over his head and took a seat, seemingly deflated.

Antetokounmpo's performance wasn't the only thing that went wrong for the Bucks. None of the Bucks starters played particularly well in overtime. In the first extended period, the Bucks' bench scored all seven of the team's points. Bledsoe missed a key free throw late in the game.

Bledsoe, Middleton and Antetokounmpo combined for 32 points in the game. The trio shot just 13 percent from 3-point range and 23 percent from the field, and they had a collective 16 turnovers.

"We could've been up 3-0," Antetokounmpo said of the series tally. "We didn't play well. ... I never expected this series to be easy."

Antetokounmpo was the last player to leave the locker room Sunday night. He sat in front of his locker, sipping a blue Gatorade and answering questions from lingering reporters. When asked if he was disappointed in how he played in Game 3, though, he stood up.

"Hell no," Antetokounmpo told ESPN, pushing himself up from the locker bench. He began to walk away, before turning back around and explaining further.

"I am Giannis," Antetokounmpo said, putting his hand on his chest. "What I have done in my life so far -- sending money to my family, put my brothers in private schools, taking care of family in Nigeria and Greece. Disappointed in a game? I'd be disappointed in myself if I was disappointed."

In other words: It is just basketball. Antetokounmpo knows it. That doesn't make him crave winning any less.

On the back wall of the visiting locker room, an 8-by-11-inch piece of white paper had been taped to the wall. Antetokounmpo had written "6" on it with a black marker. The paper counts down the number of wins the Bucks need to capture the NBA championship.

For now, the number will stay at six.

Kawhi shrugs off leg issue after win: 'I'm good'

Published in Basketball
Sunday, 19 May 2019 23:02

TORONTO -- So much of this season for Kawhi Leonard has been spent on the topic of load management.

Well, load management went out the window Sunday night.

With his Toronto Raptors' season on the line, Leonard played a career-high 52 minutes -- almost all of them coming after he landed awkwardly on a layup in the first quarter. And he put up his latest stellar line, finishing with 36 points, 9 rebounds and 5 assists to lead Toronto to a 118-112 victory in double overtime against the Milwaukee Bucks in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals.

The win got the Raptors back into the series, as they now trail 2-1 in this best-of-seven affair -- thanks mostly to Leonard's latest heroics, which came exactly a week after he kept Toronto's season alive here with his miraculous buzzer-beater to close out the Philadelphia 76ers in Game 7 of the conference semifinals.

"He loves this game of basketball," Raptors guard Kyle Lowry told ESPN after Sunday's contest. "That's what that was. He loves basketball. To play hurt, play through anything to get wins, that's what that proved tonight."

The topic of just how hurt Leonard was never went away after he landed off-kilter in the first quarter and came back down the court hopping on one leg. It appeared at that time his left leg was bothering him -- only for him to, far later in the tilt, grab at his right leg after he ran downcourt and skied for a massive left-handed fast-break slam with 3 minutes, 13 seconds remaining in the second overtime.

After the game, though, the Raptors downplayed any issues. Toronto coach Nick Nurse said he thought Leonard was "OK," and Leonard himself dismissed any reason to expect him to miss time in this series.

"I'm good," he said. "I'm just going to keep fighting. I'm going to be playing."

He did admit that it took a toll on him to play those career-high minutes and drag the Raptors to victory.

"Definitely," Leonard said, when asked if it felt like he had logged that much time. "It's 52 minutes, and it's the playoffs, so you definitely feel it. When you play 30 minutes, you feel it still.

"Just got to not worry about it and get my treatment and move on to the next one."

When Lowry fouled out midway through the fourth quarter, it was fair to wonder if there would be a relevant "next one" at all, given that a loss would have put Toronto in a 3-0 hole in the series.

The Raptors led for virtually all of regulation, and almost all of both overtimes, but did so while getting almost all of their points from five players: Leonard, Pascal Siakam (25), Marc Gasol (19), Norman Powell (19) and Lowry (11).

By the end of regulation, though, Lowry and Powell had both fouled out, leaving Nurse to scramble and play Fred VanVleet and Danny Green for the overtimes -- during which each hit their first, and only, shots of the game, both from behind the 3-point line. (VanVleet was 1-for-11 from the field, and Green was 1-for-9.)

Lowry, meanwhile, spent at least half the time in his customary seat on the end of the bench, often doing anything but looking at the court as his teammates tried to keep their season alive without him.

"I wasn't [watching]," Lowry told ESPN. "I was just trying to will the ball in and will their ball out. But when you believe in my teammates like I do, you've just got to support them and do everything you can possibly do.

"That's the one thing about it. It f---ing sucked. But we won, so it really is all that matters."

That the Raptors did triumph was, as usual, in large part down to Leonard. While Nurse didn't change up his starting lineup, he did alter both rotations and defensive assignments -- including having Leonard spend far more time on the NBA's presumptive most valuable player, Giannis Antetokounmpo, than he did in the first two games.

After defending him on just three shots through the first two games, Antetokounmpo went 1-for-9 and scored two points when guarded by Leonard in Game 3, according to ESPN Stats & Information research. When Antetokounmpo went up against anyone else, he was 4-for-7 and scored 10 points.

"Listen, I think Kawhi is the best two-way basketball player in the NBA," Lowry told ESPN. "I personally believe that.

"And when you have a guy like that, who can do the things he can do defensively, and offensively, you put him on the best player when you need to."

The Raptors needed to, and it worked. Antetokounmpo eventually fouled out in the second overtime trying to draw a charge on Siakam, ending his night with 12 points, 23 rebounds, 7 assists, 4 blocks and 8 turnovers.

It also was a bounce-back performance from Siakam (25 points, 11 rebounds and 3 steals) and Gasol (16 points, 12 rebounds, 7 assists and 5 blocks) after both had struggled in the first two games of the series.

It was Siakam's two missed free throws at the end of regulation, however, that gave Milwaukee's Khris Middleton a chance to tie the game in the dying seconds and send it to overtime.

When the game was over, though, and the victory in hand, Leonard wasn't tired enough to avoid giving his teammate a hard time.

"[I told him,] 'Damn near played an hour of basketball tonight,'" Leonard said with a smile. "He was like, 'My bad, Kawhi. I'll make those two free throws next time.'"

On this night, though, it was no harm, no foul for Toronto. That's because, for the latest time this season, and the second time in a week, Leonard willed the Raptors to a win.

Now, they just might need him to do so again three times in the next four games if they are to make it to the NBA Finals for the first time in franchise history.

"I just want to win," Leonard said. "That's it. Nobody wants to go home. We want to keep striving and reach that goal, and that's it.

"That's why I pride myself on [playing] both ends of the floor, and this is what happens."

TORONTO -- Nothing in the NBA playoffs goes off as planned.

Lineup rotations can be tweaked and defensive coverages can be refined, but no matter how much preparation has been performed, the crucial minutes of a playoff game are nothing more than a desperate exercise in survival. Every possession is a fire drill, and few of them resemble the inspired plays drawn up on crisp whiteboards by basketball brainiacs when all is at peace.

For the Toronto Raptors on Sunday night, fighting for their postseason lives, unforeseen circumstances were the norm. Kawhi Leonard landed awkwardly in the first quarter with questions swirling throughout the game about his condition.

Their starting point guard, Kyle Lowry, fouled out of the game with more than six minutes remaining in regulation. Their most productive offensive guard in Game 3 was reserve Norman Powell -- and he fouled out five minutes later. That left the Raptors with a backcourt of Danny Green and Fred VanVleet, who had shot a collective 2-for-20 on the night. With seven seconds remaining in regulation, Pascal Siakam -- a 78.5 percent shooter at the line this season -- had an opportunity to secure the win with a pair of free throws but missed both.

Despite the persistent foul trouble, and squandering leads of four points with about 70 seconds remaining in both the fourth quarter and the first overtime, the Raptors leaned on Leonard and a feisty defense to outlast the Milwaukee Bucks 118-112 in double overtime of Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals.

The greater the stakes on a given possession, the less artful the play from both teams. With Lowry on the bench, the Raptors were without their game manager for the final 16 minutes of action. "It was f---ing terrible to watch," Lowry said of having to watch the game unfold as a spectator.

Meanwhile, Bucks starting point guard Eric Bledsoe struggled during his minutes on the court, as did de facto point guard Giannis Antetokounmpo, who fouled out in the opening minutes of the second overtime. Khris Middleton, who suffered a series of miscues with the game in the balance, also had a forgettable night.

Ultimately, the Raptors won as they've typically won this spring -- on the shoulders of Leonard. He finished with 36 points, including scoring Toronto's final three field goals and eight of their last 10 points in double overtime.

"His resilience," Marc Gasol said. "He didn't allow his fatigue, his pain, whatever it was that was bothering him -- he beat it."

Leonard has been the one constant for a Toronto team whose individual performers have been variable for the better part of three weeks. The Raptors escaped the Philadelphia 76ers thanks to Leonard's theatrics a week ago with a 4-3 series win, but the historic shot -- the squat, the four bounces and all the rest of it -- occurred during a cold-shooting snap that has confounded the Raptors for days.

The two losses in Milwaukee to begin the conference finals exacerbated a tension that's familiar in a game in which probabilities rule -- but not always justly. Coming into Game 3, the Raptors had compiled just a 52.1 effective field goal percentage on uncontested shots since the start of the Philadelphia series after ranking second in the NBA (a 68.1 percent eFG) in uncontested attempts during the regular season.

For the Raptors' regulars and their coach, Nick Nurse, balancing faith in a team's longstanding success against the cruelty of recent results is a difficult task in the postseason. How do you respond when a group of players who drained uncontested shots at a higher rate than all but one other NBA team loses that touch over three chilly weeks? Do you make wholesale changes in your rotation and offensive approach even if, as the NBA axiom goes, you'd take those same shots tomorrow night?

On Sunday night, Nurse split the difference. He maintained the Raptors' usual starting lineup, yet tinkered with the rotation and flipped some defensive assignments. Most prominently, Leonard was handed the hefty assignment of Antetokounmpo -- and the results were impressive.

"Kawhi did a great job," Nurse said. "He was up and not giving him quite as much runway to get flying off of. But so were the other guys that ended up on him in a switch or in different parts of the game. They were all a little bit more locked in. We took steps forward to get physical."

Antetokounmpo recorded more turnovers than field goals in Game 3 and was only 1-for-9 from the field on possessions for which Leonard served as his primary defender. Leonard wasn't the only resistance encountered by Antetokounmpo, who saw multiple bodies on catches near the basket. The Raptors helped and recovered with precision, yielding only 10 uncontested looks in the half court in 58 minutes to a team that puts a premium on spacing.

But the most profound difference for Toronto in its first victory of the series was the factor that had been most detrimental in its losses:

The Raptors simply hit their uncontested shot attempts.

In Game 3, the Raptors actually performed worse at finding quality looks at the basket. Their quantified shot probability (a stat by Second Spectrum that measures the quality of shots taking into account both the shooter and the defense) was lower than their marks for Game 1 and Game 2 in Milwaukee.

But for the first time in a good while, the Raptors were their old selves on uncontested attempts: 11-for-21 from the field, with an effective field goal percentage of 66.7, much more in line with their strong regular-season performance.

After the game, Nurse was asked whether the team had adopted a new identity in the playoffs, something more akin to grit-and-grind, the calling card for Gasol's more rugged, less offensively dynamic Memphis teams. While most any NBA coach would take pride in a team that has established an identity around a stingy defense, Nurse noted that after acquiring Gasol, the Raptors led the NBA in 3-point percentage, a condition that almost seems prehistoric given the events of the past month.

"I still think we're creating a lot of good shots," said Nurse, who has been steadfast in his belief that the basketball gods will eventually correct this peculiar disparity, as they began to on Sunday night. "I'm still hoping some more of them go in. I think they will."

In the meantime, the Raptors narrowed the series and now trail 2-1 -- a series can't be any closer after three games.

Struggling Tebow hits first Triple-A home run

Published in Baseball
Sunday, 19 May 2019 22:38

What started off as a tough spring for Tim Tebow with the Mets' Triple-A affiliate in Syracuse, New York, took a turn for the better Sunday when he hit his first International League home run.

It came in his 105th at-bat of the season, and the former Heisman Trophy winner didn't exactly receive a hero's welcome when he returned to the dugout.

At least not at first.

Tebow's teammates largely gave him the silent treatment before the celebration at NBT Bank Stadium began in earnest.

Tebow went 1-for-4 in an 8-2 home loss to Columbus, lifting his batting average to .157. He has 11 RBIs on the season. He has a hit in seven of his past nine games.

On Thursday, he told The Associated Press that he was unfazed by his slow start.

"I think I'm improving. I'm working, developing,'' Tebow said. "I think I'm getting better, adapting to some really good players, and I think that's important.''

Tebow's average was at .130 after the team's first 23 games before his productivity increased of late, a stretch that he said has helped with his confidence as he's found more of a rhythm at the plate.

"I think sometimes if you're not in rhythm, you can press a little bit, swing at pitches you don't want to swing at," Tebow said. "But when you're in a rhythm, it just flows a little bit better. I think that's important.''

Syracuse Mets manager Tony DeFrancesco told The Associated Press that the move from Double-A to the top rung of the minor leagues has proved daunting.

"Double-A pitching is a lot of younger guys that have good velocity on the fastball but no secondary pitches,'' DeFrancesco said. "Here, Tim is seeing everything coming at him but the kitchen sink. They're throwing fastballs hard in on him, they're breaking balls, they're elevating. He just hasn't seen enough of that right now -- and they're throwing strikes.''

DeFrancesco said Tebow's recent surge has been encouraging and he was hoping that the power production would arrive after Tebow had six homers and 36 RBIs in 271 at-bats in Double-A before an injury ended his season after 84 games.

"He's playing a corner position in baseball, which is offensive production, so he's going to definitely need to drive some home runs soon," his manager said. "Getting into June, you've got to be able to put up the numbers.''

Sunday was a step in the right direction, and DeFrancesco pointed out that Tebow is only in his third professional season. He knows Tebow might not yet be ready for Triple-A, but he isn't writing him off by any means.

"It's just going to take maybe a little more time. He's not the first guy, if it doesn't work this year, come back to Triple-A again," DeFrancesco said. "There's been numerous players that have two, three years of Triple-A. Just look at my baseball card. I've got three or four at Triple-A. It's not that easy, and I played my whole life. So give the kid some time and some credit. It's definitely a work in progress.''

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

It is for Quadri Aruna and Bode Abiodun their fourth consecutive title since joining the Lisbon based club.

“It was a tough win this year but a well-deserved victory. We are hoping to return to Europe next season and make an impact. I am so excited, I hope we can continue to raise the bar and also make an inroad to Europe.” Quadri Aruna

The first leg lasted for more than three hours. Nuño Henriques and Tiago Li gave São Roque the perfect start by beating Quadri Aruna and Diogo Carvalho, recovering from a two games to nil deficit (5-11, 5-11, 12-10, 11-8, 11-4).

Quadri Aruna levelled matters by overcoming Zhao Tianming (10-12, 11-6, 11-3, 11-1), before Tiago Li accounted for João Monteiro (8-11, 11-9, 11-8, 9-11, 11-3) to restore the home team’s advantage. A critical stage of the fixture, Diogo Carvalho beat Nuño Henriques (11-6, 11-6, 12-10); before responding to the occasion, João Monteiro prevailed against Zhao Tianming (11-9, 11-5, 9-11, 11-3) to seal the win.

Testing times but on home soil less demanding, an impressive win with a single match surrendered, sealed the title.

Yanapong Panagitgun, can the form continue?

Published in Table Tennis
Sunday, 19 May 2019 19:09

Supanut Wisutmaythangkoon is the no.5 seed in the men’s singles event; however if there is player in form it is his compatriot, Yanapong Panagitgun, the winner just one day ago of the junior boys’ singles title at the SET 2019 Thailand Junior and Cadet Open.

The 18 year old excelled expectations at the ITTF World Junior Circuit Golden Series tournament, an event that witnessed a strong Chinese entry; notably in the final, Yanapong Panagitun beat Liu Yebo to seal the title.

Now for the young man who has covered more miles than most competing on the international scene, the Challenge Series presents one step higher. First he has to qualify; he is not listed amongst the seeded names but if there is one player who surely enters the preliminary stages in confident mood, it is Yanapong Panagitun.

Moving to the next level; that is the task for Yanapong Panagitgun and it is very much the same for the host nation’s seeded players in the men’s singles competitions. Last year at the Seamaster 2019 ITTF Challenge Nigeria Open both Supanut Wisutmaythangkoon and Padasak Tanviriyavechakul impressed, Supanut Wisutmaythangkoon reached the semi-final stage; Padasak Tanviriyavechakul departed one round earlier.

At the Seamaster 2019 ITTF Challenge Thailand Open, Padasak Tanviriyavechakul is the no.9 seed; the one other Thai player seeded being Pattaratorn Passarsa, he is the no.28 seed and whilst not lacking in international experience, he has yet to make his mark.

Notably in the men’s doubles event, Padasak Tanviriyavechakul and Supanut Wisutmaythangkoon join forces; they are the no.3 seeds.

Meanwhile, in the women’s singles event, the situation is somewhat similar; the question posed for the leading host nation players is as to whether they can climb the next rung of the ladder.

No player from Thailand has ever won a title of any description at an ITTF Challenge Series tournament or on the ITTF World Tour since the first ball was hit in April 1996 in the English market town of Kettering. The nearest is Nanthana Komwong and Suthasini Sawettabut who were the women’s doubles runners up on the ITTF World Tour in 2015 in Bulgaria alongside Tamolwan Khetkhuan, last year in Bangkok, the under 21 women’s singles silver medallist.

At the Seamaster 2019 ITTF Challenge Thailand Open, in the women’s singles event Suthasini Sawettabut is the no.4 seed, the ever faithful Nanthana Komwong, the no.11 seed, Tamolwan Khetkhuan, the no.18 seed. Also amongst the seeded names from the host nation is Orawan Paranang, always competitive but yet to reach the later stages, she is the no.14 seed.

Notably in the women’s doubles event, Orawan Paranang partners Suthasini Sawettabut, they are the no.3 seeds; Nanthana Komwong and Suthasini Sawettabut again join forces, they occupy the no.7 seeded spot.

A podium finish for Thailand; there are chances. Could the women’s doubles present the best opportunity?

Jin Ueda, regaining titles the Bangkok goal

Published in Table Tennis
Sunday, 19 May 2019 19:22

Furthermore, he heads a strong Japanese challenge for honours, Kenta Matsudaira is the no.2 seed, Mizuki Oikawa the no.4 seed; sandwiched in between is Germany’s Ruwen Filus.

Similar to Jin Ueda, both Kenta Matsudaira and Mizuki Oikawa have enjoyed success on the international scene. In 2016 on the ITTF World Tour Kenta Matsudaira won in Austria, last year at the ITTF Challenge Series tournament in Bulgaria, he was the runner up. Meanwhile, also in 2018, Mizuki Oikawa emerged successful in Slovenia.

Candidates for podium finishes apart; together, Jin Ueda and Kenta Matsudaira are also major title contenders; in 2017 not only did Jin Ueda win the men’s singles top prize, he partnered Kenta Matsudaira to men’s doubles gold. In 2019, they are the no.2 seeds behind Germany’s Tobias Hippler and Kilian Ort.

Also further down the list, there are Japanese names to note; especially those of Yuta Tanaka, Kohei Sambe and Masaki Takami.

Last year in Thailand Yuta Tanaka won the under 21 men’s singles title, whilst in 2014 on the ITTF World Tour Kohei Sambe created history. In Chile, by the very narrowest of margins, he beat Argentina’s Rodrigo Gilabert in the final. At the time he was 16 years old and became the youngest player ever to achieve the feat; of course that record has since been beaten by compatriot Tomokazu Harimoto.

Both Yuta Tanaka and Kohei Sambe could well have an influence on proceedings, a situation that applies also to Masaki Takami; in 2017, he was runner up in Belgium.

Notably Masaki Takami and Yuta Tanaka occupy the no.6 seeded position in the men’s doubles event; Yuta Tanaka defends his under 21 men’s singles title, he is the top seed, ahead of Tobias Hippler and Masaki Takami.

An imposing entry from Japan, all players who are just below the line for first team selection; success in Bangkok may not sway the selectors with next year’s World Championships and Olympic Games in mind but could such success provide a springboard for greater things that may just have an influence?

Pagenaud Earns Pole For 103rd Indianapolis 500

Published in Racing
Sunday, 19 May 2019 15:03

INDIANAPOLIS – A week after a stunning victory in the IndyCar Grand Prix, Simon Pagenaud continued his impressive month of May by winning the pole for the 103rd running of the Indianapolis 500.

The seventh driver to take time during the Fast Nine Shootout Sunday afternoon at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Pagenaud placed his No. 22 Team Penske Chevrolet on the pole thanks to a four-lap average of 229.992 mph.

“It’s just amazing,” Pagenaud said in the moments after officially earning the pole. “Thank you to Team Chevy and Menards. It is incredible to be able to bring this for John (Menard). Obviously last week was amazing, but this is even more special.

“This, this is incredible,” Pagenaud added. “This is the biggest race in the world so obviously I’m on cloud nine.”

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Ed Carpenter, in search of his fourth Indianapolis 500 pole, came up just short with a four-lap average of 229.889 mph. Spencer Pigot, who ended Saturday as the fastest competitor of the 36 who attempted to qualify, took the last spot on the front row for the Greatest Spectacle in Racing with a 229.826 mph lap in his Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet.

“It was flat (out) all four laps. That’s kind of all we can do,” Pigot said.

Ed Jones will lead the second row thanks to a 229.646 mph four-lap average in the ECR/Scuderia Corsa Chevrolet. Colton Herta was the fastest Honda in the field, qualifying fifth for Harding-Steinbrenner Racing at 229.086 mph. Will Power, the defending Indianapolis 500 winner, was sixth at 228.645 mph.

Sebastian Bourdais (228.621 mph), Josef Newgarden (228.396 mph) and Alexander Rossi (228.247 mph) qualified seventh through ninth, respectively.

Pagenaud’s pole is the 18th in the history of Team Penske at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the Indianapolis 500. He’ll now try to give team owner Roger Penske his 18th victory in the Indianapolis 500 on May 26.

“Just being able to get a pole under my belt here at the speedway is very amazing, but the goal is to win the race,” Pagenaud said.

This report will be updated.

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