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Aussies overseas: Maxwell's career-best haul, Warner keeps on rolling
Published in
Cricket
Monday, 15 April 2019 19:17

World Cup and Australia A squads have been named, along with the CA central contracts, as planning steps up for Australia's massive next six months. An enormous number of Australians are playing in overseas competitions in the lead up to those tours. Here the latest on how they are faring so far.
Who's in form and who's not
Glenn Maxwell isn't warming up for the World Cup in the IPL but rather in Division Two of the County Championship for Lancashire. He failed with the bat in both innings against Middlesex at Lord's but took a career-best 5 for 40 in the second innings to help Lancashire to a seven-wicket win. He claimed Dawid Malan and Eoin Morgan in his five-wicket haul.
David Warner's stellar form continued with yet another half-century in the IPL against Delhi although it was his slowest of the tournament. He is the leading run-scorer in the IPL and looks set for a big World Cup campaign.
Not many of his fellow World Cup squad members are in the same kind of touch though. Steven Smith is still battling to find some rhythm. His last two IPL innings for Rajasthan have yielded just 15 and 12 and he's chewed up 37 balls in the process.
Marcus Stoinis played well in Royal Challengers Bangalore's only win of the IPL to-date last week making 28 not out from 16 balls. Two of his four boundaries came off Andrew Tye although he was also dropped off Tye's bowling. Stoinis failed to score against Mumbai on Monday. He also hasn't bowled in his last three matches after conceding 12 runs per over in his first two.
Jason Behrendorff dismissed Virat Kohli again but has been quite expensive in his last two outings after bowling well in his first three.
#Asheswatch
Peter Siddle wasn't selected in the Australia A four-day squad for the tour of England but he continued to push his case for the Ashes with a six-wicket haul for Essex against Surrey at The Oval. He ploughed through 49 overs for the match and claimed seven wickets in a draw. He also made 41 not out with the bat.
Marnus Labuschagne made a century for Glamorgan, just his fifth in first-class cricket, but it came on a Cardiff pitch that yielded six centuries and just 19 wickets in four days and was criticised by Northamptonshire.
Matt Renshaw made 48 not out in quick time to help guide Kent home in a fourth-day run chase at Edgbaston. He also made 39 in the first innings on a surface that was described as "Test quality" by Kent assistant coach Allan Donald. Renshaw again batted at No.3 in both innings.
Cameron Bancroft made scores of 33 and 22 also batting at No.3 on debut for Durham in a loss to Sussex in Division Two.
Did you see?
Chris Lynn has become a forgotten man in Australian cricket. After being groomed in the ODI team last year to potentially become a key cog in the World Cup campaign his name was nowhere to be seen when Australia listed 34 cricketers to tour England on Monday. But he continued his good form in the IPL over the weekend making a blistering 82 from 51 balls against Chennai. He struck seven fours and six sixes in his second half-century in three matches.
Injury list
Nathan Coulter-Nile was due to head to the IPL this week after a short rest at home following the UAE tour but he did not end up travelling and was replaced in RCB's squad by Dale Steyn. It was only precautionary and not due to any specific injury. He was named in the World Cup 15-man squad and is expected to be fully fit for the camp in Brisbane on May 2.
Performance of the week
Maxwell's five-wicket haul at Lord's was pretty significant. Not only did it set up a victory for Lancashire, it was the first time he had taken five wickets in a first-class match. Notably, it was also the first time he had taken four wickets in a first-class innings since his Test debut in Hyderabad in March of 2013.
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Langer's sympathy for Handscomb as 'all-time great' Smith pips him
Published in
Cricket
Monday, 15 April 2019 18:46

Australia's head coach Justin Langer has acknowledged how tough it was on Peter Handscomb to miss out on the World Cup squad but said that it was impossible to ignore "all-time great"Steven Smith.
It was the clearest indication of where the final call on Australia's 15-man squad came with the team's recent upsurge in one-day form having created a logjam for batting positions. With Smith and David Warner both eligible to return following their bans, two of the players who featured on the successful India and Pakistan series had to be cut and they have been Handscomb and Ashton Turner.
The latter is less of a surprise after he didn't get a game against Pakistan - despite his thrilling 84 off 43 balls in Australia's record run chase in Mohali - but Handscomb had been a steady presence in the middle order since his recall, averaging 43.54 across 13 matches including a maiden hundred in that same Mohali match.
ALSO READ: The winners and losers from Australia's big day
He also brought a second-string with his wicketkeeping which could have provided back-up for Alex Carey, but in the end the selectors couldn't squeeze him in with Smith penciled in to be the middle-order accumulator, likely to bat at No. 4 behind Warner, Aaron Finch and Usman Khawaja in a yet-to-be-decided order.
Shaun Marsh could have been the other batsman with a few questions hanging over him, but he scored four centuries in eight matches - albeit all losing causes - during the period Smith and Warner were absent although he could now be shunted into the reserve spot.
"Selection is always hard, there's no doubt about that. It's the toughest part of the job. It has been for as long as I've been coaching but certainly last Tuesday was really tough," Langer told RSN radio. "Pete is terribly stiff to miss out. He's all class. I spoke to him yesterday. He's literally all class. He's another ripper."
"I can give you all the clichés, I can try to find some good reasons, but the truth is I can't tell you how close he was to being selected. He had a brilliant time of it. He played exactly the role that we talked about for the back end of the ODI summer and in India and the UAE. He did a great job. He's super fit and a terrific young bloke. He gets on and does his job. But we just felt that Steve Smith would play that same role and Steve Smith is one of the all-time greats of Australian cricket."
Smith and Warner will join up with the World Cup squad for a pre-tournament camp in Brisbane early next month which includes three non-international matches against a second-string New Zealand XI. They will be followed by two warm-up matches in England, one of which is against the hosts, before their campaign starts against Afghanistan on June 1.
"I said 12 months ago it would be great for those guys to come back into the team and they've got to work hard to get back into the team," Langer said. "We're at that point now where the team is flying, the team is going really strongly and like always they'll be part of it. They're both great players and they'll fit nicely back into the team, no doubt about that.
"It was a strong process over the last nine or 10 months particularly, just to keep an eye on how the boys were going. They went through a lot of life education I guess themselves because of what had happened."
There remain a couple of injury concerns hanging over the World Cup 15, with Mitchell Starc and Jhye Richardson having been selected subject to fitness after their pectoral and shoulder injuries receptively.
Starc appears on track with his recovery and Langer was "confident" that Richardson would be fine having not needed surgery after the dislocation he suffered in the UAE. Chairman of selectors Trevor Hohns confirmed on Monday that Josh Hazlewood, whose back injury and lack of cricket ruled him out of the initial squad, and Kane Richardson were the first-choice reserve quicks if required.
Andrew McGlashan is a deputy editor at ESPNcricinfo
© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.
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Ovechkin KO's Svechnikov, 19, in Game 3 fight
Published in
Breaking News
Monday, 15 April 2019 18:12

RALEIGH, N.C. -- Alex Ovechkin and the Washington Capitals are looking to defend the Stanley Cup. And they're not going down without a fight.
Ovechkin fought -- and knocked out -- Carolina Hurricanes forward Andrei Svechnikov in the first period of Game 3 of the teams' first-round series on Monday night, a 5-0 win for Carolina.
Svechnikov, 19, is the youngest player in the NHL playoffs this season. A native of Barnaul, Russia, Svechnikov has said that he grew up idolizing Ovechkin, his countryman who is 14 years his elder. Svechnikov appeared to provoke Ovechkin, and the two exchanged words before dropping the gloves. Svechnikov got a few jabs in before Ovechkin dropped Svechnikov with three hard rights.
Svechnikov's head hit the ice on the way down. Svechnikov stayed down on the ice for several minutes before he was helped off by Carolina trainers. He was later ruled out by the Hurricanes to return. Both players received five minutes for fighting.
According to HockeyFights.com, Ovechkin has fought only four times in his NHL career -- and not since 2010.
Svechnikov scored two goals and tallied one assist in the Hurricanes' first two playoff games. Ovechkin won his record eighth Rocket Richard Trophy this season as the league's top goal scorer. He has one goal and two assists in the Capitals' first two games these playoffs.
The Hurricanes are hosting their first playoff game in a decade. Washington holds a 2-1 series lead after the loss.
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SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- The Sacramento Kings hired Luke Walton as their coach on Monday, just days after the Los Angeles Lakers parted ways with him following three losing seasons.
Neither the Kings nor Walton waited long following changes that came just after the regular season. Sacramento fired coach Dave Joerger on Thursday following a 39-43 finish that was the best record for the franchise in 13 years. Walton was dismissed in Los Angeles a day later after failing to get the Lakers into the postseason in the first year with LeBron James.
Kings general manager Vlade Divac met with Walton on Saturday and the two sides quickly came to the agreement that was formally announced Monday.
Walton, 39, was 98-148 with Los Angeles in his first full-time head-coaching job, missing the playoffs all three seasons. He was 37-45 this season.
Walton also has experience as an assistant for Golden State, helping the Warriors win the 2015 title and then leading the team to a 39-4 record, including 24 straight wins to open the 2015-16 season, as interim coach while Steve Kerr was sidelined following complications from a pair of back surgeries.
That performance helped Walton get the job with the Lakers, but he was unable to duplicate that success with a roster with far less talent during his first two seasons and then again this year with James on board.
Walton takes over an up-and-coming team in Sacramento that features several talented young players acquired by Divac: guards De'Aaron Fox and Buddy Hield, forward Marvin Bagley III and center Willie Cauley-Stein. The Kings finished nine games out of a playoff spot after being tied for the Western Conference's eighth seed heading into the final game before the All-Star break.
Sacramento had its most wins since going 44-38 in 2005-06, during coach Rick Adelman's final season. That ended a run of eight straight playoff berths, and Sacramento hasn't been back to the postseason since for the NBA's longest active drought.
Joerger was the ninth coach since Adelman was fired in 2006 and none was able to post a winning record or earn a playoff berth. In fact, since they moved to Sacramento before the 1985-86 season, the only winning seasons for the Kings came in Adelman's eight years at the helm, highlighted by a trip to the Western Conference finals in 2002.
Divac is now counting on Walton being the one who can get the team back to the level it reached under Adelman, when the Kings were a contender for several years and played an entertaining brand of basketball.
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Zion declares for draft after 'best year' of life
Published in
Basketball
Monday, 15 April 2019 16:23

Duke freshman Zion Williamson, the consensus player of the year, made it official Monday, declaring his eligibility for the NBA draft.
Williamson, whom ESPN ranks as the No. 1 prospect in the June draft, made his announcement on Instagram, saying it had been the "best year" of his life and thanking those who helped make his dream a reality.
The 6-foot-7, 285-pound Williamson captivated all of college basketball with his freakish, once-in-a-generation athleticism, his energy at both ends of the floor and his omnipresent charisma.
Williamson, 18, averaged 22.6 points and 8.9 rebounds per game while ranking second nationally by shooting 68 percent. He won the Wooden Award and the Naismith Award and was named player of the year by the Associated Press and the U.S. Basketball Writers Association.
He became the face of college basketball this season, routinely coming up with at least one highlight-reel play or show-stopping dunk per game.
On May 14, the NBA will hold its lottery to determine which team has the right to draft Williamson. New York, Phoenix and Cleveland hold the best odds, followed by Chicago and Atlanta.
Williamson's decision to turn pro came as no surprise. He spent the season greeting NBA chatter with a playful wink and a knowing nod.
He said it would be "dope" to play on a hypothetical New York Knicks team with Kyrie Irving and Kevin Durant. Upon learning that LeBron James and Stephen Curry were talking about him during All-Star Weekend, he responded by saying that he is "hoping to be there competing against them next year."
During his lone college season, Williamson helped the Blue Devils earn the No. 1 ranking in the final AP Top 25 and the top overall seed in the NCAA tournament. Duke was knocked out by Michigan State in the East Regional final.
Now that Williamson is headed to the NBA, one key subplot to follow is which sneaker company will land his endorsement.
In one of the biggest moments of the season, Williamson blew out his left Nike shoe -- the PG 2.5, the signature shoe of Oklahoma City star Paul George -- and sprained his right knee in the opening minute of what became a lopsided home loss to rival North Carolina.
The impact was immediate: Nike's stock price took a hit the next day, and the shoe company sent a team of representatives to Duke's campus to investigate. When Williamson returned roughly three weeks later for the ACC tournament, he wore a pair of modified size-15 Nikes from Irving's signature line.
He opened in February at -2000 to be drafted No. 1 overall at DraftKings. After his decision to declare, he's now up to -5000.
Williamson joins RJ Barrett and Cam Reddish as classmates headed to the pros after one season. Point guard Tre Jones said he will return to school for his sophomore year.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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OAKLAND, Calif. -- Clippers head Doc Rivers lost $2,000 dollars on the San Francisco streets Monday morning only to have a stranger give it back to him.
Rivers ended his pregame news conference prior to Game 2 of the Clippers' Western Conference quarterfinal against the Golden State Warriors by telling the story of a random act of kindness that left the assembled media in awe.
"Last thing," Rivers said after the questions finished. "Shout out to the San Francisco person who at the corner today, I was walking down the street -- this is a true story -- I reached in my pocket to grab my phone, unbeknownst to me I dropped about two grand on the street, kept walking, didn't know it. A guy tapped me on the back and said, 'That's your money.'"
Rivers, who grew up in Chicago and spent time playing for the New York Knicks during his 14-year playing career, couldn't believe his luck.
"I don't know a lot of places that that would happen," Rivers said. "But it happened today, so whoever that was, you could have had free tickets if you hadn't have ran away."
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76ers tie record for playoff quarter with 51 points
Published in
Basketball
Monday, 15 April 2019 20:48

PHILADELPHIA -- It might have taken a game and a half, but the Philadelphia 76ers finally arrived at their first-round series against the Brooklyn Nets with a historic third quarter in Monday night's 145-123 win.
Leading by just one at the half after dropping Saturday's Game 1 at home to fall behind in the series, the Sixers outscored the Nets 51-23 in the third quarter with a dazzling display of precision on both ends.
Joel Embiid, a game-time decision because of discomfort in his left knee, got things started, going on a personal 8-0 run. Embiid's spark extended to the entire team as Philadelphia pushed the run to 21-2 in the first four minutes of the quarter. Philadelphia shot 6-for-8 (corralling the offensive rebound on both of those misses) while Brooklyn went just 1-for-8 (0-for-3 on 3-pointers) with three turnovers in that span.
The 51 points tied the Los Angeles Lakers for most points in a quarter in a playoff game by a team. The Lakers had 51 in the fourth quarter against the Detroit Pistons on March 31, 1962.
Embiid left the game in the fourth quarter after rolling his ankle when Nets forward Rondae Hollis-Jefferson stepped on his foot going up for a basket near the rim. Embiid went to the bench and grabbed the ankle, wincing. He stayed on the bench and did not appear to receive treatment for it.
Entering Game 2, Sixers coach Brett Brown acknowledged how important it would be to climb back into the series.
"For sure, anxiety and urgency gets expedited when you lose at home in Game 1," Brown said. "And because we've all kind of been doing this awhile, you learn. And you try to avoid this in a regular season, where the highs and lows aren't as dramatic. In the playoffs, it's hard to avoid that. Like, even as sane as I try to be and preach about psychological stability and a balance, you're mindful.
"Like, tonight is a really big game. And so you can't deny that. And so be it. That's what you coach and you play for, and there's nothing like the NBA playoffs. ... So, we feel it. We feel it, and I think that's a good thing. I really do. I look forward to watching us respond to our loss at home from the other night."
Game 3 is Thursday in Brooklyn.
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Clippers coach Doc Rivers ended his press conference by telling an unprompted story about how he was walking around San Francisco, reached into his pocket to grab his phone and accidentally dropped $2,000 on the ground. He didn't know he had dropped the money and started walked away, but then someone came up to him and told him, "That's your money." Said Rivers: "I don’t know a lot of places that that would happen, but it happened today. So whoever that was, you could’ve had free tickets if you hadn’t run away.”
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The Philadelphia Phillies have placed reliever David Robertson on the 10-day injured list with soreness in his pitching elbow.
Robertson, 34, has a 5.40 ERA in seven appearances this season, his first with the Phillies. The right-hander threw two scoreless innings Sunday in Philadelphia's 14-inning victory over the Marlins.
The Phillies signed Robertson to a two-year, $23 million contract this past offseason.
Philadelphia recalled right-hander Drew Anderson from Triple-A Lehigh Valley on Monday in a corresponding roster move.
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Arizona Diamondbacks closer Greg Holland threw a couple of tight inside pitches to the San Diego Padres' Francisco Mejia during Sunday's ninth inning, raising questions about whether it was in retaliation for Padres pitchers hitting two Diamondbacks with pitches on Saturday in Phoenix.
Arizona manager Torey Lovullo said all that mattered was that Holland got three outs to end the 8-4 victory.
But Padres manager Andy Green had some choice words for the umpiring crew.
"Umpires being literally clueless on the field right now. That's inexcusable at that point in time," Green said. "The first one, OK maybe slips. The second one, we know what is going on there. It is not lost on us at all. If it is lost on them (umpires), they are not paying attention to the baseball game."
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
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