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Brazil shares honours, Chile and Peru claim titles

Published in Table Tennis
Thursday, 12 March 2020 06:47

Peru, represented by Carlos Fernandez and Adolfo Cucho won the junior boys’ team title but in the final they were tested by the Argentine combination of Matias Velarde and Matias Guadalupe; they had to resist a spirited recovery.

Carlos Fernandez gave Peru the perfect start, he beat Matias Velarde (13-11, 9-11, 6-11, 11-9, 11-7); Aldofo Cucho doubled the advantage by accounting for Matias Guadalupe (11-6, 11-4, 11-3). It was at that stage the Argentine fightback began.

Matias Guadalupe and Matias Velarde combined to secure the doubles (3-11, 11-7, 11-7, 11-9), before Matias Guadalupe accounted for Carlos Fernandez (11-9, 11-9, 11-7) to level matters. The outcome in the balance, Adolfo Cucho beat Matias Velarde (12-10, 11-7, 11-7) to seal the top prize.

Earlier in a less dramatic manner, Adolfo Cucho and Carlos Fernandez had recorded a 3-0 quarter-final success against Chile’s Jean Parra and Jeremias Paredes, followed by success by the same margin when facing colleagues José Zapata and Adrian Rubinos. Similarly, in the opposite half of the draw, at the same stages, Matias Velarde and Matias Guadalupe had secured a 3-0 win against Brazil’s Henrique Noguti and Luigi Yamane, followed by 3-1 success against Ecuador’s Mathias Lecaro and Neycer Robalino.

Fernanda Araneda and Constanza Mesas secure top prize

Gold for Peru, in the cadet girls’ team event it was gold for Chile. Fernanda Araneda and Constanza Mesas secured the top prize.

After recording a 3-0 quarter-final success against Peru’s Alejandro Chavez and Tatiana Soria, a 3-1 margin of victory was recorded in opposition to Brazil’s Karina Shiray and Victoria Strassburger, prior to the title being sealed, by once again overcoming host nation opposition. A 3-1 win proved the outcome against Cecilia Zea and Karla Mendoza.

In the adjacent half of the draw, Cecilia Zea and Karla Mendoza had progressed courtesy of a 3-1 against Ecuador’s Keimy Anchundia and Maria Borja, followed by a 3-0 victory in opposition to Chile’s Romina Barrientos and Sofia Perez.

Dominant performances

Success for Chile and Peru; in the junior girls’ team and cadet boys’ team events, Brazil proved dominant.

A direct entry to the semi-finals, in the cadet girls’ team event, Giulia Takahashi and Laura Watanabe recorded a 3-0 win against Peru’s Alessandra Cisneros and Maria Maldonado, prior to securing the same margin of victory in opposition to Divina Ding and Valentina Parola in the title deciding contest.

Success for Giulia Takahashi and an air of revenge, at the quarter-final stage Divina Ding and Valentina Parola had recorded a narrow 3-2 margin of victory against Brazil’s Barbara Jorente and Lhays Stolarsky, before securing a 3-1 success when facing Chile’s Jerusalen Flore and Macarena Montecino.

Similarly impressive

Impressive from Brazil in the junior girls’ team event, it was the same in the cadet boys’ team event; Leonardo Ilzuka and Nicolas Nishimura recorded a 3-1 win against Ecuador’s Jeremy Cedeño and Diego Piguage, thus maintaining form. At the quarter-final stage they had claimed a 3-0 victory in opposition to Chile’s Alvaro Fuentes and Josthyn Miranda, followed by a 3-1 penultimate round win against Peru’s Ranzo Zeballos and Eduardo Mendoza.

Notable performances and as in the junior girls’ team event an air of national revenge; Jeremy Cedeño and Diego Piguave having stifled Brazilan hopes.

At the quarter-final stage they posted a 3-0 win against Rafael Takahashi and Augusto Sasaki, prior to securing a 3-1 success in opposition to Thiago Motizuki and Nicolas Duarte.

Proceedings now focus on the individual events.

Every Women's Six Nations team has the potential to fill stadiums if there is more investment in the game, says former Wales captain Philippa Tuttiett.

England are the only professional team in the competition, and nearly 11,000 fans watched them beat Wales at Twickenham Stoop this month.

France, who are semi-professional, have long attracted big TV audiences and large crowds, including more than 14,000 at Stade du Hameau when they faced England in February.

But the structure of the Women's Six Nations remains under the spotlight as Wales, Scotland and Ireland continue to fall behind.

There have been calls for the women's tournament to no longer mirror the men's fixtures and for the consideration of a different format to reflect the ability and investment unions are putting into their women's programmes.

"Every nation has the potential to fill stadiums, but it's never going to happen unless someone takes the chance and invests," Tuttiett told the BBC's Rugby Union Weekly podcast.

"As uncomfortable as it is seeing the girls putting their hearts into the game and not coming away with anything, I think that needs to happen for people to ask questions and for the unions to look up and see how good women's rugby could be.

Both the Scottish Rugby Union (SRU) and Welsh Rugby Union (WRU) told BBC Sport they plan to revise their elite women's programmes later this year but were unable to give further details.

The Irish Rugby Football Union (IRFU) does not have any plans to develop its programme beyond its women in rugby action plan launched in 2018. That outlines a number of targets for 2018-2023, including winning one Women's Six Nations.

Ireland's women finished fifth in 2019 and have no plans to go professional or semi-professional.

Lynne Cantwell, their most-capped player, told the Rugby Union Weekly podcast: "Their targets are not achievable.

"I think every country has to have their own blueprint of how they plan to win a Six Nations," she said. "Their structure is not something that's going to be competitive against England and France for the next few years."

Women's rugby commentator Nick Heath explained: "New Zealand and France seem to be the only sides capable of giving England a game at the moment and that's a shame."

BBC Sport contacted Six Nations organisers, but they declined to comment.

Before the tournament they said the women's tournament was being reviewed in line with a new television rights deal for the men's, women's and Under-20s competitions.

You can listen to the final episode of the Women's Rugby Union Weekly of the Six Nations on BBC Sounds here.

Scotland make three changes to pack against Wales

Published in Rugby
Thursday, 12 March 2020 05:15

Head coach Gregor Townsend has made three changes to Scotland's forward pack for Saturday's Six Nations match against Wales in Cardiff.

Hooker Stuart McInally comes in to the front row, with Exeter Chiefs' Sam Skinner added to the second row in front of McInally's Edinburgh team-mate Magnus Bradbury at number eight.

Glasgow Warriors pair Fraser Brown (hooker) and Scott Cummings (second row) start on the bench with Matt Fagerson, while Nick Haining is unavailable through illness.

The rest of the pack is unchanged from the team that beat France 28-17 at Murrayfield on Sunday.

With the same selection of backs for the third consecutive Test, the Scotland team has a familiar look, with props Rory Sutherland and Zander Fagerson, and flankers Jamie Ritchie and Hamish Watson among the 10 players to have started every match in this Six Nations.

Scotland's victory over Grand Slam-chasing France followed a win over Italy, those results coming after losses to England and Ireland.

Wales have only one win from their four matches in this year's championship, against Italy in Cardiff.

Scotland's back three comprises Stuart Hogg, Blair Kinghorn and Sean Maitland, with Glasgow Warriors half-backs Ali Price and Adam Hastings and their Scotstoun team-mate Sam Johnson at centre alongside Gloucester's Chris Harris.

Scotland: Hogg (capt); Maitland, Harris, Johnson, Kinghorn; Hastings, Price; Sutherland, McInally, Fagerson, Skinner, Gilchrist, Ritchie, Watson, Bradbury.

Replacements: Brown, Dell, Nel, Cummings, Fagerson, Horne, Weir, Steyn.

Wales v Scotland: Rhys Webb starts for hosts in Six Nations

Published in Rugby
Thursday, 12 March 2020 05:03

Scrum-half Rhys Webb will make his first start for Wales in almost two and a half years when they face Scotland in the Six Nations in Cardiff on Saturday.

Sale Sharks tight-head prop WillGriff John will make his Wales debut after Dillon Lewis was ruled out by injury.

Dragons lock Cory Hill replaces injured Jake Ball to partner captain Alun Wyn Jones, who will equal Richie McCaw's world record of 148 Tests.

Jones wins his 139th Wales cap and has nine for the British and Irish Lions.

Hill has not played for Wales since their Six Nations win over England in February 2019. His return is one of four changes with Wyn Jones also replacing Rob Evans at loose-head prop.

It is the only game going ahead as scheduled in the fifth round of the Six Nations with France v Ireland and Italy v England postponed amid the coronavirus outbreak.

Wales aim to avoid a fourth successive defeat in Wayne Pivac's first campaign in charge as successor to Warren Gatland.

Webb has made replacement appearances against Italy and England and starts after Tomos Williams started three and Gareth Davies began one of the first four matches.

The 31-year-old has signed a short-term deal with Bath until the end of the season and will join Ospreys for the 2020-21 campaign.

Webb left French side Toulon in January 2020. He had previously been ineligible for international selection after the WRU brought in a policy in October 2017 that meant players were excluded if they had won fewer than 60 caps and opted to move away from Wales.

It meant Webb missed the 2019 World Cup, but became eligible again after being given a six-month dispensation by the Welsh Rugby Union in January 2020.

John's patient wait

Tight-head prop John was named in the Six Nations squad but has had to be patient behind Dillon Lewis and Leon Brown for the opening four matches.

Hill scored a try in the 2019 Six Nations victory against England but was ruled out of the rest of Wales' Grand Slam campaign because of an ankle problem.

The Dragons forward then missed the World Cup after failing to recover from a leg fracture and has been absent from the 2020 tournament so far because of a hamstring problem.

Ryan Elias, Rhys Carre and Leon Brown provide the front-row replacements, with Will Rowlands and Taulupe Faletau completing the forward contingent.

Gareth Davies, Jarrod Evans and Johnny McNicholl are the backline cover.

"Saturday is a great opportunity for us to wrap up the campaign with a big performance at home in Cardiff," said Pivac.

"We want to finish with the performance we know we can deliver and we have been working hard to get there.

"Alun Wyn is one of the most iconic figures in the game, he is our leader and I'm delighted for him as he continues to set the bar across the game."

Wales team to face Scotland

Halfpenny; North, Tompkins, Parkes, L Williams; Biggar, Webb; W Jones, Owens, John, Hill, AW Jones (capt), J Navidi, Moriarty, J Tipuric.

Replacements: R Elias, R Carre, Brown, Rowlands, Faletau, G Davies, J Evans, J McNicholl.

For the latest Welsh rugby union news follow @BBCScrumV on Twitter.

Kurt Busch Named Atlanta Grand Marshal

Published in Racing
Thursday, 12 March 2020 06:45

CONCORD, N.C. — NASCAR Cup Series racer Kurt Busch will serve as grand marshal for the NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series Vet Tix Camping World 200 at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Saturday.

Busch started his NASCAR National touring series career racing in the NGROTS in 2000 and was a four-time winner in NGROTS competition in just one full-time season on the circuit.

Vet Tix is a national 501 (C)(3) which has provided more than 9 million event tickets to the military and first responder communities since 2008. The mission of Vet Tix is to give back to those who have served our nation as active duty military, reserves, veterans, and first responders.

In 2019, Busch started the KB100, which made a personal commitment to offer 100 tickets to every NCS race through a partnership with Vet Tix. Last season more than 50,000 veterans and active servicemembers requested the nearly 4,000 available tickets.

In 2020, Busch announced plans to enhance the offering to Vet Tix members by encouraging other drivers, sponsors and industry partners to consider matching his offer of 100 tickets to each race creating the KB100 Plus ticket giveaway.

“I am honored to be selected as the grand marshal for the Vet Tix Camping World 200,” Busch said. “I have enjoyed a great relationship with Vet Tix over the past year. It’s a great organization; not only for their support of the KB100 Plus program, but for what they do to help get active service members and veterans to hundreds of events around the country. I have a great appreciation for our nation’s military members and veterans and am proud to be a small part of what Vet Tix does to service that community.”

NASCAR Euro Postpones Valencia Event

Published in Racing
Thursday, 12 March 2020 06:59

VALENCIA, Spain — After conversations with Circuit Ricardo Tormo and the local government, the NASCAR Whelen Euro Series season opener in Valencia, Spain has been rescheduled due to the ongoing concerns regarding the spread of coronavirus.

The NASCAR GP Spain at Valencia, previously scheduled for April 25-26, will now take place on Oct. 31-Nov. 1.

All other NASCAR Whelen Euro Series events are scheduled to proceed as planned. The 2020 NASCAR Whelen Euro Series season will begin with the June 6-7 NASCAR GP UK at Brands Hatch.

By serving as the final event of the season, the NASCAR GP Spain will become a playoff event and award double points.

The NASCAR Whelen Euro Series will continue to monitor the global situation and provide timely updates if necessary.

CARS Tour Sets Format For Old North State Nationals

Published in Racing
Thursday, 12 March 2020 06:59

MOORESVILLE, N.C. – The format for the second edition of the CARS Solid Rock Carriers Tour Old North State Nationals presented by Visit Orange County has been announced by series officials.

The weekend will begin for race fans with the Old North State Nationals Fan Fest in downtown Hillsborough on Friday, April 4 from 7-9:30 p.m. Fans can come to downtown Hillsborough to meet and greet the stars of the CARS Solid Rock Carriers Tour at  Whit’s Frozen Custard, Volume Records & Beer, Village Diner or Hot Tin Roof. Hot Tin Roof will also be the venue for the Old North State Nationals Kickoff Party, which will follow the Fan Fest at 9:30 p.m.

The slate of racing on Saturday, April 5 will keep the same format as the inaugural edition of the Old North State Nationals. The first 250 people in attendance on Saturday will receive Old North State Nationals koozies courtesy of GXS Wraps.

The top five drivers in Hedgecock Racing Pole Qualifying will lock themselves in to Sunday’s feature race. Qualifying times will set the grids for the Old North State Nationals Qualifying Races pres. by GXS Wraps. Drivers will compete in four 30-lap heat races, of which the top four finishers from each race will lock themselves into Sunday’s feature.

Saturday’s slate of events will conclude with a 30-lap Last Chance Qualifier, from which the top five finishers will advance into Sunday’s feature. The final two places in the 28-car grid for Sunday’s feature will be held for two provisionals. Those provisionals will go to the two drivers highest in the CARS Late Model Stock Tour points standings that have not already qualified for the race.

Drivers will compete for $30,000 in Sunday’s 200-lap feature, which will begin at 3 p.m. Teams will have six tires per car to use over the course of the race. They will be allowed to change tires under caution, but cannot take tires and fuel during the same caution period. The winner will join Lee Pulliam as an Old North State Nationals champion.

Justice Brothers Supports Meyer Shank Racing

Published in Racing
Thursday, 12 March 2020 07:00

PATASKALA, Ohio — With the NTT IndyCar Series season scheduled to kick off this weekend in St. Petersburg, Fla., Meyer Shank Racing has signed Justice Brothers to sponsor both its IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship and IndyCar programs.

Justice Brothers, Inc. manufactures and distributes car care products, fleet, farm and industrial lubricants and cleaners to consumers worldwide.

A longtime fixture in motorsports, Justice Brothers will join the 2019 IMSA Championship winning team for its 2020 IMSA campaign. The lubricant company will have a presence on MSR’s dual Acura NSX GT3 entries in the GT-Daytona class.

The company will also join MSR in its inaugural full season IndyCar Series campaign with driver Jack Harvey and the No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda.

“We’re excited to join forces with Meyer Shank Racing for the 2020 IMSA and IndyCar season,” said Ed Justice Jr., president & CEO of Justice Brothers. “I’ve watched their Acura GTD race cars at numerous races and always are impressed with their high level of performance and professionalism. Clearly this was a big contributor to the 2019 championship they captured. Of course their new IndyCar effort is very close to our heart with our families 75-year consecutive race history at the Indianapolis 500.”

Joining forces just in time for MSR’s back-to-back Florida event weekends, Justice Brothers will first be featured on the No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda IndyCar at the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg this weekend.

The team will then travel two hours southeast to Sebring International Raceway for the Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring (March 19-21) – part of the Super Sebring race weekend which features the World Endurance Championship 1,000 miles of Sebring.

“We’re really excited to have Justice Brothers come on board for the season,” said Mike Shank. “Ed and his family have a long history in the sport and we are looking forward to being a part of that starting this weekend. We have a really big year ahead of us, running two full season programs and to have their support and partnership will be a contributing factor to the team this year.”

Mayor Postpones Homestead Cup Series Race

Published in Racing
Thursday, 12 March 2020 07:34

HOMESTEAD, Fla. — Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Gimenez has declared a state of emergency in the south Florida county as the world continues to deal with the public health threat created by the coronavirus.

County officials have canceled or postponed all mass gatherings in the area. As a result, the NASCAR Cup Series race scheduled for March 22 at Homestead-Miami Speedway has been postponed.

However, the statement released by Mayor Gimenez states that NASCAR officials will decide whether or not to hold the race without fans.

Below is the full statement from Mayor Gimenez:

“Miami-Dade County is under a state of emergency, as we deal with the public health threat of COVID-19.

“Although we do not have community spread at this time, we want to take the preemptive steps to keep it that way. Therefore, I have decided to suspend the operation of the Miami-Dade County Youth Fair, the Miami Open tennis tournament, the MIA 5K run, and all major events at the American Airlines Arena. The March 22 NASCAR race at the Homestead Miami Speedway is postponed at this time. NASCAR officials will decide whether or not to hold the race without fans.

“As we move forward together during this time, we will continue to monitor what the World Health Organization has determined is a global pandemic. We will constantly evaluate planned mass gatherings as the situation evolves.

“I will be making future policy decisions regarding indoor events planned for more than 250 people based on federal and state health officials’ guidance.

“In addition, I am recommending that smaller gatherings, if they’re not essential, also be reconsidered.”

NASCAR said in a statement that the sanctioning body will announce its plan for near-term event scheduling Thursday at 1 p.m. EST.

The announcement by Mayor Gimenez that the Homestead-Miami Speedway NASCAR Cup Series race has been postponed is the latest motorsports cancelation or postponement related to the coronavirus pandemic.

MotoGP officials have already announced the cancelation or postponement of four races in Qatar, Thailand, the United States and Argentina. Formula E officials have also announced the postponement of events in Rome, Italy and Indonesia.

World Superbike has also announced the postponements of multiple events, with races in Spain and France already rescheduled for later in the year. Officials from Monster Energy AMA Supercross confirmed Wednesday that the Seattle, Wash., round of the series that was scheduled for Saturday has also been postponed.

The NASCAR Whelen Euro Series is also postponing events. The series event that was scheduled for Spain’s Circuit Ricardo Tormo on April 25-26 has been postponed until Oct. 31-Nov. 1.

The NTT IndyCar Series season opener, the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg in Fla., is still scheduled to take place. However, general admission has been canceled for the event by event officials.

When coronavirus cancels your hockey season

Published in Hockey
Wednesday, 11 March 2020 18:27

After finishing third in the regular season, the Straubing Tigers were well-positioned to challenge for Germany's Deutsche Eishockey Liga championship. It would have been the first one in franchise history for Straubing, a city of fewer than 48,000 people in lower Bavaria whose hockey team consistently has one of the smallest budgets in the DEL.

The Tigers' season ended this week. Not with them hoisting a trophy. Not because they were defeated and eliminated. Their season ended the way the season ended for all 14 German pro hockey teams: because of a global pandemic.

On Tuesday, the DEL became one of the first professional sports leagues in the world to cancel in-season due to the coronavirus outbreak. Some international leagues have postponed games or opted to play them in empty arenas and stadiums for an uncertain time period. The DEL was "forced to end the current season prematurely with immediate effect" after local German governments banned gatherings with more than 1,000 attendees.

"I think it's devastating for a lot of fans," Tigers goalie Jeff Zatkoff told ESPN.

The DEL announced that its top four teams in the regular season -- EHC Red Bull München, Adler Mannheim, Straubing Tigers and Eisbären Berlin -- will be its representatives in next season's European champions' league. But for the first time in the league's 26 seasons of operation, there will be no German hockey champion crowned this year.

"It feels ... weird. You didn't lose, so you should be playing. But at the same time, everyone is on the same page. We understand the health concerns and that it was something out of our control," Zatkoff said.

"A lot of teams probably feel that a championship was taken from them. There were four teams this year that legitimately thought they had a chance to win. For a town like ours, you don't know how often that chance is going to come around," he said. "But we qualified for champions league next year, which is the first time that's happened [for this franchise]. I mean, it's still been a successful year, but you play for the playoffs. All these games are just to get into the dance. So now it's like you've got your ticket, but they're turning you away at the door."

You remember Zatkoff, right? The Detroit native played 48 NHL games with the Pittsburgh Penguins and Los Angeles Kings from 2013 to 2017, including a win in Game 1 of the Penguins' first-round playoff series against the Rangers in 2016.

"I'm Mr. Game 1," he said with a laugh. "After we lost the first game of our next two series against Washington and Tampa, I went to [coach Mike Sullivan] before the Stanley Cup Final and told him I was available for Game 1 against the Sharks."

Zatkoff has been the primary goalie the past two seasons in Straubing. Although he was excited for the playoffs this season, he couldn't help but notice how other European hockey leagues were impacted by the outbreak over the past month. The Swiss National League played games in empty buildings at the end of its regular season and canceled its postseason due to a government ban on gatherings of more than 1,000 people.

"I thought we were going to keep playing for a while. I texted my general manager a few weeks ago, when the Swiss made the announcement that they were postponing games, and asked, 'What's going on here? Are we getting shut down?' And he's like, 'no.' Germany had been pretty vocal about not shutting down businesses and not closing the borders or any of that," Zatkoff said.

"We finished our last game on Sunday. The next day, we got a text saying the Bavarian government had shut down [mass gatherings]. At the time, we're thinking maybe we're going to play ghost games in empty arenas. By 2:30 p.m. the following day, they had canceled everything. No ghost games. Just cancellation."

The DEL is a gate-revenue-driven league. Zatkoff theorized that "ghost games" in empty arenas weren't a viable financial option, as opposed to outright cancellation. "I don't know if they have the financial backing to run a game in an arena with no fans, at those operating costs," he said. "For a small club like where I play, it's not worth it financially for the owners to play a ghost game. They can't handle it."

There's economic impact for the players, too. The DEL has a 10-team postseason. Almost every player gets a set amount of bonus money for each playoff game. Straubing was guaranteed at least two, for example. There are also bonuses for advancing to later rounds of the playoffs.

"I think that money would be significant for some guys," Zatkoff said. "There's pretty big fluctuation in salary between the younger guys and the guys that have been around in the league for a while. For the guys just getting into the league, that's a decent chunk of money they're missing."

That's one reason the German league players were hoping the season could be salvaged. "I think there are guys that wanted to do the empty arena thing," Zatkoff said. "Some guys were hoping they would do, like, a week-long tournament that was really quick, almost like an abbreviated world championship."

Like many things with the coronavirus outbreak, what's happening in European hockey is a harbinger of what's to come in North America. Already, the Columbus Blue Jackets are slated to stage regular-season games in front of nearly empty arenas. The San Jose Sharks are expected to have "ghost games" when they return to Santa Clara. In both cases, as in Germany, the local government's orders were the catalyst for the decision.

The NHL has anticipated that municipalities would begin doing this. If the league's hand were to be forced, it would comply, but it hasn't been looking to be the catalyst itself; there was insurance money on the line, and there are too many liability considerations.

But as the NBA and NCAA react to the outbreak, so too will the NHL. Extraordinary times should call for extraordinary considerations. What if the season is postponed for a few weeks? What if the NHL tinkers with its playoff format? Kevin Paul Dupont of the Boston Globe wondered if a truncated season schedule could result in best-of-five series for the first few rounds of the Stanley Cup playoffs before finishing with seven-game series.

Everything should be on the table, and hopefully there's an option that allows the NHL to provide satisfying closure on the 2019-20 season while playing a role in slowing the outbreak.

Or, perhaps, there is no satisfying closure for NHL teams. There hasn't been for hockey leagues in Austria, Poland, Norway, Slovakia, Germany and other places that opted to cancel the rest of their seasons. Those players don't get to write the final chapters of their stories this season. A team such as the Straubing Tigers will have paid the physical price for 52 games while sweating through hundreds of hours of practice and preparation, just to have it all lead to ... nothing.

That is difficult for an athlete to process.

"We had meetings today that were exit interviews. Like we had lost out in the playoffs. But we didn't even play a playoff game," Zatkoff said.

He laughed to himself.

"At least there's no way you can underachieve in the playoffs this year."


Jersey Fouls

From the New York Rangers:

Taj Gibson of the New York Knicks was honored by his MSG-mates the Rangers with a personalized jersey. Now, Jersey Foul rules state that a personalized jersey given to an individual by a team is not a Foul, as they are unofficially "part of the team." But the question here is whether that exception is superseded by the fact that the Rangers gave Taj Gibson the only number put out of circulation by every NHL team, retired for a player who in fact wore it with the Rangers. To that we say, "Yes, it is very much superseded and totally a Foul."


Three things about playing in empty arenas

1. As of this writing, the possibility of the NHL playing games in empty arenas was still on the table, so let's briefly explore this premise, which I'm fascinated by from an aesthetic viewpoint. As San Jose Sharks coach Bob Boughner noted, the lack of fans on home ice changes the entire approach for players: "You're going to have to find ways to get your own adrenaline going. It'll feel like a preseason game, in a way. At the end of the day, you have to concentrate on the opponent and game plan. But you're going to have to find a way to rally, and find your own way to motivate without the fans and the noise."

But what if there was crowd noise?

Think back to all of those sitcoms we used to watch that had a laugh track to help viewers know how and when to react in a scene. (What, you thought "Gilligan's Island" was filmed before a live studio audience?) Why not do the same with an NHL game in an empty barn? Give the arena DJ a giant soundboard with all sorts of reactions: the "oh!" of a shot that just misses the net; the simultaneous "yeah!" when a goal is scored; the slowly building roar when the noise-o-meter is on the Jumbotron before a faceoff. Hit the "boo!" button when the opponent does anything of consequence. Have the chants ready to pipe in; heck, maybe even "ref, you suck!" for a penalty.

Maybe that'll get the adrenaline going.

2. I just wanted to take a moment to clear up something on the media side of things. When we talk or tweet about changes in the access policy during the coronavirus crisis, we're not whining or playing the victim. We get it. We're just trying to explain what's going on or chronicle these extraordinary times for posterity and give you a sense of how things have changed for us behind the scenes.

Now, there's been a lot said about the media being kept out of dressing rooms. We've heard all the snark about us losing out on asking questions like "How did it feel to score that goal?" and other inanity. Which is insulting, frankly, because it's the local TV reporters who ask those questions, not the writers (and we do appreciate that they're the ones who get those out of the way). What's mostly frustrating about this is how much people don't understand the value of an open dressing room for the media. It's where season-long relationships can be established for players and beat writers. It's where stories that can't really be reported from a news conference -- sensitive stories or quirky ones -- get done. And after games, it can be where the raw emotion of a sport is displayed in a way it never would at a news conference 30 minutes later. As Joey Votto of the Cincinnati Reds eloquently put it:

A word about the players and the dressing room. Sure, we're annoying and ask questions they don't like and step on their sacred logo in the middle of the room -- again, is it too much to ask teams to put the thing they don't want stepped on anywhere that isn't where feet are? But a lot of these guys would 100 percent prefer to sit in their stall with a small group of reporters than to stand at a podium or sit at a table in front of every TV camera and every reporter. That's a factor, too.

3. Finally, if the NHL played a game in an empty arena, we assume every home team power play would spectacularly fail without fans telling the players when to shoot.


Listen To ESPN On Ice

Amazing show this week featuring a lengthy interview with Patrick Burke of the Department of Player Safety, who addresses all your pressing questions about why suspensions happen or don't happen, Evander Kane's criticism and whether George Parros should step down. That, plus NHL team superlatives and much more! Rate, review and subscribe here!


Winners and losers of the week

Winner: Caution

Kudos to Santa Clara County for being the first home to a pro sports team to formally ban public gatherings. Kudos to the International Ice Hockey Federation for proactively cancelling several tournament around the world. Kudos to the NBA for leading the way on postponing a season in North America. And kudos -- hopefully -- to every team, league and federation that will accommodate fans left with tickets and nowhere to use them. These are unprecedented times and uncharted waters. The sooner these decisions are made, the safer.

Losers: Fans of Teams USA and Canada

Your heart goes out to the pro women's hockey players on the Dream Gap Tour, whose barnstorming series of games were in preparation of another couple of classic showdowns at the IIHF world championships, which were cancelled next week. The best rivalry in hockey will have to wait another year before battling for global supremacy again.

Winner: Mika Zibanejad

There are hot streaks, and then there's whatever has gotten into Mika Zibanejad. The Rangers center has an absolutely preposterous 22 goals in his last 21 games to give him a career-high 41 on the season.

Loser: Jack Hughes

On the other end of the spectrum, the first overall pick in the 2019 draft has one goal in his last 26 games, and four points in that span. He's gone scoreless in his last eight games. He's 18 years old. He'll get better. But this rookie season should be wiped from the memory banks.

Winner: Sam Simon

The Fort Collins High School goalie made 84 saves in a five-overtime state championship game loss. That tied the national record, originally set in 1987 by Jamey Ramsey of Flint Northern, Michigan. On the game-winning goal, he said: "It's a save I could make all night long, I just didn't make it. I kind of let them down a little bit." Um, no you did not, sir.

Loser: Capitals goaltending

In the Caps' last 19 games, Braden Holtby is 7-5-2 with a .898 save percentage and a 3.15 goals-against average, while Ilya Samsonov is 1-4-1 with a .873 save percentage and a 4.11 GAA. Granted, what the team in front of them is doing plays a major role here. But this is pretty bad.

Winner: Chara's good wood

While very much a penalty, Zdeno Chara's new bit where he slashes the stick of an opponent into orbit is pretty fantastic. He's done it twice now this season, to Sean Couturier of the Flyers and Mikhail Sergachev of the Lightning.

Loser: Bat-and-switch

At first, the Colorado Avalanche appeared to have done something awesome and innovative in making Rockies legend and Baseball Hall of Famer Larry Walker their emergency goaltender for a game on Sunday night. Alas, he was actually the "honorary emergency goalie," which apparently is a thing.


Puck Headlines

The Toronto Maple Leafs were among the pro teams using a charter plane company that had its operating license revoked after "conducting dozens of unauthorized charter flights and using unqualified pilots.

Wild story from the ECHL, as a former Fort Wayne Komets player accused them of "using his signature without his consent" on a form that placed him on injured reserve.

"New Hampshire youth hockey coach Brian Pouliot fights referee on ice, gets fired from organization."

Fun story about how Devils coach Alain Nasreddine scored his first and only goal of his NHL career on an assist from a player he coached against recently: Sidney Crosby.

"Jason Pominville: From 15-year NHL vet to a dad who plays in a rec league."

Finally, the one you've been waiting for. Prepare thy mullets for the 2020 Minnesota State High School All Hockey Hair Team:

Hockey tl;dr (too long; didn't read)

Down Goes Brown explains his idea for fixing the NHL loser point: "Under my system, a team can only earn a loser point if they began the day outside of a playoff spot." ($)

In case you missed this from your friends at ESPN

Great feature here from Emily on Dominik Kubalik and his journey to rookie stardom.

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Basketball

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