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

I Dig Sports

Scotland end 14-man France's Grand Slam bid

Published in Rugby
Sunday, 08 March 2020 10:03

France's hopes of a Six Nations Grand Slam are over after a revitalised Scotland inflicted their fourth consecutive Murrayfield defeat.

Fabien Galthie's side had won their first three games but a first-half red card for Mohamed Haouas allowed Scotland to seize control.

Sean Maitland crossed either side of the break after Damian Penaud's score, before Stuart McInally added a third. And Charles Ollivon's late consolation could not prevent Gregor Townsend's side earning consecutive wins.

Adam Hastings, who impressed in place of the exiled Finn Russell, added 13 points with the boot.

France remain top of the championship, but even a bonus-point win over Ireland in Paris next weekend might not seal the title with England still to face Italy.

'Murrayfield revels at ferocious Scots'

Chasing the fourth leg of a Grand Slam, France were met with Scottish belligerence from the get-go, their day beginning badly and getting steadily worse as it went on.

Here they met a home team who had no truck with all the chat of the glorious revival of Les Bleus. They said privately they believed they would win and they set about their mission with zeal.

There were towering performances from the Scotland back-row, with Jamie Ritchie and Hamish Watson bringing their relentless personalities to bear. Lock Grant Gilchrist was outstanding. The front row to a man were ferocious with prop Zander Fagerson doing his bit in a winning scrum and putting in a monstrous shift around the park.

Hastings was terrific and this was a big day for Stuart Hogg, perhaps his biggest in a Scotland jersey. As captain, he would have felt the joy of this big time. There were big performers all over the field. Red card or no red card, this was richly deserved.

France had Francois Cros binned early for dumping Gilchrist on his head in the tackle, with Paul Willemse perhaps getting off lightly for he was on the scene as well. And while Cros was away for his 10 minutes - and there was a case for it being a red card - Scotland hit the front.

The visitors' scrum has been one of their few areas of weakness on their road to Murrayfield this season and now it hurt them again. The Scots have been reborn in that department. When France collapsed, Hastings banged over the first points.

Romain Ntamack had gone by then, the brilliant fly-half injured inside 10 minutes. Another blow following the withdrawal in the warm-up for their replacement hooker, Camille Chat. Things were not going their way.

Cros returned but Hastings made it 6-0 just after. A quarter played and France had produced nothing. When they threatened to get up a head of steam they were halted by the aggression coming at them, their threat snuffed out early through Scotland's intensity and their own handling errors under the pressure of the blitz.

Murrayfield revelled in it - and then Murrayfield winced. Having looked passive, France suddenly switched and regained their magic, if only for a little while.

A thrust up the left from Matthieu Jalibert and Gael Fickou had Scotland in trouble. When they moved it right. Anton Dupont, the wee wizard that he is, put in the most sumptuous cross-field kick for Penaud to score. Jalibert then rifled over the conversion to put France ahead.

'Big & bold Scotland rip Slam from French'

The drama was only starting. Four minutes before the break, Haouas, a boy with the shortest fuse, lost the plot amid a melee on the French line. Practically every player was in there, pushing and shoving, but Haouas threw a punch at Ritchie and he got what he deserved - a red card.

Hastings added to the misery by putting over the reluctant penalty to inch Scotland back in front. Before the half was done, Scotland sickened France further, striking out through their forward muscle before Hastings entered proceedings with some brilliance that France couldn't cope with.

He dummied and slalomed his way into space and found Ali Price in support. France were spreadeagled. Pace and accuracy did for them. Sam Johnson kept his cool in the decisive moment and gave it on a plate to Maitland, who sprinted over in the corner. Within four minutes of Haouas walking Scotland had hit them with eight points. At last, they had found their ruthless streak.

The early minutes of the second half shone a light on how Scotland managed to put it all together on the day. Under ferocious pressure near their own line, they stood up. Big and bold, they would not let the French through, Watson coming up with a massive turnover.

Then, they attacked and France got well and truly Hogg-roasted. The captain took off from his own 10m line, arcing downfield before playing in Chris Harris, who galloped clear. The centre had Price on his shoulder and when Price was hauled down in the French 22, the recycle was quick and the execution precise. Ritchie and Johnson sent Maitland in for his second score.

Hastings conversion from the touchline was pin-sharp. The 15-men led the 14-men 21-7. The Slam had been slammed.

France rallied but the only joy they got from pressure was three points from Jalibert, a penalty that was put over after they seemed to realise that trying to bust the home defence for a try wasn't working out.

The third Scottish try came 15 minutes before the end. It was a fluke, but Murrayfield didn't care a whole lot about that. Scotland had a lineout in the French 22. McInally - on for the 50-cap man Fraser Brown - had his throw pinched, the ball being diverted back on the French side, where no visitor stood. McInally scooped up the gift and ran away to score. Hastings knocked over the conversion.

The Scots led by 28-10, a gap that narrowed to 11 when Ollivon battered his way four minutes from time. Jalibert added the conversion, but he couldn't save the Slam. A thunderous Scotland, with help from the madcap Haouas, ripped it from their grasp.

Line-ups

Scotland: 15-Stuart Hogg (capt); 14-Sean Maitland, 13-Chris Harris, 12-Sam Johnson 11-Blair Kinghorn; 10-Adam Hastings 9-Ali Price; 1-Rory Sutherland, 2-Fraser Brown, 3-Zander Fagerson, 4-Scott Cummings, 5-Grant Gilchrist, 6-Jamie Ritchie 7-Hamish Watson, 8-Nick Haining

Replacement: 16-Stuart McInally, 17-Allan Dell, 18-Willem Nel, 19-Sam Skinner, 20-Magnus Bradbury, 21-George Horne, 22-Duncan Weir, 23-Kyle Steyn

France: 15-Anthony Bouthier; 14-Damian Penaud, 13-Virimi Vakatawa, 12-Arthur Vincent, 11-Gael Fickou; 10-Romain Ntamack, 9-Anthony Dupont; 1-Jefferson Poirot, 2-Julien Marchand, 3-Mohamed Haouas, 4-Bernard Le Roux, 5-Paul Willemse, 6-Francois Cros, 7-Charles Ollivon (capt), 8-Gregory Alldritt

Replacements: 16-Camille Chat, 17-Jean-Baptiste Gros, 18-Demba Bamba, 19-Romain Taofifenua, 20-Dylan Cretin, 21-Baptiste Serin, 22-Mathieu Jalibert, 23-Thomas Ramos

Referee: Paul Williams (New Zealand)

Touch judges: Wayne Barnes (England) & Frank Murphy (Ireland)

TMO: Brian MacNeice (Ireland)

Friesen Commands Joseph Memorial

Published in Racing
Sunday, 08 March 2020 04:40

GEORGETOWN, Del. — Stewart Friesen became the first driver to be a repeat champion of the Melvin L. Joseph Memorial at the Georgetown Speedway.

The $10,049-plus conquest was Friesen’s 20th Bob Hilbert Sportswear Short Track Super Series Fueled By Sunoco win.

Friesen mentioned the word “fast” several times in victory lane. He and Ryan Watt set a blistering pace for much of the 49-lap affair in the Northeast modified opener.

The 49-lap race began with Ryan Watt and First State driver Joseph ‘Jo Jo’ Watson on the front row in the STSS Velocita-USA presented by Design for Vision South Region opener.

It was Watson, who used the outside to jump out the initial lead. The lead was short-lived however, Watson’s night would end four laps in due to a broken rear end. The beneficiary would be Watt, who inherited the lead.

The first 10 laps went caution-free, as Watt and Friesen battled through lapped traffic while Rick Laubach quickly climbed to the third spot and was beginning to reel in the leaders. Billy Pauch Jr. was putting on a show as well, coming from 14th to seventh in the short 10 laps.

The ensuing restart however would end Laubach’s charge as his engine expired as well with 11 laps in.

A lap-14 restart would end the night for several top-running cars, including David Van Horn, Anthony Perrego and Duane Howard.

Following the multiple restarts between laps 10 and 15, a long green-flag run allowed Watt and Friesen to flex their muscle as the two pulled away from the rest of the field. However, they never left each other, with Friesen staying within five car-lengths of the leader.

Right at the 30-lap mark, things began to change. Watt’s car began to push through the corners, ultimately coming the on lap 35. Watt washed up the track hard in turns three and four, allowing Friesen to drive underneath Watt and drive away.

Watt’s push persisted until the front end, along with Watt’s night, ultimately went by the wayside on lap 42 due to a broken bolt on the Ron Roberts-owned No. 14w.

The remaining seven laps undoubtedly belonged to Friesen, as he pulled away from Craig Von Dohren, who took a back-and forth night to a runner-up finish in his self-owned No. 1c big-block-powered ride.

Tyler Dippel, making his first run at a full-time STSS schedule, kicked it off with a third-place run. Billy Pauch Jr. continues to be strong at Georgetown after a great 2019 at the speedway, grabbing a fourth-place finish in his Rick Holsten-owned ride. Danny Bouc, in his Craig Pondish-owned No. 6, rounded out the top five.

In the Crate 602 Sportsman feature, Jim Housworth avenged his heartbreak from last November at the Georgetown Speedway. Housworth lost a close battle for the STSS championship in the finale.

This time, Housworth bested a 47-car field to get his first Georgetown win and the $1,490 payday. Scott Hitchens, would follow Housworth closely, but never quite could catch the leader, ending in a runner-up finish.

Joe Toth would kick off his 2020 season with a podium run, while Sammy Martz Jr., and Jeff Brown rounded out the top-five.

Chris “Tippy” Martinez dominated the Delmarva Charger feature, his second consecutive Georgetown win, dating back to November. Ashley Merritt and Chris Carroll would round out the podium.

Andy Cassel won the Modified portion of the Southern Delaware Vintage Stock Car Club in the 12-lap feature. David Tucker I was also a winner, being the highest finishing Sportsman driver and fifth overall.

Dale Elliott finished off opening night, winning a hotly contested Delaware Super Truck feature.

The finish:

Feature (49 laps): Stewart Friesen, Craig Von Dohren, Tyler Dippel, Billy Pauch Jr., Danny Bouc, Larry Wight, Jordan Watson, Jimmy Horton, Richie Pratt Jr., Alex Yankowski, Brandon Grosso, Andy Bachetti, Ryan Watt, H.J. Bunting, Michael Maresca, Matt Sheppard, David Van Horn Jr., Anthony Perrego, Duane Howard, Mike Gular, Kyle Fuller, Kevin Sockriter, Danny Tyler, Danny Hieber, Rick Laubach, Clay Tatman, Billy Dunn, Joseph Watson, Jeff Strunk.

Thorson Goes From 15th To First In Shamrock Classic

Published in Racing
Sunday, 08 March 2020 04:47

DUQUOIN, Ill. – Aggression was the better part of valor for Tanner Thorson on Saturday night, as the Minden, Nev., native raced from 15th to the win in the fifth annual Shamrock Classic presented by Dooling Machine.

For a driver who is traditionally known for being unafraid to mix it up on his way to the front, Thorson did exactly that on the sixth-mile dirt bullring inside the Southern Illinois Center.

The 23-year-old was 12th by the end of the opening lap, after a trio of incidents on the initial start sent five cars to the rear of the field, and inside the top 10 by the end of the eighth of 50 laps in the feature.

From there, Thorson methodically picked his way to the front, taking advantage of others’ misfortune ahead of him and making passes when he needed to before finally claiming the $5,000 winner’s share.

Thorson’s winning move came on lap 35, when he used a huge slider in turns three and four to turn underneath point leader Chris Windom and wrest the top spot away, bringing fans to their feet in the process.

After that, he led the final 16 laps uncontested for his 15th career NOS Energy Drink USAC National Midget Series win and second in three races to open the season.

“Man, this race team … I love working with these guys,” said Thorson. “It’s just a big group that works really hard and keeps digging to get the job done. As a driver, it helps to have that behind you,” Thorson said. “The overall package we have from our shocks to motors to cars, just everything … it’s cool to watch the things we do work. Sometimes they don’t, obviously, but we’re doing a lot of little things that no one probably even thinks about that all add up.

“We’ve got a really good team and even as we’re celebrating this one, I’m looking forward to the next one.”

Tanner Thorson (19) races ahead of Tyler Thomas during the Shamrock Classic. (Ray Hague Photo)

Thorson’s victory Saturday night made him the fifth different winner in five editions of the Shamrock Classic, but ended the string of drivers winning their first-career USAC national midget feature in the event at four.

Where Thorson triumphed, the night was a struggle for Keith Kunz/Curb-Agajanian Motorsports, despite the fact that its two heralded young guns – Cannon McIntosh and Buddy Kofoid – turned in perfect preliminary performances to start on the front row and appeared to have the upper hand early on.

McIntosh blitzed the field for the first 11 laps on Saturday night, but his race began to unravel when he clipped the inside berm in turn three and lost momentum, leaving second-running Kofoid with nowhere to go but right into the back of the No. 71k Tulsa Sod & Mulch-backed entry.

Kofoid stalled and had to drop to the rear of the field after the contact, while McIntosh was able to continue. However, the 17-year-old’s problems only intensified after that.

On a restart one lap later, McIntosh clipped the inner berm again – this time in turn one – and again lost momentum in the corner. This time, however, he couldn’t keep his car running and chugged to a halt, collecting Tyler Courtney in the process and ending the hopes at victory for both of them.

McIntosh was able to continue, but Courtney went off on the hook from second, his night dashed.

Thorson found himself seventh at that point, and it took him nine more laps to crack the top five as a bit of a longer run began to develop, but his bigger moves began coming in the second half of the race.

A pass attempt on Jake Neuman with 19 to go led to contact between the two that sent Neuman spinning in the battle for third, then Thorson regrouped on the ensuing restart and bolted up to second after dispatching Tyler Thomas with a slick maneuver in turn two.

From there, he went on the attack to get to the race lead, slashing Windom’s half-second advantage to shreds and finally finding the forward drive he needed coming to 15 to go as Windom’s car began to fade.

Thorson never looked back after that, with Thomas eventually passing Windom for the runner-up spot with 14 to go but having nothing to run down the lead in the final stages.

Windom completed the podium and retained the USAC National Midget Series point lead through three races, but lamented not being able to do more with what he had after “feeling like we had a winning car” through the middle stint of Saturday night’s race.

“The track just went away from where I was planning on running,” Windom noted. “I was wanting to stay on the top all the way around, but Tanner and Tyler were able to stick the bottom and go faster down there than what I could by just keeping my momentum up. They were just a little better than I was tonight.

“I felt like we had the car to win at the mid-point of the race tonight, and then it just got away from us a bit, but we’re off to a really good start,” he added. “We’ve run first, second and third in the first three races of the year, and I think that’s a testament of what Tucker/Boat Motorsports has built with their program.”

Both Robert Dalby, who finished fourth, and fifth-place Kyle Simon took home career-best finishes in USAC national midget competition with impressive runs on Saturday night.

Cole Bodine was sixth, while Kofoid ran back through the field and ended up seventh. Tanner Carrick, Daison Pursley and Trey Robb completed the top 10. Polesitter McIntosh was scored 15th at the finish.

To view complete race results, advance to the next page.

SELINSGROVE, Pa. – Selinsgrove Speedway and Williams Grove Speedway will join forces to present the Civil War Super Late Model Series – North vs. South, presented by Modern Heritage of Mifflinburg, Pa., and RBS Auto & Trailer Sales of Eldersburg and McHenry, Md.

The inaugural series will consist of three races at each track, spanning April through August, carrying points for feature finishes that will award a premium to the champion at series’ end and contingency prizes for finishers second through fifth in points.

Hooser Tire and Lias Tire American Racer will sponsor the series as well, joining forces with Modern Heritage and RBS Auto & Trailer Sales.

The Civil War Super Late Model Series – North vs. South, will kickoff on Friday, April 10 in the South, at Williams Grove Speedway when the United Late Model Series invades the track.

Ensuing southern Williams Grove dates will take place on June 5 as part of the Pennsylvania Super Late Model Challenge and on Aug. 7.

In the North, Selinsgrove Speedway will pick up with the series when it hosts the Ron Keister Memorial on May 16.

Action will continue in the North for a Summer Championship on July 25 and for the series finale in the Aug. 15 Ultimate Northeast Showdown on Sand Hill.

PHOTOS: Xfinity Series LS Tractor 200

Published in Racing
Sunday, 08 March 2020 09:00

Indy 500 Pole Winner Jerry Hoyt

Published in Racing
Sunday, 08 March 2020 10:00

Gerald Frederick “Jerry” Hoyt is, perhaps, best remembered for his unexpected run to the  Indianapolis 500 pole in 1955.

Through an unusual set of circumstances, Hoyt took a car with outdated technology and gained racing’s most prestigious starting spot.

Anxious to set track records but plagued by 40-mph wind gusts that shoved their cars several feet off the racing line, a number of the top teams agreed to wait until the next day to run.

Practicing with good lap times despite the wind, Hoyt decided he wanted to get the always nerve-wrenching qualifying over with.

As he roared away, other teams desperately scrambled for a spot in line. But with barely 20 minutes of qualifying time remaining, only Tony Bettenhausen made it out. Caught by a gust of wind, Bettenhausen slowed and settled for second quick time.

Surprised at becoming the top qualifier, Hoyt insisted had he known about the agreement, he wouldn’t have run. “It was tricky out there,” he admitted.

Come race day, Hoyt was unable to capitalize on his prime starting position, however. He fell out early with an oil leak. Regardless, capturing the pole generated needed attention from owners of quality championship rides.

Born in Chicago, Hoyt grew up in Indianapolis, where his initial involvement with auto sports came as the mascot for the “Lucky Teter Auto Thrill Show.” He’d putter around the track in a miniature race car, waving an American flag as a scratchy rendition of the national anthem played.

When he graduated from high school in 1947, Hoyt moved to full-size racers, driving a midget for the first time on a tiny bullring in Russiaville, Ind. Later that year, he moved to sprint cars.

As Hoyt’s driving skills improved, he moved from outlaw sprint cars to the elite AAA circuit, where his success steered him to Indianapolis. He made his first 500 in 1950, qualifying 15th and finishing 21st.

After a stint in the Army, Hoyt didn’t return to Indianapolis until 1953.

Being out of racing for two years forced Hoyt to restart his career. In a rush to regain the lost time, he accepted Championship Trail rides that were barely competitive. Still, he capitalized on his talent to get the most from them, as a third-place finish at Milwaukee in 1953 and his gutty pole run in 1955 demonstrated.

As a result, Hoyt secured the seat in Roger Wolcott’s Offy-powered Kurtis. In addition, his good friend, 1955 500 winner Bob Sweikert, invited him to join his potent sprint car team.

While his professional life accelerated, events in his personal life moved even quicker. Within minutes of his exciting 1955 qualifying run, a friend introduced the boyishly handsome Hoyt to Indianapolis model Diane Baker.

They hit it off immediately and planned to elope, but married instead at the Broadway Baptist Church on Indy’s west side.

They spent their honeymoon chasing sprint cars. First to Dayton’s high banks, then to Gatlinburg, Tenn., where Hoyt raced with his teeth wired together. They’d been loosened by a jarring accident in the Wolcott car at Langhorne (Pa.) Speedway. At Salem (Ind.) Speedway, a wheel popped off and he ran the last lap on three wheels to finish fourth.

Oklahoma City was next where earlier that year he’d beaten Sweikert for the feature victory. His wife didn’t want him to race on July 9, however. A penicillin shot administered to fight infection in his damaged teeth left his face swollen and he was nauseous. He was leading the standings, however, and insisted on running.

He qualified well. Then, on the first lap of his heat, the car brushed the wall, tumbled into a slow roll and stopped upright. The crash didn’t appear serious. But in the rollover, the car caught the wall cockpit down. Hoyt suffered severe head injuries.

Rushed to the local hospital, he underwent three hours of brain surgery, while Diane and Sweikert waited.

Jerry Hoyt died the next morning.

Eddie Sachs drove Hoyt’s distraught bride of two weeks back to Indianapolis. It was a tragic end to a brilliant future.

NHL playoff bracket update: Predators strike back

Published in Hockey
Sunday, 08 March 2020 06:43

The Nashville Predators' midseason coaching change from Peter Laviolette to John Hynes didn't cause the kind of immediate impact that some had hoped, but the team has lingered in the playoff mix through much of the second half. With Saturday's 1-0 win over the Dallas Stars, they jumped back into the second wild-card spot. The Predators have six remaining games against teams currently in a playoff spot.

Here's where things stand throughout the league heading into Sunday's seven-game slate, including Carolina Hurricanes-Pittsburgh Penguins and Vegas Golden Knights-Calgary Flames streaming live on ESPN+.

Note: Playoff chances are courtesy of Money Puck, while tragic numbers are per the NHL's Damian Echevarrieta.

Jump to:
Eastern standings | Western standings
Race for No. 1 pick | Current playoff matchups

Eastern Conference

Boston Bruins

Points: 98
Regulation wins: 37
Playoff position: Atlantic 1
Games left: 13 (6 home, 7 away)
Next game: March 10: @ PHI
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Tampa Bay Lightning

Points: 91
Regulation wins: 35
Playoff position: Atlantic 2
Games left: 14 (7 home, 7 away)
Next game: March 8: @ DET
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Toronto Maple Leafs

Points: 79
Regulation wins: 27
Playoff position: Atlantic 3
Games left: 13 (8 home, 5 away)
Next game: March 10: vs. TB
Playoff chances: 78.8%
Tragic number: N/A

Washington Capitals

Points: 89
Regulation wins: 31
Playoff position: Metro 1
Games left: 14 (8 home, 6 away)
Next game: March 9: @ BUF
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Philadelphia Flyers

Points: 89
Regulation wins: 31
Playoff position: Metro 2
Games left: 14 (7 home, 7 away)
Next game: March 10: vs. BOS
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Pittsburgh Penguins

Points: 84
Regulation wins: 28
Playoff position: Metro 3
Games left: 15 (7 home, 8 away)
Next game: March 8: vs. CAR
Playoff chances: 94.3%
Tragic number: N/A

New York Islanders

Points: 79
Regulation wins: 24
Playoff position: Wild card 2
Games left: 15 (6 home, 9 away)
Next game: March 10: @ VAN
Playoff chances: 51.9%
Tragic number: N/A

Columbus Blue Jackets

Points: 79
Regulation wins: 24
Playoff position: Wild card 1
Games left: 13 (5 home, 8 away)
Next game: March 8: @ VAN
Playoff chances: 43.4%
Tragic number: N/A

Carolina Hurricanes

Points: 77
Regulation wins: 25
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 16 (8 home, 8 away)
Next game: March 8: @ PIT
Playoff chances: 77.8%
Tragic number: 31

New York Rangers

Points: 76
Regulation wins: 30
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 14 (5 home, 9 away)
Next game: March 10: @ DAL
Playoff chances: 17.0%
Tragic number: 26

Florida Panthers

Points: 76
Regulation wins: 29
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 14 (6 home, 8 away)
Next game: March 9: @ STL
Playoff chances: 35.0%
Tragic number: 26

Montreal Canadiens

Points: 71
Regulation wins: 19
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 12 (5 home, 7 away)
Next game: March 10: vs. NSH
Playoff chances: 1.6%
Tragic number: 17

New Jersey Devils

Points: 68
Regulation wins: 22
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 14 (8 home, 6 away)
Next game: March 10: vs. PIT
Playoff chances: 0.3%
Tragic number: 18

Buffalo Sabres

Points: 66
Regulation wins: 22
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 14 (7 home, 7 away)
Next game: March 9: vs. WSH
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: 16

Ottawa Senators

Points: 62
Regulation wins: 18
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 13 (4 home, 9 away)
Next game: March 10: @ ANA
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: 10

Detroit Red Wings

Points: 37
Regulation wins: 13
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 13 (6 home, 7 away)
Next game: March 8: vs. TB
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: Eliminated


Western Conference

St. Louis Blues

Points: 90
Regulation wins: 31
Playoff position: Central 1
Games left: 14 (7 home, 7 away)
Next game: March 8: @ CHI
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Colorado Avalanche

Points: 88
Regulation wins: 36
Playoff position: Central 2
Games left: 15 (9 home, 6 away)
Next game: March 8: @ SJ
Playoff chances: 100%
Tragic number: N/A

Dallas Stars

Points: 82
Regulation wins: 26
Playoff position: Central 3
Games left: 14 (8 home, 6 away)
Next game: March 10: vs. NYR
Playoff chances: 96.8%
Tragic number: N/A

Edmonton Oilers

Points: 82
Regulation wins: 31
Playoff position: Pacific 2
Games left: 13 (9 home, 4 away)
Next game: March 9: vs. VGS
Playoff chances: 96.1%
Tragic number: N/A

Vegas Golden Knights

Points: 82
Regulation wins: 29
Playoff position: Pacific 1
Games left: 13 (4 home, 9 away)
Next game: March 8: @ CGY
Playoff chances: 97.2%
Tragic number: N/A

Calgary Flames

Points: 79
Regulation wins: 25
Playoff position: Pacific 3
Games left: 13 (9 home, 4 away)
Next game: March 8: vs. VGS
Playoff chances: 85.8%
Tragic number: N/A

Vancouver Canucks

Points: 76
Regulation wins: 27
Playoff position: Wild card 1
Games left: 15 (8 home, 7 away)
Next game: March 8: vs. CBJ
Playoff chances: 54.5%
Tragic number: N/A

Nashville Predators

Points: 76
Regulation wins: 27
Playoff position: Wild card 2
Games left: 14 (6 home, 8 away)
Next game: March 10: @ MTL
Playoff chances: 38.0%
Tragic number: N/A

Winnipeg Jets

Points: 76
Regulation wins: 28
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 13 (5 home, 8 away)
Next game: March 9: vs. ARI
Playoff chances: 29.1%
Tragic number: 27

Minnesota Wild

Points: 75
Regulation wins: 30
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 14 (6 home, 8 away)
Next game: March 8: @ ANA
Playoff chances: 66.6%
Tragic number: 28

Arizona Coyotes

Points: 74
Regulation wins: 26
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 13 (8 home, 5 away)
Next game: March 9: @ WPG
Playoff chances: 29.4%
Tragic number: 25

Chicago Blackhawks

Points: 70
Regulation wins: 22
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 14 (9 home, 5 away)
Next game: March 8: vs. STL
Playoff chances: 6.4%
Tragic number: 23

Anaheim Ducks

Points: 64
Regulation wins: 19
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 14 (8 home, 6 away)
Next game: March 8: vs. MIN
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: 17

San Jose Sharks

Points: 63
Regulation wins: 22
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 14 (6 home, 8 away)
Next game: March 8: vs. COL
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: 16

Los Angeles Kings

Points: 60
Regulation wins: 19
Playoff position: N/A
Games left: 14 (9 home, 5 away)
Next game: March 9: vs. COL
Playoff chances: 0%
Tragic number: 13


Race for the No. 1 pick

The NHL uses a draft lottery to determine the order at the top of the first round, so the team that finishes in last place is not guaranteed the No. 1 selection. However, whoever does win the draft lottery has a chance to select Alexis Lafreniere.

Find out more about Lafreniere here, read up on the rest of the top draft prospects here, and check out all of our 2020 NHL draft coverage.

Detroit Red Wings

Points: 37
Regulation wins: 13
Chance of No. 1 pick: 18.5%

Los Angeles Kings

Points: 60
Regulation wins: 19
Chance of No. 1 pick: 13.5%

Ottawa Senators

Points: 62
Regulation wins: 18
Chance of No. 1 pick: 11.5%

San Jose Sharks

Note: Pick belongs to Ottawa.

Points: 63
Regulation wins: 22
Chance of No. 1 pick: 9.5%

Anaheim Ducks

Points: 64
Regulation wins: 19
Chance of No. 1 pick: 8.5%

Buffalo Sabres

Points: 66
Regulation wins: 22
Chance of No. 1 pick: 7.5%

New Jersey Devils

Points: 68
Regulation wins: 22
Chance of No. 1 pick: 6.5%

Chicago Blackhawks

Points: 70
Regulation wins: 22
Chance of No. 1 pick: 6%

Montreal Canadiens

Points: 71
Regulation wins: 19
Chance of No. 1 pick: 5%

Arizona Coyotes

Points: 74
Regulation wins: 26
Chance of No. 1 pick: 3.5%

Minnesota Wild

Points: 75
Regulation wins: 30
Chance of No. 1 pick: 3%

Winnipeg Jets

Points: 76
Regulation wins: 28
Chance of No. 1 pick: 2.5%

Florida Panthers

Points: 76
Regulation wins: 29
Chance of No. 1 pick: 2%

New York Rangers

Points: 76
Regulation wins: 30
Chance of No. 1 pick: 1.5%

Carolina Hurricanes

Points: 77
Regulation wins: 25
Chance of No. 1 pick: 1%


Current playoff matchups

(A1) Bruins vs. (WC2) Blue Jackets
(A2) Lightning vs. (A3) Maple Leafs
(M1) Capitals vs. (WC1) Islanders
(M2) Flyers vs. (M3) Penguins
(P1) Oilers vs. (WC1) Canucks
(P2) Golden Knights vs. (P3) Flames
(C1) Blues vs. (WC2) Predators
(C2) Avalanche vs. (C3) Stars

DOHA, Qatar – Jorge Campillo lost a two-shot lead with three holes to play Sunday, stayed alive with two long birdie putts in a playoff and won on the fifth extra hole to beat David Drysdale in the Qatar Masters.

On the sixth time playing the 18th hole for the day, Campillo rolled in a 20-foot birdie putt and raised his arm. Victory was not assured until Drysdale's 18-foot putt to extend the playoff missed to the left.

"It was a tough win, but I'm glad I pulled it off," said Campillo, who won for the second straight year on the European Tour.

It looked like a certain victory when he stepped to the 16th hole, two shots clear of Jeff Winther and three ahead of Drysdale, the 44-year-old Scot still looking for his first European Tour victory.

Campillo made a soft bogey on the 16th, and lost his drive well to the right on the 17th hole at Education City Golf Club and took double bogey. He still had a 20-foot birdie putt on the 18th in regulation to win, but it stopped short.

Campillo closed with a 1-over 72, while Drysdale shot 71. They finished on 13-under 271.

Drysdale looked like the winner in the playoff, which was held on the 513-yard closing hole. He had 8 feet for birdie on the first extra hole, but Campillo knocked in a birdie putt from 30 feet, and Drysdale had to match him. On the second extra hole, Drysdale hit his approach to 3 feet. Campillo made another big putt from 25 feet to extend the playoff.

They exchanged pars the next two times before Campillo hit the winner.

Winther bogeyed the 16th and 17th holes and shot 72 to tie for third, one stroke out of the playoff, along with Niklas Lemke (65) and Kalle Samooja (69).

Campillo said he was proud of how he kept his composure after throwing away the late lead.

"I knew I was still in the game, and I was able to pull it off," he said.

Chelsea hammer Everton, boost CL prospects

Published in Soccer
Sunday, 08 March 2020 09:50

Chelsea boosted their Champions League prospects with a thumping 4-0 win over Everton at Stamford Bridge on Sunday.

Academy product Mason Mount opened the scoring on 14 minutes on a day when Frank Lampard handed another rising star his chance in Billy Gilmour, who excelled in the Blues' FA Cup win over Liverpool. Gilmour excelled once again, earning the man of the match award for his efforts.

Pedro made it 2-0 midway through the first half and Everton had no way back, with Willian making three on 51 minutes before Olivier Giroud made it four.

The result solidified Chelsea's position in fourth and moved them to within two points of Leicester in third, while Everton's bid for European football next season took a dent with Carlo Ancelotti's men ending the day in 12th following the joint-heaviest defeat of his managerial career.

"Everything went wrong. It is not difficult to judge this game or analyse this game. We were too open defensively, we lost a lot of duels, we made a lot of mistakes with the ball. It was not a good day. What we can do is learn from our mistakes," Ancelotti said.

"We think we can compete to fight for Europe over the next season. With this type of performance we have to forget [that]."

Everton coach Ancelotti received a warm welcome from the Chelsea fans as he returned to Stamford Bridge, where he won the double with the club in 2010.

And the home fans were nearly on their feet six minutes in when Willian found Mount in the area, but his fierce drive was well kept out by Jordan Pickford.

Chelsea didn't have to wait long for the opener, though, with Mount receiving the ball from Pedro and finishing superbly on the turn, burying the ball into the bottom corner for his first goal in 18 matches.

- ESPN Premier League fantasy: Sign up now!
- VAR in the Premier League: Ultimate guide
- When can Liverpool win the Premier League?
- When does the transfer window re-open?

Pickford did well to deny Willian moments later but could do nothing to stop Pedro doubling the lead on 22 minutes. Former Everton midfielder Ross Barkley played Pedro through and he made no mistake, slotting the ball home to deepen the away side's misery.

Dominic Calvert-Lewin wasted a glorious opportunity to respond five minutes later but he screwed his shot wide when through on goal.

It was a familiar story in the second half, with Willian netting his fifth league goal of the season with a fine arrowed drive that gave Pickford no chance and put the game beyond doubt.

Willian then turned provider, sending over a teasing ball that Giroud met to flick the ball home moments later.

The only sour note on an otherwise positive afternoon for Lampard came when Mount was substituted on the hour mark, clutching his hamstring as he walked towards the dressing room.

Mourinho launches stinging attack on Ndombele

Published in Soccer
Sunday, 08 March 2020 05:14

Tottenham Hotspur manager Jose Mourinho singled out the club's record £54 million midfielder Tanguy Ndombele for some stinging criticism after subbing him at half time in Saturday's 1-1 draw at Burnley.

Last summer's signing from Lyon made little impact on the opening 45 minutes as Burnley dominated the midfield and was part of a double change at the break with Spurs trailing to a Chris Wood goal.

The introduction of Giovani Lo Celso and Lucas Moura at the interval for Ndombele and 19-year-old Oliver Skipp saw Spurs deliver a much-improved performance and get a point thanks to a Dele Alli penalty.

While praising his team's transformation at the break, Mourinho did not disguise his frustration with Ndombele.

"In the first half we didn't have a midfield," said the Portuguese.

- ESPN Premier League fantasy: Sign up now!
- VAR in the Premier League: Ultimate guide
- When can Liverpool win the Premier League?
- When does the transfer window re-open?

"Of course I'm not speaking of Skipp because he's a kid of 19 who's played two hours in the last few days. I don't criticise him at all.

"But I'm not going to run away and I have to say he [Ndombele] has had enough time to come to a different level.

"I know the Premier League is difficult, and some players take a long time to adapt to a different league. But a player with his potential has to give us more than he is giving us, especially when you see how Lucas, Lo Celso and those players are playing. I was expecting more in the first half from him."

Mourinho suggested the 23-year-old might find it hard to return to the starting lineup.

"Many fantastic players in their first season, in a new country, for different reasons they struggle," he added.

"There have been many examples of that. He's a player with great talent. He has to know he has to do much better and know I cannot keep giving him opportunities to play because the team is much more important."

Soccer

Maguire out for October as Utd injury list grows

Maguire out for October as Utd injury list grows

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsManchester United are set to be without injured defender Harry Magu...

Chicago names ex-USMNT's Berhalter as coach

Chicago names ex-USMNT's Berhalter as coach

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsFormer United States men's national team manager Gregg Berhalter ha...

The best of Iniesta: Retiring Barcelona, Spain great's most magical moments

The best of Iniesta: Retiring Barcelona, Spain great's most magical moments

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsAndrés Iniesta, one of the greatest midfielders ever to play the ga...

2026 FIFA


2028 LOS ANGELES OLYMPIC

UEFA

2024 PARIS OLYMPIC


Basketball

NBA GMs overwhelmingly pick Celtics to repeat

NBA GMs overwhelmingly pick Celtics to repeat

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsThe annual NBA.com survey of all 30 of the league's general manager...

'Set up for failure': What lies ahead for Bronny James and the Lakers

'Set up for failure': What lies ahead for Bronny James and the Lakers

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsRICH PAUL WAS sitting on a couch inside his spacious, glass-walled...

Baseball

Luis Tiant, Red Sox pitching legend, dies at 83

Luis Tiant, Red Sox pitching legend, dies at 83

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsLuis Tiant, Boston Red Sox pitching legend and a beloved fan favori...

Chisholm: Yanks still confident as Royals 'got lucky'

Chisholm: Yanks still confident as Royals 'got lucky'

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsNEW YORK -- Frustration did not permeate the home clubhouse at Yank...

Sports Leagues

  • FIFA

    Fédération Internationale de Football Association
  • NBA

    National Basketball Association
  • ATP

    Association of Tennis Professionals
  • MLB

    Major League Baseball
  • ITTF

    International Table Tennis Federation
  • NFL

    Nactional Football Leagues
  • FISB

    Federation Internationale de Speedball

About Us

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

 

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

Affiliated