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SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – Harold Varner III etched his name into an unusual chapter of the PGA Tour record book by keeping his scorecard clean at the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

While there were birdies and bogeys aplenty during the opening round at TPC Scottsdale, Varner’s 71 remarkably included 18 straight pars. The streak continued Friday, as he went on to par each of the first 14 holes of his second round.

The run of 32 straight pars is the longest to open a tournament on the PGA Tour in the ShotLink era, surpassing K.J. Choi’s mark of 27 in a row at Colonial in 2006.

“When I got done (Thursday) I was like, ’18 is enough.’ I was hoping we would just blaze the trail today,” Varner said. “Obviously that wasn’t the case to start off.”

Varner finally broke the streak with a 2-foot birdie on the par-5 15th, reaching red figures for the first time. But after 32 in a row he didn’t make a par the rest of the way, alternating birdies and bogeys over his final four holes. That left him right where he started at even, a total that meant he missed the cut by a shot.

Scorecard for player 54303 during event 18479.

Varner has now missed each of his first three cuts to start the year, and he’ll likely look to limit the pars on the card the next time he tees it up.

“It’s crazy. Some days you’re like, ‘Man, I couldn’t buy a par.’ And some days you’re like, ‘I just hate pars,’” Varner said. “It’s just funny to be right in the middle the whole way.”

Transfer Talk: Arsenal to chase for Barcelona's Umtiti

Published in Soccer
Friday, 31 January 2020 17:43

The winter transfer window is closed -- but now it's time to look ahead to the summer! Here are the new rumours floating around following the Jan. 31 deadline day:

- Transfer grades: Man United get a 'D' for Ighalo
- Miller: The good, the bad, and ... Man United
- O'Hanlon: How Liverpool dominate transfer 'value'

Arsenal to resume chase for Umtiti in the summer

While Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta was successful in bringing in two new defenders in the January transfer window, he'll have to wait until the summer to resume his quest to sign Barcelona's Samuel Umtiti, says Le Parisien.

The Gunners' boss added Pablo Mari from Flamengo and Cedric Soares from Southampton to his dwindling defensive ranks, but Arteta was also keen for some proven quality with Champions League experience.

He turned to Barca's Umtiti, who turned down the Gunners in this transfer window in the hope of securing more first-team football in the second half of the season under new boss Quique Setien.

Umtiti, 26, has played just 10 games this season but he believes he can work his way back into what he says is the best club in Europe.

Chelsea face fresh battle for Mertens in the summer

Frank Lampard failed in his quest to bring Dries Mertens to Chelsea in this January transfer window and while the Blues boss looks set to renew his efforts at the end of the season, he could face pressure from Mertens' employers, Napoli.

Mertens, who was also eyed by Barcelona and Inter Milan, is out of contract at the end of the 2019-20 campaign which could see a host of clubs join the race for his signature. He is free to talk to clubs from Feb. 1 ahead of any summer move.

However, Italian platform Calciomercato says that Napoli president Aurelio de Laurentiis is preparing to offer the Belgian international a new contract, which could scupper Chelsea's plans.

Napoli's deal is reported to be for two years and worth €5 million per season, though he may feel he can cash in elsewhere is he leaves on a free transfer instead.

More teams to battle for Cavani in the summer

Chelsea may drop their interest in signing PSG striker Edinson Cavani after he snubbed a move to Stamford Bridge in this transfer window, but Marca suggest the Uruguayan could have the pick of a growing list of suitors.

Manchester United and MLS side Inter Miami are said to be among those who fancy adding the striker's firepower to their squads at the end of the current campaign.

PSG were reluctant to sell the striker this season after Atletico Madrid were unable to meet the player's wage demands, despite lodging an €18 million bid for him.

The 33-year-old is available on a free transfer in the summer, which will no doubt see more clubs join the clamour to sign him.

Tap-ins

- Manchester United's pursuit of Birmingham City wonderkid Jude Bellingham will continue in the build-up to the summer, reports The Independent. United have put together a £20 million package which includes £8.5m up front, £11.5m in add-ons, £5m after 50 appearances and £2m after his first goal. The package is unlikely to meet Birmingham's valuation, which means United may need to return to the drawing board.

- Juve are already working on plans to bring back Paul Pogba in the summer, suggest Calciomercato. The Frenchman will have just one year left on his contract and with his United career seemingly heading towards an anti-climatic finish, Juve hope to bring the midfielder back to Turin alongside Brescia midfielder Sandro Tonali. Key to both deals will be agent Mino Raiola, with whom Juve have a good relationship.

A few Premier League big boys had a window to forget, while some smaller clubs nailed it. Then there's Man United's head-scratching business.

WINNERS

Tottenham

It's true, they could've done with a striker, but as we know, Spurs signing a striker when Harry Kane is around, even with him injured, is not easy. But otherwise Tottenham had a pretty good month: They finally ended the Christian Eriksen saga and got a bit of money for him, they secured Giovani Lo Celso on a permanent move, signed an exciting forward/winger in Steven Bergwijn, and while Gedson Fernandes is a bit more of a wild card, he's potentially quite an interesting option in midfield.

Perhaps an underrated aspect of this window is actually that they signed only a couple of players. Everyone is aware that a rebuild is coming for Tottenham, but replacing a squad more or less wholesale is a dicey business, and it's more sensible to do it cautiously.

Sheffield United

Almost everything Sheffield United have done in the past few years has been impressive, a shrewd chain of decisions that has put them where they now are in the table. And so it continues in this transfer window. They picked up a solid backup option at left-back in Jack Robinson for pocket change, a risk-free punt on Jack Rodwell and, most intriguingly, midfielder Sander Berge, for whom they have broken their transfer record.

United have apparently been tracking holding midfielder Berge for some time, and this was a culmination of many months of negotiation and planning. At the very least, it's an indication that this is a club with a plan, who stick to it and try their best not to deviate. Who knows whether Berge will be a success, but the fact that Sheffield United have chosen to sign him does give you some faith that he will.

Newcastle United

Weird isn't it, praising a set of decisions made by Newcastle United. But they have genuinely enjoyed a good window, skilfully managing to come out of the potentially bad situation of Jetro Willems' injury by arguably upgrading with a loan deal for Danny Rose, while Nabil Bentaleb always seemed rather underrated when he was in England before and will add some steel and creativity to their midfield. Valentino Lazaro could go either way, but if that comes off then he'll provide a sparky option from the wing.

They failed to sign a striker, but who didn't? If you were feeling particularly generous, you could even praise them for having the ambition to try for Olivier Giroud, who instead elected to hold his nerve and wait for Inter or Napoli or Spurs or whoever. You wonder if some regular football with Newcastle looks quite attractive to him now.

Aston Villa

Many might disagree, but Villa have signed a solid, experienced goalkeeper, a striker when they desperately needed one and a midfielder with a point to prove. Pepe Reina, Mbwana Samatta and Danny Drinkwater might not be the most eye-catching of signings, but they augment a squad that just looks like it's jelling and starting to produce good performances -- and, more important, results.

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1:44

Nicol: Man United should've signed Ighalo 4 years ago

Steve Nicol says Man United adding Odion Ighalo shows the club's desperation and its declining brand power.

WHO KNOWS?

Manchester United

What a strange club Manchester United are. On the one hand they have more or less done what they needed to at the start of the window by signing a forward and an attacking midfielder. But even in achieving what they were meant to achieve, they have made themselves look silly.

Months were spent haggling over Bruno Fernandes, before their crack negotiators simply returned and paid the amount they were asked for in the first place. And then there's Odion Ighalo, who might do a reasonable enough job as a backup, but whose signing -- from left-field, in the closing hours of the window, when they had exhausted all other options -- just emphasised how chaotic the decision-making at Old Trafford is.

LOSERS

Chelsea

What must the lawyers think? By all accounts Chelsea worked pretty hard on their appeal against their transfer ban, spending plenty on lawyers to ensure they had a clean run at the January transfer window, and it worked. The ban was lifted, they could recruit at will, had a reported £150 million to spend but instead ... crickets.

Frank Lampard's affable demeanour was notably darker during his press conference on deadline day, carrying the air of a man who felt let down. And he had every right to: they needed a left-back, a centre-back, a striker and a winger would have been nice to supplement a squad who started the season well but whose limitations and lack of depth had been exposed of late.

And not only has nobody at all arrived, Lampard has also been left with Giroud, who has been desperate to leave but will now have to spend the rest of the season mooching around despondently. This transfer window, which was supposed to solve a few problems for Chelsea, has simply created more of them.

- Transfer Grades: All the big moves rated
- All major completed transfer deals

Manchester City

It was pretty clear that Manchester City needed a centre-back when Vincent Kompany decided to leave. That was in May. Eight months have passed, in which City have lost their one reliable specialist centre-half in Aymeric Laporte for a solid chunk of the season, with Pep Guardiola trying a rotating cast next to Fernandinho in the interim, the result of which was being out of the title race before Christmas.

If it was a careless mistake to not replace Kompany in the summer, it's just bizarre that they didn't do it when given another chance in January. Yes, this is a difficult month to buy players. Yes, they are more careful with their money these days. But City are left with John Stones and Nicolas Otamendi as their alternative central defensive options, when they had the opportunity to bring in something more.

Bournemouth

You would think that, for a club who have been in Bournemouth's form for the last few months, the transfer window would be like a vat of ice-cold water in the middle of a desert. This was their chance to plug some gaps, fix some problems, or even just give a desperate squad a bit of a pep up, as they battle against relegation.

But instead they have signed nobody. Not a single soul. Their squad on Feb. 1 will be as it was on Jan. 1. They reportedly feel they had a good window because they kept hold of Nathan Ake and Joshua King, which might be a semi-reasonable point, but to pass up the chance of actually improving the squad feels negligent.

You can't help but wonder if there's an element of Bournemouth second-guessing themselves involved here. Their recruitment has been so bad in the last couple of years, the odd hit (David Brooks, Jefferson Lerma) hidden among the thickets of dross (Dominic Solanke, Jordon Ibe), that it might simply be playing on their minds. Through their own mistakes, perhaps they've made themselves gun shy.

Crystal Palace

On Thursday, three deals looked on the cards: Yannick Carrasco, Nathan Ferguson and Jarrod Bowen. By Friday, all three had disappeared, Carrasco not unreasonably preferring to return to Atletico Madrid, Ferguson's arrival nixed over a knee problem and they were gazumped by West Ham for Bowen. That leaves Cenk Tosun and Scott Banks, a midfielder from Dundee United, as their only arrivals. Seems a little light.

Alex Hales at the top, Jonathan Wells in the middle

Published in Cricket
Friday, 31 January 2020 17:31

February 1: BBL Knockout - Adelaide Strikers v Sydney Thunder, Adelaide

Our XI: Phil Salt, Alex Hales, Travis Head, Alex Carey, Jonathan Wells, Chris Morris, Daniel Sams, Rashid Khan, Michael Neser, Jonathan Cook, Peter Siddle

Captain: Alex Hales

The in-form Hales is the second-highest run-scorer this season, and has been crucial to the Thunder making it to the business end of the tournament, with scores of 85, 63, 47 and 60 in his last four outings. That's some serious form.

Vice-captain: Jonathan Wells

The star Strikers batsman has been one of the best middle-order batsmen this time out, fourth on the batting chart this season with 444 runs in 14 games from a tough spot. He usually scores quickly, puts a big price on his wicket, and finishes games.

Hot picks

Daniel Sams: Leading the bowling chart with 27 wickets in 15 games, left-arm quick Sams' consistency has been one of the big factors for the Thunder. He has struck once every 11.2 balls and has an economy of 7.75 this season, useful numbers too.

Travis Head: Head has been a bit up and down this season, not quite able to string together a sequence of big scores, but he's getting there, scoring 79, 35 and 47 in three of his last four innings. But after entering the show late - he has batted only seven times - he has made decent contributions for the Strikers, and they will want him to be the leader he can be.

Value picks

Phil Salt: Salt might have flown under the radar a bit, but the Strikers opener has been impressive on the whole, with 356 runs from 14 games with four fifties, two of which came in the last two matches leading up to the playoffs.

Jonathan Cook: The 30-year-old legspinner has been quite consistent for the Thunder this season. He finished with career-best figures of 4 for 21 in the eliminator against the Hobart Hurricanes to knock them out of the tournament. A good time to get to his best.

Point to note

The first time these two teams slugged it out, there wasn't much slugging as they had to split points after an abandonment in Canberra. The second time, the Thunder got the better of the Strikers in Adelaide, putting up 168 for 5 and then stopping the home side at 165 for 9.

LeBron reveals Black Mamba tattoo saluting Kobe

Published in Basketball
Friday, 31 January 2020 17:06

LeBron James revealed his new tattoo in memory of Kobe Bryant on Instagram on Friday.

The tattoo is mostly black, with the main image that of a snake -- a Black Mamba -- entwined around the number 24 and the number 8, with a black rose on the upper left and lower right. Underneath, the caption in script is "Mamba 4 Life."

Bryant, who wore both numbers during his career with the Los Angeles Lakers, was known as the Black Mamba.

The photo on James' Instagram that precedes the photo of the tattoo is from a Team USA practice. It is a black and white photo of James leaning into Bryant.

On Wednesday, tattoo artist Vanessa Aurelia shared video on Instagram showing her work on James' left thigh and teammate Anthony Davis' right thigh.

The Lakers are hosting the Portland Trail Blazers on Friday at Staples Center and will celebrate and grieve Bryant, his daughter Gianna and the seven others who were killed in a helicopter crash on Sunday in Calabasas, California.

Friday will mark the Lakers' first game at Staples since Bryant's death, and James and Davis are expected to make their first public remarks on the death of the Lakers legend.

A bristling Melbourne Stars coach David Hussey insisted he has the squad to win the Big Bash League for the first time in the club's nine attempts, and declared his team would be more decisive and entertaining in their second and final chance at getting to the decider after an abject batting display against the Sydney Sixers on Friday night.

Clearly angry at the performance of his team, Hussey said he would be asking "hard-hitting and confronting questions" of his players and said that all options within the squad would be considered for selection. At the same time Hussey said it was critical to reinforce to the players how good they are to rejuvenate their confidence after a performance he described as "timid" in pursuit of a mediocre target of 143 set by the Sixers.

"In previous seasons, every semi-final we've lost has been in Perth, beaten by a pretty good Perth team and they've either gone on to win the competition or finish second. Perth is a very hard place to play, so playing here probably hurts the most," Hussey said when asked about the Stars' long history of failing to round off strong tournament's with finals success. "We'll review tonight's game, each individual player, I'll go round to each player and ask them some hard-hitting questions and confronting questions, but we were completely outplayed tonight.

ALSO READ: Sydney Sixers storm into home BBL final as Melbourne Stars fold for 99

"It's more one on one with the batting coaches and myself, asking them about their plan and whether they actually committed to that plan, and whether they wanted to play that way, that style of cricket in that game, and I reckon nine out of the 11 who played tonight didn't commit to their plans tonight

"At half way we were ahead, and to put on a batting performance like that wasn't good enough and it's not the way the Stars want to play their game. You've got to give credit to the Sydney Sixers and their bowling coach, who executed their plans beautifully. They didn't allow our batters to play how we wanted to play, they summed up the conditions very, very quickly and they executed their skills, and unfortunately we might have been a little bit timid with the bat, the intent probably wasn't quite there, but we've earned the right to have a second chance."

Hussey said that Ben Dunk, who has languished unwanted for most of the tournament, must now come into selection consideration. "We've got to consider all options now, we've underperformed the last four games, so all options are on the table. We've got to get more out of each individual player," Hussey said. "We've just got to reinforce how good the players are who we have in the squad, pick them up, lots of confidence, lots of skill work, and commit to our plans a little bit better.

"We've tried a few things. We've tried Gotch at the top, tried Larkin in the middle, Larkin at No. 3, it's all about match-ups. We do that much strategy about which player matches up with each individual opposition, so we'll be doing the same thing come Monday morning, the coaches and I, and we'll implement that strategy come Tuesday with each player.

"Deep down I truly believe we have the squad to win the whole competition, we've earned the right to have the second chance, we just need to do it the hard way now, game on Thursday night, travel to Sydney and beat them in their own backyard, which can happen. Come Thursday you'll see a different brand of cricket we want to play, one of our key pillars of cricket we play is entertainment and we haven't done that the last three games. Come Thursday, mark my words to the fans, we'll play a very entertaining brand of cricket."

The Stars have stuck rigorously to a plan of bowling first at the MCG, though they were able to dominate the Sixers in their previous match at the ground when, after being sent in, Marcus Stoinis pummeled 147 to set up a total of 219 and a 44-run victory. Hussey said that the Stars would need to consider trying to put runs on the board in their match against either the Adelaide Strikers or the Sydney Thunder.

"Basically I give all the information to Glenn on what to do batting first, what to do bowling first, then we don't actually get a choice," Hussey said. "They lose the toss then we have to make our mind up, but the dew comes into play at the MCG, it's pretty important toss to win. The stats show that teams who chase here generally win the game of cricket. Unfortunately, it wasn't the case tonight, maybe we have to revisit that come the next game."

Scots still in contention in Edinburgh Open

Published in Squash
Friday, 31 January 2020 12:53

Emily Whitlock (right) and Georgia Adderley in action in Edinburgh

Top seed Whitlock halts Adderley
By Squash Mad Correspondent

Day Two of the Edinburgh Sports Club Open saw yesterday’s winners take on the eight seeded players in the women’s PSA Challenger 20 draw, and there was barely a hint of an upset as the seeds all won in straight games to set up the anticipated quarter-finals.

Yesterday’s home winners all lost, two of them to compatriots as Lisa Aitken and Alison Thomson kept Scottish interest alive.

Aitken now meets England’s Rachael Chadwick, while Thomson takes on fourth seeded South African Alexandra Fuller. English top seeds Emily Whitlock and Julianne Courtice face Aussie Donna Lobban and Japan’s Satomi Watanabe in the quarter-finals. 

On day one there was plenty of home interest with Scots in five of the eight matches, and successful forays for Georgia Adderley, Katriona Adderley and Elspeth Young.

Adderley, who turned 19 earlier this month, overcame clubmate Carrie Hallam in straight games while Allen and Young upset 9/16 seeds Charlotte Jagger and Fanny Segers to give Scotland five spots in round two.

Adderley then went out to top seeded Englishwoman Emily Whitlock while Allen and Young meet fellow Scots Thomson and Aitken.  

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Results title.

First round:
[1] Emily Whitlock (ENG) bye
[9/16] Georgia Adderley (SCO) bt Carrie Hallam (SCO) 11-4, 11-2, 11-2 (22m)
Yura Choi (KOR) bt [9/16] Eva Feřteková (CZE) 11-0, 11-4, 9-11, 11-6 (27m)
[5] Donna Lobban (AUS) bye
[8] Alison Thomson (SCO) bye
Katriona Allen (SCO) bt [9/16] Charlotte Jagger (ENG) 11-5, 11-4, 12-10 (24m)
[9/16] Cristina Gomez (ESP) bt Jessica Shaw (SCO) 11-3, 11-2, 11-6 (18m)
[4] Alexandra Fuller (RSA) bye
[3] Lisa Aitken (SCO) bye
Elspeth Young (SCO) bt [9/16] Fanny Segers (FRA) 11-4, 8-11, 12-10 ret. (23m)
[9/16] Sanne Veldkamp (NED) bt Lucy Murchie (SCO) 11-4, 9-11, 11-7, 11-9 (35m)
[6] Rachael Chadwick (ENG) bye
[7] Satomi Watanabe (JPN) bye
[9/16] Farah Momen (EGY) bt Celine Walser (SUI) 14-12, 9-11, 7-11, 11-8, 11-4 (38m)
[9/16] Kace Bartley (ENG) bt Faiza Zafar (PAK) 11-4, 11-6, 11-6 (17m)
[2] Julianne Courtice (ENG) bye
Second round:
[1] Emily Whitlock (ENG) bt [9/16] Georgia Adderley (SCO) 11-7, 11-3, 11-4 (24m)
[5] Donna Lobban (AUS) bt Yura Choi (KOR) 11-4, 11-5, 11-6 (19m)
[8] Alison Thomson (SCO) bt Katriona Allen (SCO) 11-2, 11-5, 11-7 (26m)
[4] Alexandra Fuller (RSA) bt [9/16] Cristina Gomez (ESP) 11-6, 11-4, 11-5 (24m)
[3] Lisa Aitken (SCO) bt Elspeth Young (SCO) 11-5, 11-3, 12-10 (21m)
[6] Rachael Chadwick (ENG) bt [9/16] Sanne Veldkamp (NED) 11-3, 11-3, 11-5 (15m)
[7] Satomi Watanabe (JPN) bt [9/16] Farah Momen (EGY) 11-7, 11-3, 12-10 (23m)
[2] Julianne Courtice (ENG) bt [9/16] Kace Bartley (ENG) 11-7, 11-7, 11-6 (22m)
Quarter-finals:
[1] Emily Whitlock (ENG) v [5] Donna Lobban (AUS)
[4] Alexandra Fuller (RSA) v [8] Alison Thomson (SCO)
[3] Lisa Aitken (SCO) v [6] Rachael Chadwick (ENG)
[2] Julianne Courtice (ENG) v [7] Satomi Watanabe (JPN)

Pictures courtesy of ESC

Posted on January 31, 2020

For Scotland, Dublin has long been a desolate hunting ground, the site of so many shellackings and so much misery.

Since 1998, the men's team have won in Ireland once. In a dozen meetings since that 2010 victory, there have been three Scottish victory, all at Murrayfield, and one in a World Cup warm-up Test.

In the past three games, Scotland have scored only two tries and shipped a grimace-inducing 11. Ireland ran in four during the World Cup savaging that set the tone for a limp pool-stage exit in Japan.

Johnnie Beattie's barnstorming try propelled the Scots to a stunning victory at Croke Park a decade ago. No Scotland men's side has triumphed on Irish soil since.

How do they go about arresting that barren run on Saturday? Here, recently retired number eight Beattie outlines a tactical blueprint for at long last conquering Ireland in Dublin.

A sensible start

In 2019, Scotland shipped an eye-watering number of early tries. They emerged from the traps like slugs on crutches.

England and France (twice) scored in the opening minute of Test matches, Wales had a try inside 12, Ireland got two in 16 during the Six Nations and two more in 15 at the World Cup.

"Instead of throwing caution to the wind, I'd like to see Scotland start with a little more structure and pragmatism," Beattie says. "Don't run everything out of your own third, kick tactically and pressure Ireland.

"If you run everything from deep, we saw in the World Cup that to get to the opposition 22 you have got to be extremely accurate and you're exhausted by the time you get there.

"If you don't get there and it's ambitious attack, you risk turning over ball, which is the hardest ball to defend and where I felt we came unstuck."

Avoid 'impending doom'

Few teams are as masterful as Ireland when it comes to suffocating play. They smother and spoil and bully their opponents with ruthless efficiency, gobbling up possession and turning it into points. Scotland have not kept them try-less since 2011.

"It's horrible, but there's almost that impending doom if Ireland get the ball in your 22," Beattie says. "You kind of know what's coming because they're so well-organised but they've got good power and they're going forward.

"Your discipline has to be on-point, no penalties, don't allow them any easy field position and try to boss possession in the right areas of the field. That's where Ali Price and Adam Hastings have got a huge task in directing the team, exerting pressure and squeezing them.

"Ireland are excellent at squeezing teams, making them cough up possession, and absolutely pouncing. It's a question of dominating collisions wherever you can, giving them little go-forward and keeping them out of your third, because once they get down there, they're very clinical."

Allow 'leader' Hastings to flourish

In steering Scotland away from choppy waters, Hastings will play a monumental role. Since Finn Russell's unsettling departure from the camp, it has been clear that the 23-year-old Glasgow fly-half would be given his first championship start in Dublin.

"Adam will have bossed the entire week at training and he'll be relishing it because he's a confident young guy in superb form with good players around him," Beattie says.

"The pack, especially, need to get him going forward and he'll be looking at centres Sam Johnson and Huw Jones to get yards and momentum. Once he's on that front foot, he's a very, very talented 10, so I'm not worried for him.

"If everyone does their jobs, Adam's role becomes easy. He leads things at Glasgow week in, week out. He works well together with Price and Johnson and Jones. It's not a case of people helping him, it's just a case of them performing their roles and allowing him to perform his."

Poach ball and 'cause damage'

It is fiendishly difficult to prise ball from relentless, bruising Irish phase play. It isn't always cosmic rugby, but it is physically punishing and invariably effective.

Opportunities to pilfer possession are fleeting and Scotland must be clever in seizing turnovers when they can.

"Ireland are so structured that it's really hard to get at them at the contact area. You really have to pick and choose and go hard at options that are presented," Beattie says.

"Our flankers - Jamie Ritchie and Hamish Watson - are both world-class over ball. Fraser Brown and Zander Fagerson are huge at the breakdown. Rory Sutherland is good over ball. There's threat all over our pack for poaching.

"You know that when Ireland have the ball, they have it for long periods, so we've got as good a chance as we've ever had of slowing down and jackaling some turnovers. And because their play is so structured, that turnover ball is absolutely key - against a disorganised defence, it gives us the best chance to cause damage."

Boss the set-piece

Gregor Townsend has selected Sutherland, the explosive Edinburgh prop, at loose-head, and chosen Glasgow's dynamic Scott Cummings to partner Jonny Gray in the second-row.

The Scottish pack face a mountainous task in halting the beef of the Irish scrum, spearheaded by Lions Cian Healy and Tadhg Furlong.

"Sutherland looks like he has the physical mould of a top-class loose-head," Beattie says. "He held his own against a monster Bordeaux-Begles pack for Edinburgh this month. Bordeaux-Begles talked during the week about massacring Edinburgh's pack and he did an outstanding job.

"Scotland had a couple of line-out wobbles last year and it looked more like communication errors as opposed to bad throws or bad lifts. They have really got to do some serious work in that area.

"If, at scrum and line-out time you are in the mix, and you can pragmatically get in the right areas of the field, you know your odds of winning the game shoot up massively. Add in these simple things and front up physically and Scotland will be there or thereabouts."

RoofClaim.com Backing MBM Motorsports

Published in Racing
Friday, 31 January 2020 10:42

STATESVILLE, N.C. – MBM Motorsports and RoofClaim.com have announced a multi-race sponsorship agreement beginning with the Daytona 500 at Daytona Int’l Speedway on Feb. 16.

RoofClaim.com is a technology services company serving communities in major markets across the U.S. RoofClaim.com focuses primarily on insurance claims processing and roof replacements for storm-damaged homes through the use of cutting edge technology.

“This sponsorship allows us to support Timmy Hill, an up and coming driver, and immerse our organization in the world of NASCAR motorsports,” said RoofClaim.com CEO Brian Wedding. “NASCAR has a large and loyal fan base so when I was presented with this opportunity it was a simple decision. I look forward to watching the #66 RoofClaim.com car compete in the 2020 season.”

Hill has made starts in each of NASCAR’s three national divisions, including 92 starts in the NASCAR Cup Series during the last eight years.

“I was already excited to get the season started at Daytona with everyone at MBM Motorsports, and to get the news that we have added a quality sponsor like RoofClaim.com makes it that much more exciting,” said Hill. “I know Carl (Long) and everyone at MBM Motorsports has worked very hard during the off season and we are looking forward to unloading at Daytona and do all we can to put the RoofClaim.com No. 66 in the Daytona 500.”

The RoofClaim.com entry at Daytona will be a Ford Mustang which will be powered with a Roush Yates powerplant.

“We have been working very hard to make our race team more competitive. My business partners have been instrumental in keeping us heading in the right direction,” said team owner Carl Long. “To have such a prestigious company like RoofClaim.com come on board really helps take our race program to another level. We look forward to representing their company and marketing their brand throughout the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series schedule.”

Bowyer To Be Regular FOX Xfinity Series Analyst

Published in Racing
Friday, 31 January 2020 11:58

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – FOX Sports is opening its 20th consecutive season of NASCAR coverage from Daytona Speedweeks with a little help from a friend.

NASCAR Cup Series regular Clint Bowyer will expand his FOX NASCAR on-air contributions this season, adding more NASCAR Xfinity Series races to his plate alongside Adam Alexander and a rotation of Cup Series drivers to be announced in the near future.

Additionally, Bowyer will contribute to NASCAR RaceDay and NASCAR Race Hub multiple times throughout the year, offering his unique insight and analysis as an active NASCAR Cup Series racer.

The Stewart-Haas Racing driver has served as a FOX Sports analyst for multiple Xfinity Series races, in addition to the network’s “Drivers Only” broadcast the past three years.

“Anyone who knows me knows I want to have fun, and I’ve really had a good time doing TV the past few years,” Bowyer said. “It’s a different perspective up in the FOX Sports booth, and I always learn something, even if it’s just about the guys I race with every week.

“My Saturdays are free this year, and Lorra (Bowyer, wife) made it clear she wants me out of the motorhome, so this is the perfect weekend part-time gig for me.”

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