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

Rooney's Derby held by 4th-tier Northampton

Published in Soccer
Friday, 24 January 2020 15:29

Former England captain Wayne Rooney failed to inspire his Derby County side as they were held to a 0-0 draw away to fourth tier Northamption in an FA Cup fourth round tie on Friday.

Northampton forward Vadaine Oliver went closest to a breakthrough in the first half, striking the crossbar from close range, while second tier Derby failed to muster a shot on target and now face the prospect of a replay.

Derby claimed that Northampton's Charlie Goode should have been sent off for hauling Jack Marriott to the ground when he was through on goal but the referee ruled it was not a foul.

Sheffield Wednesday won 2-1 at Queens Park Rangers in the evening's other match, an all second-tier affair, while Liverpool, Manchester City and Manchester United all play on Sunday against lower division opponents.

Zlatan scuffs chance as Rebic bails out Milan

Published in Soccer
Friday, 24 January 2020 14:23

AC Milan forward Ante Rebic scored the winning goal for the second week running as they beat Brescia 1-0 away in Serie A on Friday, sparing the blushes of Zlatan Ibrahimovic after an extraordinary miss by the 38-year-old.

Ibrahimovic had only to tap the ball in from six metres after Theo Hernandez sent in a low cross in the 40th minute but the Swede instead contrived to shoot wide, his only excuse being that the ball might have been slightly behind him.

He made amends, however, by setting up the winning goal in the 71st minute. Ibrahimovic pulled the ball back from the byline and, after a scramble in the area, Rebic turned it from close range.

play
1:31

Zlatan 'demanding better' from teammates at AC Milan

The FC crew break down the impact Zlatan Ibrahimovic has had on AC Milan since joining the club.

The win continued a mini-revival for Milan, who are unbeaten since Ibrahimovic returned for a second stint at the club in January.

"We are a completely different team from the one who started the season," said coach Stefano Pioli. "Technically, we can do better but we have a great attitude, we know how to suffer and pull a winning goal out of the hat.

"Ibrahimovic has only scored one goal but with him on the pitch we have managed four wins and a draw (in all competitions since he joined) because he is an added value thanks to his presence and quality."

They have won four and draw one of their five matches in all competitions following his arrival on a six-month contract and the win took them up to sixth in the table with 31 points from 21 games.

Brescia, stuck in the relegation zone with 15 points, were missing forward Mario Balotelli who began a two-match suspension after he was sent off for insulting the referee in a 2-2 draw with Cagliari on Sunday.

England Under-19s 64 for 2 (Young 39*) beat Nigeria Under-19s 58 (Hill 4-12, Qadri 4-24) by eight wickets
Scorecard

England allrounder George Hill, playing his first game of the Under-19 World Cup, finished with figures of 4 for 12 to help England bowl Nigeria out for 58 in 27.5 overs in the final Group D game at Kimberley. England, for whom this was their first win of the tournament, won by eight wickets with opener Sam Young finishing the game off with a six, as England racing to 64 for 2 in just 11 overs.

Nigeria had opted to bat first, but the England seamers reduced them to 19 for 3 early. A 23-run fourth-wicket then took Nigeria past the forties, but then offspinner Hamidullah Qadri, who also took four wickets, and medium-pacer Hill bowled them out soon after. Nigeria captain Sylvester Okpe top-scored with 16.

Young was brisk in England's pursuit of 59, crunching five fours and two sixes in his 33-ball 39, while Hil, who batted at No.4, was not out on 7 when the winning runs were hit. Both teams will move to the Plate League stage of the tournament, having failed to come in the top two of their group. West Indies topped the group, with Australia finishing second.

Sri Lanka Under-19s 47 for 1 (Rasantha 19*) beat Japan Under-19s 43 (Paranavithana 2-2, Daniel 2-11, Madushanka 2-12, Thilakaratne 2-13) by nine wickets
Scorecard

Four days after being bowled out for 41 by India, Japan slumped to 43 all out in their final Group A match, against Sri Lanka. In a match reduced to 22 overs a side, Sri Lanka chose to bowl, and took just 18.3 overs to rattle through Japan's line-up, and only 8.3 to complete their chase.

None of the Japan batsmen got into double figures, their No. 4 Debashish Sahoo coming closest with 9. Four Sri Lanka bowlers - Dilshan Madushanka, Sudeera Thilakaratne, Ashian Daniel and Navod Paranavithana - took two wickets each, with the other two coming via run-outs.

Paranavithana fell early in Sri Lanka's chase, before Mohammad Shamaz and Ravindu Rasantha steered their side home with an unbroken partnership of 38. The result confirmed that New Zealand - whose match against Japan didn't produce a result - joined India in the quarter-finals.

Watch the best shots as world number one Rafael Nadal sweeps aside fellow Spaniard Carreno Busta to set up a last-16 tie with Australia's Nick Kyrgios.

READ MORE: Nadal beats Carreno Busta in straight sets

Australian Open highlights available on BBC iPlayer.

Available to UK users only.

Nick Kyrgios will face top seed Rafael Nadal in the last 16 at the Australian Open after an "insane" five-set win over Karen Khachanov.

Kyrgios, who missed match points in the third and fourth sets, won 6-2 7-6 (7-5) 6-7 (6-8) 6-7 (7-9) 7-6 (10-8).

The Australian, 24, needed nearly four-and-a-half hours to win a tense third-round match against the Russian - having led by two sets and a break.

But he came through in a final-set tie-break at a boisterous Melbourne Arena.

"It was definitely one of the craziest matches I've ever been a part of," Kyrgios said.

Kyrgios leads 2-1 in his head-to-head record on hard courts against Nadal, with whom he has rarely seen eye-to-eye, although the 19-time Grand Slam champion leads 4-3 on all surfaces.

The pair, who will meet at Melbourne Park on Monday, last faced each other on grass at Wimbledon in July when Nadal won in four sets.

The Spanish top seed, 33, cruised past compatriot Pablo Carreno Busta 6-1 6-2 6-4 in his third-round match earlier on Saturday.

The world number one wrapped up a straightforward win almost seven hours earlier than Kyrgios, whose brutal contest against Khachanov lasted for four hours and 26 minutes.

"I'm not thinking about that [playing Nadal] - I'm just thinking about my legs and getting them into an ice bath," Kyrgios said.

Kyrgios fights way into last 16

The prospect of another meeting between Kyrgios and Nadal has been a tantalising one since the Australian Open draw was made nine days ago.

Kyrgios has previously described Nadal as "super salty", while Nadal has been visibly irritated by the Australian's erratic on-court behaviour in the past.

To add further spice to a highly-anticipated blockbuster, Kyrgios cheekily mocked Nadal's superstitious service routine in his second-round win over France's Gilles Simon.

And, after Nadal thrashed Carreno Busta in his "best match of the tournament", Kyrgios ensured it would happen by seeing off 16th seed Khachanov.

"Whatever happens between us, he [Nadal] is an amazing player. Arguably the greatest of all time," Kyrgios said.

"At the end of the day, we're two different tennis players. We go about it completely different."

After clinching victory over Khachanov, Kyrgios fell to the court in celebration and laid out on the baseline before rising to wearily take the acclaim of the crowd.

Few would have predicted the drama which followed after Kyrgios, with his generally more relaxed demeanour, bettered Khachanov in all the key areas during the first two sets.

Kyrgios had a higher first-serve percentage, won more first-serve points, hit more aces and cracked more winners, while throwing in several drop-shots to unsettle the Russian.

Khachanov's frustration at being outplayed - and some calling out from the crowd during play - was laid bare when he whacked a loose ball into the court's roof during the third set.

That anger seemed to spur him into finding a different level, clawing a set back when Kyrgios hit a wild forehand wide and then levelling after a fourth set where he made just two unforced errors.

Kyrgios led 3-0 in the deciding first-to-10 tie-break, used to settle matches that reach 6-6 in the fifth set at the Australian Open.

Roars greeted every winning point for the Australian number two, with anguished cries heard as Khachanov fought back in a gripping battle.

The pair were deadlocked at 6-6, then 7-7, before a Kyrgios forehand into the net post gave Khachanov an opportunity to serve out the match.

However, a pinpoint backhand down the line finished a tense rally, leaving Kyrgios grinning and the crowd on their feet as Khachanov missed his chance.

Khachanov then hit a backhand into the net for Kyrgios' third match point - one hour and 54 minutes after his first - and pushed another wide to cause pandemonium in the Melbourne Arena.

Kyrgios described the match as "insane" as he struggled to speak on court afterwards.

"At 8-7 down, I had all the thoughts. I thought I was going to lose. I was thinking about everything. I was thinking about the media if I lost, everything," he added.

Up next, the world number one

Nadal, 33, was sharp on serve as he raced into a two-set lead in his match, allowing 27th seed Carreno Busta just five return points.

Carreno Busta fared little better in the third as 2009 champion Nadal wrapped up a one-sided win over his friend, with whom he helped Spain win the Davis Cup in November in one hour and 38 minutes.

Nadal set the tone by breaking in the second game of the match, pinching Carreno Busta's serve another four times on a sun-soaked Rod Laver Arena.

"It was my best match of the tournament without a doubt," said Nadal, who hit 42 winners and made just seven unforced errors.

"When the conditions are warmer, the ball bounces higher and flies through the air. That helps my game.

"I did very well with my serves and started to hit some forehands down the line. That is key for me."

Victory also continued Nadal's dominance over his compatriots. The Majorcan left-hander has now won his past 18 matches against Spanish opposition, stretching back to a 2016 Australian Open first-round defeat by Fernando Verdasco.

Against Belarus, Maria Xiao beat Nadezhda Bogdanova (9-11, 11-8, 11-8, 11-3) in the second match of the fixture, after colleagues Galia Dvorak and Zhang Sofia-Xuan had experienced doubles defeat at the hands of Katsiaryna Baravok and Daria Trigolos (5-11, 13-11, 11-6, 11-9).

Galia Dvorak gave Spain the advantage by overcoming Katsiaryna Baravok (11-9, 11-9, 11-4) in the third match of the fixture, before Nadezhda Bogdanova levelled matters by overcoming Zhang Sofia-Xuan.

Thus the scene was set to determine the outcome, Maria Xiao faced a spirited Daria Trigolos; a young lady who tested the Spaniard by recovering from a two games to nil deficit to force a decider. Sadly the contest finished with Maria Xiao gaining the verdict, an unreturnable edge ball (11-7, 11-7, 4-11, 5-11, 11-8).

Did simple things well

However, in no way whatsoever should the conclusion detract from the efforts of Maria Xiao.

Above all else she did the simple things well; she put the ball on the table, time and again a controlled forehand top spin was the opening stroke, not fast but safe with heavy rotation, forcing her opponent into a passive role. Equally, left handed, from the backhand, she was safe, creating angles, making Daria Trigolos move; playing consistently controlling matters.

“The key was to not give up, I lost the third and fourth games really easy. After I just focused on the first ball, service and receive.” Maria Xiao
Maria Xiao

Success against Belarus meant she maintained her unbeaten record. In a 3-0 win against Great Britain she had beaten Tin-Tin Ho (11-9, 11-3, 11-8); in the 3-1 defeat when facing Austria, she had overcome Sofia Polcanova (11-3, 6-11, 5-11, 11-5, 11-4).

Fighting herself

Compact technical skills proved a factor but composure was the vital ingredient, especially after losing the third and fourth games against Daria Trigolos. However, if any player needed to be strong mentally on the morning of the fourth day of play, it was Maria Migot.

Not only did the 21 year old have to fight against her opponent, she had to fight against herself. India fielded Manika Batra, Ayhika Mukherjee and Sutirtha Mukherjee, the team that the previous day had come so close against Romania. All three use combination rackets, long pimpled rubber on the backhand, antispin or smooth reversed on the forehand.

After India had taken the lead by securing the doubles, Ayhikha Mukherjee and Suturtha Mukherjee beating Stéphanie Loeuillette and Yuan Jia Nan (11-7, 6-11, 10-12, 11-4, 11-8), the pressure was firmly on the shoulders of Marie Migot as she faced Manika Batra, the 2008 Commonwealth Games gold medallist. Focused Marie Migot prevailed in five games (11-7, 3-11, 11-9, 3-11, 11-7) to level matters.

Yuan Jia Nan returned to the fray to beat Sutirtha Mukherjee (11-7, 11-8, 11-6), before Stéphanie Loeuillette experienced defeat at the hands of Manika Batra (11-7, 12-10, 11-4).

Vital deciding match

Proceedings level, Marie Migot faced Ayhika Mukherjee; it was in that contest where she had to fight herself.

She wanted to play at speed, counter top spin; against the combination racket of her adversary, patience was needed. The contest went the full distance; at the change of ends in the fifth game Marie Migot trailed by one point, she lost the next but then recovered to lead 9-7. The next point was lost but playing carefully, remaining calm she established a 10-8 lead, she converted at the second attempt (6-11, 11-8, 9-11, 11-9, 11-9).

“I was up on the last game, but it was a special game. She had this anti-spin and pimples. I have never played this kind of game before. I was nervous because of the game also but I tried, and in the end was good. I fought a lot, I worked hard and I’m super happy to have given the last point to France. Portugal are at home. We are still the outsiders , so we try to push them an maybe win this match, we will see at 7.00 pm this evening.” Marie Migot

At the semi-final stage in the battle for the one remaining place in the women’s team event France meets Portugal, Spain confronts Korea Republic.

Please follow and like us:

Burrows Strikes Again On East Bay Dirt

Published in Racing
Saturday, 25 January 2020 04:00

GIBSONTON, Fla. – Shane Burrows picked up his second modified victory in four days of racing on Friday evening at East Bay Raceway Park during the annual Winternationals.

Friday’s night of racing was pivotal for competitors, as the top-six in weekly points would earned guaranteed starting positions in Saturday’s finale. After three nights of racing, Burrows was on the outside looking in and had to win if he hoped to lock into Saturday’s A-Main.

Kevin Adams took the early lead in Friday’s feature, holding a slight margin over Jason Hughes in the first two laps. The caution was displayed twice in the first five laps before the field could start to get momentum. The lap-five incident was a multi-car pileup that left the racers idle on the track while safety workers addressed the incident. When the race went green, Burrows began to make his move, vaulting to second by lap 11 and seeking the lead from Adams.

The leaders encountered lapped traffic, forcing Burrows from the high line to follow the leader. As Adams approached Donnie Moran on the bottom, Burrows determined the best way to go would be back on the top. Adams had difficulty getting past Moran and that was all of the opportunity Burrows needed to grab the lead on lap 24.

Adams tried gamely to get the lead back after a couple of late race restarts, with Spencer Hughes factoring in for his best run of the week. When the checkered waved, it was Burrows dashing across the line for his second feature win of the week.

The victory was enough to move Burrows solidly into the top-six in points. Devin Dixon’s fifth place was enough to secure the top point spot. The racers who earned places in Saturday’s feature are Dixon, Adams, Burrows, Tyler Nicely, Jason Hughes and Tait Davenport.

Thomas Pratt won the companion street stock feature.

Peter Murphy Purchases Keller Auto Speedway

Published in Racing
Saturday, 25 January 2020 06:01

HANFORD, Calif. – Retired Australian sprint car driver Peter Murphy has purchased Keller Auto Speedway, located on the grounds of California’s Kings County Fairgrounds.

The purchase became official on Friday following a fair board meeting. Murphy, who retired from racing following a near-fatal crash at California’s Antioch Speedway in 2013, takes over ownership of the facility from Morse Racing Promotions.

“We weren’t looking to sell, but there were some rumors that Peter was interested in running a track,” said Morse Racing Promotions’ Brandon Morse in a press release posted on Facebook. “Peter has the time, effort and is universally loved by the racing community, he will do a great job. We wanted to make sure it was going to go to a quality guy like Pete.”

Despite retiring from racing as the result of the crash at Antioch, Murphy has remained involved in motorsports. He promotes an annual event, the Peter Murphy Classic, at Thunderbowl Raceway in Tulare, Calif., every year.

Now he’ll have a deeper foothold in the California racing scene as owner of Keller Auto Speedway in Hanford, Calif.

“I am just excited about this opportunity to run a great track like Hanford,” Murphy said. “My juices get flowing every year when the Peter Murphy Classic comes around. I am ready to take the next step and be just like (President Donald) Trump, I want to make racing great again.”

Keller Auto Speedway will open its season on Feb. 22. The Kings of Thunder Winged 360 Sprint Car Series, the Western RaceSaver Sprint Cars and IMCA A Modifieds will be on the card.

It’s Marcus Dumesny On Night Two In Warrnambool

Published in Racing
Saturday, 25 January 2020 06:32

WARRNAMBOOL, Australia – Young gun Marcus Dumesny showed the way during the second preliminary night for the 48th Southwest Conveyancing Grand Annual Sprint Car Classic on Saturday at Premier Speedway, rocketing to a $10,000 victory.

Dumesny took to the lead off the initial start, then survived a back-and-forth battle with fellow countryman Kerry Madsen before retaking control of the 30-lap feature on the 12th round.

Once back out front, Dumesny hung on for the duration, despite several fierce challenges from both Madsen and Cory Eliason down the home stretch of the event.

The 19-year-old son of seven-time QSS World Series champion and three-time Grand Annual Sprint Car Classic winner Max Dumesny crossed under the checkered flag in front of Madsen by .387 seconds, with the top three covered by less than eight tenths in the end.

Eliason took the final step of the podium, followed by Tim Shaffer and Steve Lines.

Ian Madsen, Jamie Veal, Corey McCullagh, Lachlan McHugh and Kalib Henry, who came out of the B-main, completed the top 10 finishers. Carson Macedo was 14th in the rundown.

The only other American of note in the night two field, McKenna Haase, was eliminated during the B-main on Saturday.

A final round of heats on Sunday, featuring the top 48 from each qualifying night, will help determine the top 16 in combined points who will lock in to the championship A-main.

The remaining 80 drivers will slot in to B, C and D-mains to try and race into the field.

The finish:

Marcus Dumesny, Kerry Madsen, Cory Eliason, Tim Shaffer, Steve Lines, Ian Madsen, Jamie Veal, Corey McCullagh, Lachlan McHugh, Kalib Henry, Ryan Jones, David Murcott, John Vogels, Carson Macedo, Jessie Attard, Danny Reidy, Charles Hunter, Dennis Jones, Jacob Smith, Ryan McNamara, Sam Walsh, Grant Anderson, Robbie Paton, Brooke Tatnell.

SAN DIEGO — The PGA Tour is raising the prize money at The Players Championship to $15 million, making it the largest purse in golf unless any of the majors decide to up the ante this year.

The winner of March 12-15 event at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, will receive $2.7 million, nearly as much as Tiger Woods earned in his first two seasons as a pro.

PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan announced the increase at the annual players meeting this week at Torrey Pines during the Farmers Insurance Open, according to several players.

The tour typically does not release information on the prize money, wanting the focus to be more on prestige than cash. But it also has a history of wanting its premier event to reflect that in the money available.

''It's our flagship event,'' Xander Schauffele said. ''It needs to counterbalance the major championships, and it's putting a nice incentive out there. I'm not upset by it.''

Rory McIlroy won last year when the purse was $12.5 million, the same prize money as the U.S. Open. The Masters had a purse of $11.5 million, while the PGA Championship offered $11 million and the British Open purse was $10.75 million.

''It feels like it keeps going up and up and up,'' said Jason Day, who won The Players in 2016. ''That's great. I'm not complaining.''

PGA Tour players privately grumbled a few years ago when the USGA signed a 10-year deal with Fox Sports worth a reported $1 billion while the U.S. Open purse featured only gradual increases.

Brandt Snedeker was among those who felt this would challenge the four majors to increase their purses.

''As a player, I feel good about it,'' Snedeker said. ''The Players does it to push the majors to keep up. The majors are huge money-makers, and we're getting a small percentage of that.''

The PGA Tour has no ownership in the four majors, which are organized by Augusta National, the PGA of America, the USGA and the R&A.

The $2.7 million is not the largest prize in official money. The DP World Tour Championship that concludes the European Tour pays $3 million to the winner.

The PGA Tour offers $15 million for the winner of the Tour Championship, but that is considered bonus money from its season points race.

But the purses for PGA Tour events are likely to keep increasing, especially after the tour wraps up its latest round of television negotiations.

Soccer

Ten Hag on Man United start: No reason to panic

Ten Hag on Man United start: No reason to panic

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsManchester United head coach Erik ten Hag has said his team's start...

Luis Enrique: PSG no match for 'superior' Arsenal

Luis Enrique: PSG no match for 'superior' Arsenal

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsParis Saint-Germain coach Luis Enrique said he has no idea how long...

Saka talks up 'hunger in my belly' after PSG win

Saka talks up 'hunger in my belly' after PSG win

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsBukayo Saka said "this is the year" for Arsenal to become winners a...

2026 FIFA


2028 LOS ANGELES OLYMPIC

UEFA

2024 PARIS OLYMPIC


Basketball

Kerr says all but Curry's starting job up for grabs

Kerr says all but Curry's starting job up for grabs

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsLAIE, Hawai'i -- Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr has a very...

Grizz's Jackson exits 1st camp practice with injury

Grizz's Jackson exits 1st camp practice with injury

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsNASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Memphis Grizzlies power forward/center Jaren Ja...

Baseball

Nevada coroner finds Rose died of natural causes

Nevada coroner finds Rose died of natural causes

EmailPrintPete Rose died of natural causes, the Clark County Coroner's Office in Nevada announced Tu...

Tatis feels playoff 'energy,' homers in Padres' win

Tatis feels playoff 'energy,' homers in Padres' win

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsSAN DIEGO -- Fernando Tatis Jr. hit a towering two-run homer on his...

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