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Moeen Ali has claimed he is "refreshed and ready to go" after taking a break from international cricket, but says he has yet to make a decision on whether he will return to Test cricket for England's tour of Sri Lanka in March.

Moeen, who asked for a break from Test cricket after being dropped following the first Ashes Test, has now admitted he was suffering from "burn-out" and felt he had become "one of the first guys to get the blame" when England lost.

And while he says "no timeframe" has been put on a possible Test return, he has said that "when I'm ready, I'll be back for sure".

"I felt burnt out," Moeen told the BBC Cricket Social. "I felt tired mentally and physically. I needed this break to recharge my batteries and work on a few things on my game. And to just find that hunger and love for the game again.

"It's not something people would normally do. Especially after you've just won the World Cup and the Ashes are playing. I was doing quite well before that. It was tough. But I knew it was the right thing to do.

"A lot of people could see I probably needed a break. It's easy to just carry on, keep going and almost dig a deeper hole at times. But I just wanted to step back from it. I started reading about my faith a bit more. And I started taking interest in other things rather than focusing on cricket 24-7.

"I love being away and travelling and playing cricket. But it was almost too much and it needed to take a bit of a back seat. I can put my cricket to one side. It's not my be-all and end-all. I've more than cricket in my life and I wanted to spend time being normal in the winters.

"A lot of the time if we lose I feel I am one of the first guys to get the blame for it. Yes, there have been days when I have not had good games but I feel sometimes it is easy to point the finger at me. It did get to me and that was one of the reasons why I needed to step back from Test cricket. I felt like I was drained from it all. But I have got to become a stronger person for that as well. It is difficult, but I will be fine."

Moeen will join up with the England limited-overs squad in South Africa in the next couple of weeks, and he says he will "probably" come to a conclusion about the Sri Lanka tour after talks with the England management in South Africa.

"I'm not sure yet [about going to Sri Lanka]," he said. "I'm going to go to South Africa now for the one-day stuff and I will probably decide there. I'll speak to a few people.

ALSO READ: Broken rib was 'most pain on a cricket field' - James Anderson

"I'll definitely come back when I feel ready. England - the ECB - have been amazing in terms of support and they fully understand where I'm coming from. Playing all forms of the game is not the easiest thing at the moment as we play so much cricket.

"There's no time-frame. When I'm ready I'll come back for sure. But I know I've got to fight for and earn my spot again. Which I'm looking forward to. I've missed being around the guys and being on tour. I missed the banter with the boys. But I know, in the long run of my career, I needed this break."

While Moeen insisted he still "definitely" saw Test cricket as "the pinnacle" of the sport, he suggested that playing franchise cricket had helped him improve his game and recover his confidence after losing the Test part of his ECB central contract.

"When that contract was taken I had a few approaches from franchise cricket which is great because you feel valued," he said. "It was just the intensity of Test cricket was too much at the time. I have still got to earn some money, even though it is not all about the money. You want to play a good standard of cricket. I felt valued when all the leagues came in for me.

"For me it is enjoying my cricket. I bat up the order bat low down for England and I want to improve my batting and bowling before I come back and I want to come back a better player I was."

Banged-up LaMelo shutting down Aussie season

Published in Basketball
Thursday, 16 January 2020 04:44

LaMelo Ball's season in Australia is over, his manager, Jermaine Jackson, told ESPN via text message.

A bone bruise suffered in early December sidelined Ball 12 games into the season, and he has run out of time to complete the required rehab before the season ends.

"Melo's foot is totally healed, but the doctor's policy is if you're out for six weeks, you must rehab for six weeks," Jackson texted. "He's starting court work tomorrow."

Ball's team, the Illawarra Hawks, has six games remaining in the regular season, which concludes Feb. 14. Ball shutting down his season will not come as a surprise to NBA teams, as few anticipated Ball risking further injury.

Ball was on an upward trajectory prior to his injury, tallying consecutive triple-doubles in his final two games in the Australian NBL. He finished the season averaging 17 points, 7.5 rebounds, 6.8 assists and 1.7 steals in 31 minutes per game, emerging as the potential No. 1 pick in the 2020 NBA draft thanks to his combination of size, ballhandling ability, creativity and passing instincts.

Ball struggled at times with efficiency, shooting just 46 percent from 2-point range and 25 percent from 3, and will need to improve significantly on defense to hold his own against NBA point guards.

Most NBA decision-makers did not have an opportunity to evaluate Ball in person during his time in Australia. Although several scouts told ESPN they feel Ball is the most talented prospect in the draft, he has a significant amount of work to do to convince teams he will reach his full potential, due to concerns about his reportedly erratic work ethic, potential distractions generated by his father, LaVar, and the foot injury that forced him to miss more than half this season.

Fellow projected lottery pick RJ Hampton reinjured his hip in his last game against Brisbane and is not expected to play in the New Zealand Breakers' next game against Sydney. Hampton is questionable to return for the final seven games of the regular season, as the Breakers (9-12) are close to being eliminated from postseason contention.

DEEP UNDER THE Staples Center basket, cameras are held aloft, each lens moving in unison like starlings in murmuration. Nearly two dozen digital eyes are trained on the vending-machine-sized forward warming up, and each time he drives to the hoop, the crowd of onlookers beneath the basket parts to make ample room.

Also looking on before this early January matchup against the Los Angeles Lakers are athletic trainers for the New Orleans Pelicans. They watch the distance between Zion Williamson's steps and whether he's waddling or taking longer strides. They watch to see whether he's moving on the balls of his feet or transferring more force closer to his toes. They prefer the latter in both instances, says one league source close to the team.

The Pelicans watch the positioning of his feet, ankles and knees as he lands after one of his seismic leaps.

And they're hardly the only ones in the NBA studying young players for flaws.

"By the time you get them, they don't have any movement patterns that are worth a s---," says one veteran trainer for a Western Conference team. "It's unbelievable."

Says one NBA general manager, "They're more damaged when they get to us than they ever were before. They've got way more trauma to their bodies."

Dr. Mike Clark, who was formerly the Phoenix Suns' physical therapist for 14 seasons, describes younger players today as having powerful Ferrari-like engines, but with the brakes and suspensions of a basic sedan. And one Western Conference NBA general manager says that there might be no player in the league who has a more powerful engine than the team-listed 6-foot-6, 284-pound Williamson. The massively hyped No. 1 pick presents the sort of challenge to NBA trainers that is common among today's young players, but one that is exaggerated because of a body type far more common on an NFL defensive line than a basketball court.

And as Williamson now engages in practices and is set to debut on Wednesday after right knee surgery on Oct. 21, the spotlight is shining on what the Pelicans are doing to care for a prized asset that they hope will become a franchise star.

"Everyone's going to have their own opinion," Pelicans forward Josh Hart says. "No one knows him personally. Not a lot of people know his rehab process. They don't know anything like that."

So the Pelicans watch. And they preach small details.

"He's not quick for a big guy," New Orleans GM David Griffin says. "He's quick for quick guys. That's a really big deal when you're talking about the amount of torque you generate."

Back on the Staples Center sideline, Griffin watches Williamson. When Zion begins exploding toward the rim and throwing down two-handed slam dunks, fans flock to the Pelicans' half of the court.

"He's doing s--- from a physics perspective that no one else does," Griffin says. "It's fascinating to me. We've learned more during this process than we've taught him."

That process is Williamson's rehabilitation and return-to-play protocol. And while conventional wisdom suggests that the best way to keep Zion injury free is for him to lose weight -- to lighten the load on his lower extremities -- a new yearslong study suggests that it isn't quite that simple.

ESPN DAILY PODCAST: Waiting for Zion


ON A HOT August weekend in 2017, three officials from P3 Applied Sports Science wove through 20 miles of Houston's morning traffic to a cavernous gym where they believed they were going to witness the equivalent of a space shuttle launch in human form. P3, a Santa Barbara, California-based sports performance laboratory, has assessed thousands of athletes and almost 600 NBA players over the past 13 years, but jaw-dropping internet highlights from Williamson, a teenage sensation, had piqued the curiosity of even its longtime staff.

Once there, they affixed him with 22 spherical markers, each the size of a small marble, on his hips, knees and ankles. He stood atop two force plates designed to record ground-reaction forces. Williamson was shirtless, wearing compression tights and sneakers, and he stared up at a vertical leap ladder -- the kind used at combines to measure how high players can fly.

Eight high-tech cameras were positioned around Williamson while the officials huddled around a laptop where results would appear in real-time.

Without taking a step, Williamson crouched, preparing for takeoff, then swung his arms high, powering upward.

A chart spiked on the laptop as his tank-like frame continued to rise in the air, ultimately putting 33 inches of space between his sneakers and the floor.

On its own, that figure registered as one of the best standing vertical leaps P3 officials had seen -- not far from Andrew Wiggins' P3 record of 36 inches.

But Eric Leidersdorf, P3's director of biomechanics, says that comparison isn't apt. Williams, he notes, weighs 85 pounds more.

"No one with his body type gets up there," he says today, rewatching the jump.

Later in the session, Williamson completed what is known as a box jump, in which he jumped down from an 18-inch box before quickly leaping as high as possible. When he did, those force plates recorded that he had created 4,900 Newtons worth of force -- about twice the amount needed to crack a brick with a karate punch. It was also the highest such figure the P3 officials had ever seen.

Says Dr. Marcus Elliott, founder of P3: "Zion has the highest peak force of any athlete we've ever assessed -- and he was still in high school."


AT THE END of the 2018-19 regular season, P3 completed a five-year study of 481 NBA players they had evaluated in the hope of understanding one thing: What are the biggest factors that can lead to serious knee injuries?

After combing through at least 500 variables, officials were surprised to learn that four stood out as driving the majority of risk -- and to learn how different those first three variables were compared to the fourth.

The first three focused on mechanics -- how the foot rotates over the course of a jump; how the femur rotates relative to the shin; and the ability to control landing from a jump using the hips.

The fourth factor, though, could determine the fate for the most exciting NBA prospect in a decade: mass.

What they found had defied conventional wisdom: mass has no independent relationship to risk of injury. Rather, it serves as a multiplier for the other three factors. So when Zion Williamson told ESPN on Dec. 25 that the Pelicans were tweaking how he walks and runs, the aim was to manage the first three variables in order to control for the fourth.

"If Zion's mechanics are clean," Elliott says, "then I'll take him all day with his weight."

Veteran NBA trainers say today's young players often have stiff and inflexible hips that keep them from squatting and hinder their lateral movement -- and league sources say these issues also affect Williamson. But Griffin reports progress on Williamson's ability to get low to the ground and move laterally.

These are the sorts of issues that the Pelicans would have always focused on with Williamson, Griffin says, but his monthslong rehabilitation from knee surgery has given the team and 2019 No. 1 pick time to focus on them and little else. Griffin is hopeful that the injury will, in time, be something that everyone looks back on as a "blessing in disguise."

Specialists at P3 and elsewhere note that it's easier to repair such issues in younger players than older ones. One veteran Western Conference scout says recent reports for prospects have often included the phrase "tight hips."

"At first, I would kind of laugh at it," the scout says. "But now I notice it more and more often, especially when they move laterally while defending. A lot of these guys can't get low to the ground."

Griffin says the team has a checklist of assessments -- the particulars of which he declined to share -- that Williamson must pass in order to play. But Griffin acknowledges that the key for Williamson's longevity will be all about "his brakes," his lower extremities, and that as the team works to maintain them, it's important for Williamson to become adjusted, acclimated and comfortable.

"They have a lot of work ahead of them," one Western Conference NBA athletic trainer says of the Pelicans. "It's not their fault, [but] I don't think it's going to be super easy."


IT'S 30 MINUTES to tipoff on Nov. 24, and the Pelicans are in town to face the Clippers for their 17th game of the 2019-2020 season. And Zion Williamson has played exactly zero minutes in any of them. New Orleans is a disappointing 6-10.

Griffin, in a suit and tie and standing off to the side of the court during warm-ups, is talking about his prize rookie and the narratives that have hovered around him since the summer: Zion is in poor condition. He weighs too much. He's too explosive. That's why he's injured.

Griffin hasn't been shy about fighting back, calling such theories "asinine" in October when he cited Williamson's strong preseason, in which he averaged 23.3 points and 6.5 rebounds in four games. Here, Griffin calls Williamson a "freak of nature" and notes that when he went through his physical with the Pelicans, "he ran on the treadmill longer than the cardio-stress test people have ever needed to put anybody through a test to get his heart rate up."

Says Griffin: "Our challenge with Zion is: How do you continue to give him enough strength to control the torque he generates without adding weight that increases the torque in and of itself -- giving him the ability to be flexible enough and to have the right mechanics, and supporting that flexibility with the strength that it takes to control it in the form of a kid who adds muscle mass as fast as any human being I've ever seen." Which, to put it that way, does sound like quite a challenge -- or at least a mouthful.

Then Griffin shares another story about Williamson -- how the Pelicans engaged in a team-wide heavy weight-lifting routine for just one week during the offseason. Williamson gained eight pounds of muscle during that span, a degree of weight gain that shocked staffers.

"He's not normal," Griffin says. "So finding stasis with Zion is the challenge, because he's 19 years old. He's still growing. It's not going to be about a number. It's going to be about metrics of flexibility and strength and control and all of the different things that we can measure that really are outside of weight."

One NBA athletic trainer who is familiar with Williamson agrees.

"If you're not moving well, I don't care if you're 300 pounds or if you're 175 pounds, there's going to be a problem," the trainer says. "It's got to be quality movement. The mechanics have to be done right."

Leading the Pelicans in their care of Williamson is Aaron Nelson, whom they hired in May as their vice president of player care and performance. Nelson spent the previous 26 years with the vaunted Phoenix Suns training staff. With Nelson, the Suns were pioneers in movement efficiency, helping revive and maintain the careers of Grant Hill, Steve Nash, Amar'e Stoudemire and others.

"Aaron Nelson has been with all of the best that have ever done this," Griffin says. "He's added years to everybody else's career. They'll figure it out."

Griffin says later, "Aaron isn't learning anything he didn't know. Still, he's never seen anybody who can generate what [Williamson] can generate ... He's a 280-pound triple-jumper. It's crazy."

And so the anticipation for Williamson's debut builds as it does whenever he explodes toward the basket, testing Newton's laws as he rises higher than physics suggests anyone of his size ever should. Cameras aim, crowds grow, hope swells -- but concern lingers.

So while the Pelicans preach patience and a fundamental approach, they know there is no fair template -- because there's never truly been anyone quite like Zion Williamson.

The headlines news across baseball this week have not been particularly happy, with scandals dominating the news and accomplished people losing their jobs. January is usually a slow time on the baseball calendar -- a good month for a vacation -- with the occasional trade or free-agent signing to keep us engaged. This extra bit of activity has been interesting, to say the least, but these aren't the kind of stories you necessarily hope will emerge. January is bleak enough.

However, January does bring us the highlight of the offseason for those who relish the long history of the great game: the annual Hall of Fame announcement, which will be made next Tuesday. Unless it's a year when no one gets in, this is always a happy time. With Derek Jeter tracking at 100%, we're going to get at least one new Cooperstown resident to join Ted Simmons, the selection of the latest version of the veterans committee, on the podium in July.

Last year about this time, we posed the question: What would the Hall of Fame look like if its virtual inhabitants were arranged in tiers? Instead of the Plaque Gallery being arranged chronologically, as it is now, you'd have the more borderline candidates near the entrance, then as you moved deeper into those hallowed halls, the more legendary the displays would get. Of course, the good folks at the Hall would never actually do this. You're either in or you're out, and the door swings in only one direction.

Australian Open organisers are confident the tournament will start and finish on time despite continuing health concerns over Melbourne's air quality from bushfires in the country.

Some players have complained about having to play qualifying matches in smoky conditions.

"There is a lot of speculation about the Australian Open not happening, or starting later," said tournament director Craig Tiley.

"The Australian Open is happening."

Slovenia's Dalila Jakupovic had to be helped off court when she retired from her qualifying match on Tuesday because of the "unhealthy" air quality.

British player Liam Broady said having to play his first-round qualifier on the same day "made his blood boil", adding he was "gasping for air" as he lost to Belarusian Ilya Ivashka.

People in Melbourne were advised to stay indoors and keep pets inside on Tuesday.

A number of players have also criticised the tournament for not postponing the matches, with American Noah Rubin saying he had "blood and black stuff" coming out of his nose following his match on Wednesday.

Tiley says he understands the anger of the players, adding he believes it stems from the confusion of seeing different measurements of air quality depending on the app or website they used.

Rubin, a former Wimbledon junior champion, also told BBC Sport he was unhappy with the communication from tournament officials, saying they were reluctant to explain the figures to the players.

"Air quality is a very complex and confusing issue which relates to a number of different factors," said Tiley.

"There are number of different air quality measures and it is made more complex by going on an app. There are different apps and websites which give you different readings.

"This is about trusting the medical advice and trusting the expertise and scientific advice of the people who analyse this every day.

"The safety, the wellbeing and the health of the players is the priority for us, as with our staff and our fans."

Tiley said the tournament decided to use a 'PM2.5 concentrate' measure to monitor the air quality levels after receiving advice from environmental and medical experts.

A PM2.5 reading is being taken every four minutes at Melbourne Park. If the reading exceeds 200, Tiley said it would be deemed hazardous and play would be suspended.

He says no reading has exceeded the 200 mark while matches have been in progress at Melbourne Park. However, it did exceed that mark - rated as 'very unhealthy' - on Tuesday, when qualifying was delayed by an hour.

If play is suspended, the Tennis Australia chief executive says the tournament will continue indoors under the roofs on Rod Laver Arena, Margaret Court Arena and Melbourne Arena.

"We do have three indoor arenas in which we can compete. It may look differently but the tournament will happen," Tiley said.

"We are speculating if that would happen but if we had to work it out we would.

"We don't expect that to happen because we haven't yet seen anywhere in the world where there has been above that 200 on the PM2.5 concentrate consecutively over two weeks."

The first Grand Slam of the year gets under way on Monday.

Liam Pitchford ready to roar in Portugal

Published in Table Tennis
Thursday, 16 January 2020 02:59

Present at the London 2012 and Rio 2016 Olympic Games, presently listed at no.22 on the men’s world rankings, the 26 year old lines up alongside Paul Drinkhall, Sam Walker and Tom Jarvis.

Following the 3-1 win against Japan at the ZEN-NOH 2019 Team World Cup, the British outfit occupies the no.7 seeded spot in Gondomar; they start as favourites to secure one of the nine positions available for Tokyo 2020.

Realistic approach

Favourites but Liam Pitchford has his feet firmly on the floor; he explained.

“Of course we have a chance to qualify but it will be very hard. We have proved that we can beat any team in the world on our day, so we need to make sure we are prepared for tough matches. We are on a good road to being in good shape, we are preparing well and everybody is feeling good.

The Olympic Games is the pinnacle of every athlete’s career I would say, so it’s a massive honour to compete for your country at the highest level.

My first target in 2020 is to qualify for Tokyo, then hopefully that will be a weight off our shoulders; then I can focus on preparing in the best way possible and getting some good results on the World Tour.
Table tennis has given me a great life as I get to travel the world doing the sport I love.”

Editor’s note: Great Britain
  • The Olympic Games is a competition that involves athletes representing National Olympic Committees.
  • Great Britain is an island that comprises England, Scotland and Wales.
  • Add Northern Ireland and the full title is the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland; the National Olympic Committee is the British Olympic Association.
  • Thus with reference to the Olympic Games the name is: the Great Britain and Northern Ireland Olympic Team. Is it often shortened to Great Britain or Team GB.
  • Known as Crown dependencies – Guernsey, Isle of Man, Jersey – plus British overseas territories which do not have their own National Olympic Committees compete as Great Britain.
  • Athletes from Northern Ireland may choose whether to compete for Great Britain or for the Republic of Ireland.
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New head coach Wayne Pivac is aiming to expand Wales' talent pool by selecting more players based in England.

Of the 38 players named in Pivac's first Six Nations squad on Wednesday, nine play for clubs in England.

There are also five uncapped players, with Pivac benefitting from the fact the likes of Wasps lock Will Rowlands and former England Under-20 centre Nick Tompkins are Welsh qualified.

"We don't have the biggest pool to select from," said Pivac.

"Looking within the rules, we think we've come up with a reasonably balanced team.

"Our hands have been forced by injury in some places. But that's just an opportunity for other players and to build the player pool."

The Welsh Rugby Union introduced a selection policy in October 2017 that meant players would not be picked if they had won fewer than 60 caps when opting to move away from Wales.

However, there are exceptions to the rule.

If a player is uncapped when he signs with a club outside Wales, he is still eligible until the end of that contract.

That stipulation allowed Pivac to select players such as Gloucester's Cardiff-born teenage wing Louis Rees-Zammit in his Six Nations squad.

There are other complications regarding English-based players, such as their availability during different periods in the season.

For example, English clubs are not required to release players for international matches which fall outside World Rugby's official windows for fixtures.

That could make some players unavailable for Wales matches or training sessions.

"It's something you're aware of," said Pivac.

"But we've looked at selecting a squad that can get the job done week to week but with an eye to 2023 [World Cup]."

Bringing Rees-Zammit and Tompkins into the fold

Rees-Zammit has burst on to the scene in spectacular fashion with Gloucester this season, scoring nine tries in 12 appearances.

The 18-year-old was named the English Premiership's player of the month for December, and England head coach Eddie Jones was reportedly thinking of trying to persuade the wing to switch international allegiance.

But Rees-Zammit has been unequivocal in his desire to play for the country of his birth, on one occasion replying simply with "Wales" to dismiss a suggestion from former Manchester United footballer Paul Scholes that an England debut was not "far off now".

"He's Welsh through and through," said Pivac.

"Having spoken to him, he's over the moon. He loves playing rugby. It's not about contracts, he just wants to play the game.

"At 18, we need to get him in and learn as much as we can. But what we've seen, he's going to be a very good player moving forward."

While Rees-Zammit has always been committed to Wales, Pivac had to do a little more work to bring English-born players such as Tompkins and Rowlands into the fold.

Saracens centre Tompkins qualifies because of a Welsh grandmother, while Rowlands' father is Welsh.

Pivac tried to sign Wasps second row Rowlands when he was in charge of Scarlets, where he also came across former England Under-20 centre Tompkins.

"I took notice when he carved the Scarlets up in the Champions Cup when he was about 20," the New Zealander added.

"I found out he was eligible afterwards. I've been watching his career ever since to be quite honest.

"He's gone very well. We've had a lot of contact with him in recent times.

"He's a quality player, he's young but with good experience. We think he's ready for this level of the game.

"He's always known he's been able to go either way [select Wales or England]. He's been living in England and gone through the age-groups.

"But in terms of committing to a national team, he's made that commitment and we're very pleased."

Sunshine Nationals Open At Volusia

Published in Racing
Thursday, 16 January 2020 03:00

BARBERVILLE, Fla. — Volusia Speedway Park is alive with the sound of dirt late model racing as the inaugural DIRTcar Sunshine Nationals kicked off on Wednesday night with the track’s first event of 2020.

Full races for three divisions of dirt late models run Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights and some of the biggest names in Florida racing took to the half-mile dirt track on Wednesday for a final tune-up before the money is on the line.

When the hot laps wrapped up, Kyle Bronson topped the leaderboard with a lap of 16.850 seconds behind the wheel of his Rocket Chassis DIRTcar Pro Late Model.

“This car has been pretty good every time we race it,” Bronson said. “The track held up pretty good … I was one of the fastest cars out every time we went onto the race track, so I can’t ask for much more than that.”

Plenty of big names have made the trip out to Volusia to take part in the event, including Randy Weaver, Max Blair, Clay Harris and Cody Overton. These, and several other victory lane contenders have just as good of a shot at the $10,000 top prize in Saturday’s 30-lap Feature for the DIRTcar Pro Late Models. There are already 44 cars in the pits with the laps that matter starting Thursday.

“There are a lot of good cars here this weekend,” Bronson said. “There are 15 guys that can win this race… My car’s good enough to where I feel like if we go out here and I do the best job I can do, I feel like we have as good or a better shot to win this deal.”

The first of three complete shows in the inaugural DIRTcar Sunshine Nationals begins Thursday evening at Volusia with hot laps hitting the track for the 602 Late Model division at 5:15 p.m. They’ll be joined by the Florida Late Models and Pro Late Models to make up three full features on each night.

Adult general admission tickets are $20 Thursday and Friday, $25 on Saturday. Kids 12 and under are free all weekend.

Catch all the action live from your home with a DIRTVision Fast Pass, only $39 a month!

Sheppard Does It Again In Arizona

Published in Racing
Thursday, 16 January 2020 03:55

SAN TAN VALLEY, Ariz. — On a night that also featured two first-time winners, Brandon Sheppard became the first repeat winner of the 2020 Keyser Manufacturing Wild West Shootout presented by O’Reilly Auto Parts with a triumph in the Dirt Track Bank Super Late Models presented by Black Diamond Race Cars.

After earning the $100 SportTruck RV and Screven Motor Speedway fast qualifier award earlier in the evening, sprinting around FK Rod Ends Arizona Speedway in 14.896 seconds, Sheppard also cruised to claim his heat race, winning by over two and a half seconds.

As customary for the event, all four heat race winners entered the redraw, to identify their starting spots in Wednesday night’s 30-lap main event.

Jimmy Mars pocketed the $100 Gorsuch Performance pole award and would be joined on the front row by Sheppard. Fellow heat race winners Ricky Weiss and Cade Dillard made up the second row.

Sheppard wasted no time on the start, easily firing out to the early lead over Dillard, Mars, Weiss and Brian Shirley. Sheppard enjoyed a lead nearly the size of a straightaway by the 12th lap, when Garrett Alberson slowed out of turn four, to bring out the race’s first caution flag.

Sheppard again launched to a sizable lead on the ensuing restart, with Dillard, Mars and Weiss still in-tow.  Dillard began cutting into Sheppard’s lead with 10 laps to go, as the leaders encountered lapped traffic.

The second caution flag occurred one lap later, as Jason Papich slowed to a stop at the entrance of turn one. Dillard was determined to drive deep into the corner on the following restart, but he hopped the cushion and caught the wall with his right front, putting an end to his solid run and his night.

With nine laps remaining, Sheppard executed his fourth perfect start of the race and again launched to a large lead over the rest of the field. While Sheppard was cruising to his second victory in as many races, chaos ensued behind him, as Mars and Weiss raced side by side for nearly the entire final nine laps, putting on an epic show for the runner-up spot.

Mars prevailed to finish second, while Weiss claimed the third position, his second consecutive podium finish.

Shirley recovered from an early-race bobble and fought through the final restarts to claim the fourth position on Wednesday, while Chase Junghans benefited from the late-race chaos and finished fifth.

Sheppard’s second $5,000 feature victory of the brief year keeps him eligible for the Keyser Quarter-Million Challenge during the 2020 Wild West Shootout presented by O’Reilly Auto Parts.

Sheppard can become the second driver to ever stake claim to a piece of Keyser’s bonus money, if he can win at least one more feature during the final three events. He can earn as much as $100,000, if he were somehow able to win all three of those remaining races.

The Mesilla Valley Transportation/Border Tire and Arizona Differential Modified main event featured a first-time winner in the desert, with Tanner Mullens leading all 25 laps and collecting the $1,000 prize.

It was another first-time winner in the RHRSwag.com Barnett Harley-Davidson X-Mod division, with Zach Benson leading all 20 laps and earning his first $500 payday of the 2020 Keyser Manufacturing Wild West Shootout.

The finish:

Feature (40 Laps): 1. B5-Brandon Sheppard[2]; 2. 28M-Jimmy Mars[1]; 3. 7-Ricky Weiss[3]; 4. 3S-Brian Shirley[9]; 5. 18-Chase Junghans[23]; 6. 99JR-Frank Heckenast Jr[17]; 7. 32-Bobby Pierce[8]; 8. 0-Rick Eckert[15]; 9. 89-Mike Spatola[10]; 10. 42S-Don Shaw[13]; 11. 20RT-Ricky Thornton Jr[21]; 12. 1ST-Johnny Scott[19]; 13. 2S-Stormy Scott[11]; 14. 32B-Cody Laney[12]; 15. 32S-Chris Simpson[6]; 16. 6T-Terry Carter[24]; 17. 78S-Steve Stultz[22]; 18. 97-Cade Dillard[4]; 19. 91P-Jason Papich[18]; 20. 99-Clay Fisher[16]; 21. 19R-Ryan Gustin[14]; 22. 74-Mitch McGrath[5]; 23. 2-Garrett Alberson[7]; 24. 37-Rob Mayea[20]

The NHL All-Star Game is scheduled for Jan. 25 in St. Louis, where some of the NHL's best and brightest (and available if their schedules permit) players will be showcased.

Being named an All-Star takes great numbers and some level of renown. It's easy for worthy players to be overlooked. So for the Power Rankings this week, we wanted to take a look at some of the NHL's "hidden All-Stars" this season. Some are unsung heroes. Some are names you know that just didn't make the All-Star cut this season.

How we rank: The ESPN hockey editorial staff submits selections ranking teams 1-31, and those results are tabulated to the list featured here. Teams are rated through Tuesday night's games, taking into account overall record, recent success and other factors such as injuries. The previous ranking for each team is its spot in last week's edition.

Note: Standings point pace is as of the games of Jan. 15.

1. St. Louis Blues

Previous ranking: 2
Standings point pace: 116

Robert Thomas. The 20-year-old forward is on track for career highs in goals and assists, and has 25 points in 42 games. He is a plus-14 at even strength, and is among their best forwards in expected goals percentage (52.68). How much more ice time should he be getting than his 13:57 per-game average?

2. Washington Capitals

Previous ranking: 1
Standings point pace: 117

Jakub Vrana. The fourth-leading points scorer on the Capitals? Not Nicklas Backstrom. Not T.J. Oshie. No, it's Vrana, with 20 goals (second on the team to Alex Ovechkin) and 18 assists, along with four game-winning goals.

3. Boston Bruins

Previous ranking: 3
Standings point pace: 113

Jake DeBrusk. Overshadowed by the offensive fireworks from the Bruins' "Perfection Line," Debrusk continues yeoman's work on the team's second line with 14 goals and 13 assists in 43 games. In the Bruins' 27 wins, Debrusk has 21 points.

4. Pittsburgh Penguins

Previous ranking: 5
Standings point pace: 112

Bryan Rust. The Penguins forward was among their considerable amount of injured players at one point this season, but when healthy, he has been an unsung part of the solution with 19 goals and 21 assists in 32 games -- surpassing career highs in both categories already this season.

5. Tampa Bay Lightning

Previous ranking: 6
Standings point pace: 107

Anthony Cirelli. The 22-year-old is building a case for being one of the best two-way centers in the NHL, and has responded to an increased role (almost four minutes more per game on average) with a points pace that would give him a career high. He has been called the "engine" of the Lightning, and for good reason.

6. New York Islanders

Previous ranking: 4
Standings point pace: 109

Anthony Beauvillier. His courtship of Anna Kendrick aside, the Islanders winger has 11 goals and 13 assists in 45 games, and is third among forwards in goals scored above average while playing a career high 17:37 per game.

7. Dallas Stars

Previous ranking: 9
Standings point pace: 103

Roope Hintz. The 23-year-old forward is leading the Stars in goals, with 15 in 39 games, and has 24 points total. He's second on the team in goals scored above average (6.9). He's also shooting 20.6%, which in theory probably isn't sustainable. But things are going pretty good now.

8. Colorado Avalanche

Previous ranking: 7
Standings point pace: 100

Ian Cole. Let's give a shout-out to one of the old guys -- comparatively; he's 30, not 70 -- on the squad. Cole is a plus-22 and has 20 points in 41 games, clearly putting him on track for a career high in goals and assists. The majority of his minutes have come without the benefit of playing with Cale Makar, too.

9. Carolina Hurricanes

Previous ranking: 12
Standings point pace: 100

Jaccob Slavin. Just put this one on a loop every season. One of the best defensive defensemen in the game, with a plus-14 at even strength and the foundation for the season his partner Dougie Hamilton is having.

10. Arizona Coyotes

Previous ranking: 11
Standings point pace: 95

Christian Dvorak. Finally healthy, having played all 49 games, the center is having his most complete season, with 11 goals, 17 assists and winning 56.6% of his faceoffs. He earned the chance to play with Taylor Hall.

11. Toronto Maple Leafs

Previous ranking: 10
Standings point pace: 98

Justin Holl. The 27-year-old former Marlie has been a big surprise for the Leafs in his first full season, averaging 16:37 of ice time in 45 contests, while getting saddled with challenging defensive assignments. After getting out from under Mike Babcock's disfavor, Holl earned a three-year contract extension in December.

12. Vancouver Canucks

Previous ranking: 13
Standings point pace: 94

J.T. Miller. The Canucks are sending Elias Pettersson and Quinn Hughes to the All-Star Game, for obvious reasons. But Miller's incredible 44 points in 47 games this season represents the best pace of his career.

13. Vegas Golden Knights

Previous ranking: 8
Standings point pace: 90

Shea Theodore. The focus is usually on the Golden Knights' offensive weapons and their goaltender, but Theodore has been a rock on their blue line. He leads Vegas in average ice time (21:47) and in puck possession (58.06 Corsi for percentage), and leads their defensemen in expected goal differential (58.35).

14. Calgary Flames

Previous ranking: 17
Standings point pace: 94

T.J. Brodie. While his offensive numbers have dipped -- as they have for most of the Flames this season, most notably for partner Mark Giordano -- the veteran defenseman is having a fine campaign, with 14 points in 42 games and the best goals-for percentage (56.0) among Calgary defensemen.

15. Edmonton Oilers

Previous ranking: 16
Standings point pace: 94

Ethan Bear. The wonderfully named rookie defenseman is playing 21:14 per game on average, and has a Corsi for percentage that's 4.6% better than that of his teammates on a team that's fifth worst in the NHL in puck possession.

16. Philadelphia Flyers

Previous ranking: 15
Standings point pace: 98

Philippe Myers. Technically a rookie this season after playing 21 games in 2018-19, the defenseman has produced three goals and 11 assists in 28 games. He's second on the Flyers in goals above average per 60 minutes (9.4). Not a flawless season -- a few too many penalties, some rookie mistakes -- but a pleasant surprise on the Flyers' blue line.

17. Florida Panthers

Previous ranking: 18
Standings point pace: 97

Noel Acciari. At this point, his stat line reads like a glitch on "play until a day" mode in an EA Sports hockey game: 17 goals, three assists. But the former Bruin just keeps scoring, including for goals in six games in January.

18. Winnipeg Jets

Previous ranking: 14
Standings point pace: 94

Anthony Bitetto. The Jets defenseman, signed for $700,000 last summer, is first among the Jets' thin blue line in expected goals percentage, despite having only four assists and no goals on the season. He plays hard, throws the body and is skating a career-high 15:15 per game. Best of all, he's living in Winnipeg and sounds every bit like a guy who grew up in Island Park, New York, who probably refers to himself as "Ant-ny."

19. Columbus Blue Jackets

Previous ranking: 19
Standings point pace: 94

Zach Werenski. Seth Jones is the All-Star, but Werenski is on the verge of setting a career high in goals (he has 15 in 40 games) with the best points-per-game average (0.70) of his career, while skating a career-high 23:27 per contest.

20. Nashville Predators

Previous ranking: 20
Standings point pace: 89

Filip Forsberg. Roman Josi got the All-Star call for the Predators, but Forsberg's 32 points in 39 games ranks first among Nashville forwards, and his 16 goals leads the team -- better numbers than his high-profile teammate, Matt Duchene.

21. New York Rangers

Previous ranking: 21
Standings point pace: 87

Adam Fox. In a class of outstanding rookie defenseman, Fox might get a bit overlooked. But the 21-year-old has six goals and 20 assists in 45 games, skating 17:56 per game. He's second on the team to Artemi Panarin in goals scored above average (10.2).

22. Montreal Canadiens

Previous ranking: 25
Standings point pace: 80

Phillip Danault. Last season, the center finally got some Selke Trophy love, finishing seventh for the award. This season, he's continuing to score at a consistent clip (31 points in 47 games) with more ice time (18:58 per game). He's fourth on the team in goals scored above average (7.5).

23. Buffalo Sabres

Previous ranking: 23
Standings point pace: 85

Sam Reinhart. Can we just say Jack Eichel? Oh, he's an actual All-Star and hence disqualified? OK, let's go with linemate Reinhart, who has 16 goals and 23 assists in 47 games, and is on pace for a career high in points. Good timing: He's a restricted free agent this summer.

24. Minnesota Wild

Previous ranking: 22
Standings point pace: 82

Carson Soucy. Yet another rookie defenseman having a solid season in the NHL. Soucy has 10 points in 43 games skating 15:34 per contest, and is a plus-13 at 5-on-5.

25. Chicago Blackhawks

Previous ranking: 24
Standings point pace: 85

Dominik Kubalík. The rookie sensation has 18 goals for the Blackhawks this season, second on the team to Patrick Kane. Not bad for the 191st overall pick in the 2013 draft.

26. San Jose Sharks

Previous ranking: 26
Standings point pace: 79

Aaron Dell. Has he been great? No. He's 8-8-2, with a .909 save percentage and a 2.84 goals-against average. Is he better than the alternative? Well, yes, considering he's on the positive side of goals above average and Martin Jones is a minus-15.51.

27. New Jersey Devils

Previous ranking: 29
Standings point pace: 73

Blake Coleman. The Devils winger has been an outstanding penalty killer during his four-season career, but 16 of his 18 goals during this campaign have come at even strength. A speedy beam of light in a gloomy season in Newark.

28. Los Angeles Kings

Previous ranking: 27
Standings point pace: 70

Jack Campbell. The goalie is 7-8-2 this season in 17 starts, posting slightly better numbers than incumbent starter Jonathan Quick in a lost season for the Kings.

29. Ottawa Senators

Previous ranking: 30
Standings point pace: 71

Jean-Gabriel Pageau. Anthony Duclair's 21 goals landed him in the All-Star Game, and for good reason. But Pageau, also in a contract year, has been outstanding, with 21 goals and 11 assists in 45 games.

30. Anaheim Ducks

Previous ranking: 28
Standings point pace: 70

Rickard Rakell. The Ducks forward might not get back to the heights of his previous goal and point totals, but Rakell is second on the team in goals scored above average (5.7) to All-Star selection Jakob Silfverberg.

31. Detroit Red Wings

Previous ranking: 31
Standings point pace: 47

Anthony Mantha. He had 24 points in 29 games before a rib injury sidelined him. But yes, that's the state of the Red Wings: A guy who hasn't played since Dec. 21 is still the only one worthy of hidden All-Star status.

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