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

Braves unveil Truist Park as new stadium name

Published in Baseball
Tuesday, 14 January 2020 09:05

ATLANTA -- Truist Park is the new name of the Atlanta Braves' stadium.

The change from SunTrust Park, the stadium's name for its first three years, follows SunTrust Bank's merger with BB&T to form Truist Financial Corp.

The stadium in Cobb County, north of downtown Atlanta, opened in 2017.

The new name was unveiled on Tuesday. Most new purple signs at the stadium are expected to be in place in time for the Braves' home opener against the Miami Marlins on April 3. The SunTrust Park signs already have been removed.

Braves president Derek Schiller said he expects the new branding to endure for the "next 20-plus years."

Yankees overhaul training staff after injury record

Published in Baseball
Tuesday, 14 January 2020 09:44

NEW YORK -- Eric Cressey has been hired by the Yankees as director of player health and performance, a move made after New York had a record 30 players make 39 trips to the injured list last year.

New York set a big league record for sidelined players. The 2016 Los Angeles Dodgers had 28 players on what was then called the disabled list.

The 38-year-old Cressey founded Cressey Sports Performance in 2007 and will continue as president of the company, which specializes in kinesiology and biomechanics and maintains facilities in Hudson, Massachusetts, and Palm Beach Gardens, Florida. New Yankees pitching coach Matt Blake was a pitching coordinator for the company.

Steve Donahue was promoted to the newly created role of director of medical services on Tuesday. The 63-year-old, starting his 42nd year with the team, had been head athletic trainer for eight seasons after working from 1986-2011 as assistant athletic trainer to Gene Monahan.

Tim Lentych, entering his 17th season with the Yankees, was promoted to head athletic trainer. The 41-year-old spent four seasons as assistant athletic trainer.

Michael Schuk, 37, was promoted to director of sports medicine and rehabilitation following six seasons as the team's physical therapist and assistant athletic trainer.

Donovan Santas was hired as assistant director of player health and performance and Brett McCabe as major league strength and conditioning coach. The 42-year-old Santas had spent the past 17 seasons with Toronto, the last as head of strength and conditioning. McCabe was strength and conditioning coach for San Diego from 2013-18.

The grumbling around the game was thick after MLB commissioner Rob Manfred rendered discipline in the Houston Astros' sign-stealing case Monday, because while two individuals got hammered, the institution that stood to glean enormous benefit from the systemic illicit behavior was mostly left untouched, the players who participated left unscathed.

The Astros are still 2017 World Series champions, a title won with cheating. They still possess the financial benefit from their on-field success -- the additional revenue pulled in during and after October runs, with the dollar magnets attached to ratings, sponsorships, memorabilia, swag and the consumer enthusiasm that spilled over into the following seasons.

The $5 million fine of the franchise, the most allowed under the rules, is inconsequential -- and, as one staffer noted, more than offset by the salaries of manager AJ Hinch and GM Jeff Luhnow that won't be paid. The loss of two draft picks in each of the next two years is mitigated by Houston's stature in the standings: The Astros will pick near the back of each round. There is sentiment in the sport that the commissioner should've taken at least one more step to affect the Astros' ability to compete and stripped Houston's spending power in the upcoming international signing market. Even after the loss of Hinch, the Astros will move ahead as favorites to win the AL West again.

In the minds of a lot of peers around the sport, that's not enough to offset the damage they caused with their cheating. Here's a partial list of the scarring, and those scarred.

1. The credibility of recent baseball history. As players from the '90s know, a lot of the accomplishments from that time are met with eye rolls from many fans, because no one has defined -- nor will ever define -- how the saturation of performance-enhancing drugs impacted the game. All records from that time are lumped together in conversation, as if the whole sport was dirty. The integrity of that era is forever compromised.

The Astros' cheating will have the same effect on moments in recent years: The Houston championship of '17, with the comeback against the Yankees and the thrilling seven-game series against the Dodgers, will never be discussed without the qualification that the team was cheating and that the players had an illicit advantage. The other day, when we posted a ranking of the top 10 second basemen in baseball and Jose Altuve was ranked second, the social media responses were immediate, just as they were for Mark McGwire, Barry Bonds and others: But he's a cheater.

2. Individual opponents. Aaron Judge finished second to Altuve in the 2017 MVP balloting, and we'll never know how the cheating affected that. Judge cannot recoup that opportunity, or the financial benefit he might've gotten from winning an MVP in his rookie season. Clayton Kershaw gave up a big lead in Game 5 of the 2017 World Series in Houston -- if the Dodgers had won that day, if they had won the World Series, Kershaw's postseason record and legacy would be completely different. How about all of the pitchers Houston pounded that summer with aid from the sign stealing -- what did each of those players lose, in evaluation, in opportunity? We'll never know.

How about Dave Roberts, the Dodgers' manager? The criticism of his postseason decisions is piled against him largely because the team hasn't won a World Series despite repeated attempts, and it turns out the deck was stacked against him.

What about Joe Girardi? The Yankees moved on from him for reasons other than the Yankees' loss in the 2017 AL Championship Series, but if New York had beaten the Astros and won the World Series, would owner Hal Steinbrenner have been moved to keep a manager who had just clinched a title? It's possible.

What about other unknown jobs and opportunities lost because of the perception that the Astros were the standard everyone else had to try to meet?

3. Mike Fiers. Other players have privately complained about his decision to speak to The Athletic about the Astros' sign stealing and his criticism of the cheating. Maybe those unhappy teammates should consider the issue from his perspective. Their decision to break established rules put him and other players who wanted nothing to do with the sign stealing in a terrible position of either going along with the cheating, effectively condoning it -- which is why Hinch was suspended -- or speaking out against it. For the rest of Fiers' career, he'll have to deal with the whispers from some peers angrily complaining about him, when what they should do is reach out to apologize to him for how they compromised his experience.

You could say the same for the other players on the '17 Astros who might not have shared in the sign stealing. Even if he had no involvement, Justin Verlander's one championship in a Hall of Fame career will be forever tarnished.

4. The fans. Forget for a moment the whole issue of squandered cost, of dollars and time spent. How about how the sign-stealing scandal rattles and wrecks the perception of fans, young or old, about what they saw and what they experienced?

Maybe this was inevitable with the Astros, who had worked right to the edge of competitive propriety since Luhnow took over as general manager. Plenty of teams had tanked before, but no club tanked quite like Houston did in Luhnow's first years, stripping the payroll to the bone, not even pretending to care about presenting a major league product. Houston finished the 2013 season with just one player making as much as $1 million, and the Astros became the first team since the 1962-65 Mets to lose at least 106 games in three consecutive seasons. This is how the Astros got Carlos Correa, Alex Bregman and others.

In the midst of the sign-stealing paranoia of 2018 -- largely caused by the Astros -- no team placed club employees right next to the opposing dugout, in violation of MLB rules, except for the Astros. Which Luhnow acknowledged, brazenly suggesting his team was playing defense rather than offense.

When the Blue Jays worked to trade closer Roberto Osuna after his suspension under the domestic violence policy, all teams passed other than the Astros. Other teams were appalled by Osuna's case. Not the Astros. What did former Houston assistant GM Brandon Taubman pointedly yell during the champagne celebration? "Thank God we got Osuna!"

Even in the hypercompetitive world that is professional sports, the Astros were willing to be different, sometimes at the direct expense of professional colleagues inside and outside their sphere. As a result ...

5. The Astros and their future. They will be unintended victims of their own crime, unanticipated collateral damage. Because every movement across a visiting ballpark will feel a little like a perp walk, with fans justifiably yelling harsh truth at them. After they won the 2017 World Series, the conversation about the athletic, dynamic Astros was about whether they should be ranked among the greatest teams ever. Now they are on the short list of baseball infamy.

Hannah England announces her retirement

Published in Athletics
Tuesday, 14 January 2020 09:19

The 2011 world 1500m silver medallist has decided to hang up her spikes

Hannah England has announced her retirement from competitive athletics.

The 32-year-old won 1500m silver at the 2011 IAAF World Championships in Daegu and ran for Great Britain at the London 2012 Olympic Games, where she reached the semi-finals.

“The 2019 track season was my last as a competitive athlete, I am so proud of my achievements on the track and even prouder that they were done with integrity and joy,” England said in a post on Instagram.

“It was a privilege to be surrounded by so many talented and wonderfully supportive training partners, coaches and practitioners who bought the best out of me as an athlete and a person.

“There’s no way I can possibly convey the happiness running has given me and want to say a huge thank you to everyone who shared this wonderful journey with me, you are all total rock stars.”

England’s track career also included two Commonwealth Games and two outdoor European Championships, as well as the 2013 World Championships in Moscow where she finished fourth. She won double NCAA gold in 2008 while running for Florida State.

The Oxford City athlete, coached by Bud Baldaro, has a 1500m PB of 4:01.89 which was set in 2011, while her 800m best of 1:59.66 was run the following year.

Alongside her competitive athletics career, England has been a member of the European Athletics Athlete Committee, served as chair of the UK Athletics Athletes’ Commission and represented athletes on the UK Members Council.

She also helped to form the Birmingham Athletics Academy, which offers weekly athletics sessions for children in Edgbaston, and has done commentary for the BBC and European Athletics.

The Indian Olympic Association (IOA) Senior Vice President, Mr Anil Khanna, together with the Advisor of the Table Tennis Federation of India (TTFI), Mr Dhanraj Choudhary, welcomed the ITTF Executive Committee members to Delhi in order to discuss the progress of table tennis in India and worldwide.

– Thomas Weikert, ITTF President

The Executive Committee reflected on a highly successful 2019, which saw table tennis continue to grow to new heights, and discussed the strategy for the continued growth of the sport, making the following key decisions:

  1. Implement Table Tennis Review (TTR) technology at major ITTF events and the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games.

This follows the successful introduction of TTR at the 2019 ITTF World Tour Grand Finals, in which players left positive feedback about the opportunity to use technology to review the original decisions of umpires.

Therefore, the ITTF Executive Committee has agreed to implement TTR at major ITTF events in 2020 and the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games, while constantly working to deliver the best possible product, such as reducing the time spent between the player’s call to review and the final decision.

– Steve Dainton, ITTF CEO

  1. Enable multiple host cities at future World Team Table Tennis Championships events.

The ITTF is in discussions with the Chinese Table Tennis Association (CTTA) about staging the 2022 ITTF World Team Table Tennis Championships Finals – the first under the new format – across multiple cities in China.

This will enable greater TV coverage of more matches during the competition, as well as increased fan engagement over multiple host cities across the country, as has been witnessed in other major sports events, such as the FIFA and FIBA World Cups.

– Steve Dainton, ITTF CEO

  1. To put forward to the AGM to hold an extraordinary general meeting towards the end of 2020 in order to vote on the future ‘Home of Table Tennis’ and Good Governance review.

The extraordinary general meeting would allow for national associations to vote on matters, which require their input as per the ITTF Constitution, at the most appropriate time, avoiding inevitable delays by waiting until the AGM of the following year.

For the ‘Home of Table Tennis’ the ITTF is seeking interest from cities around the world to become the future Headquarters in order to centralise the ITTF’s workforce and drive the growth of table tennis.

Meanwhile, the Good Governance review is aimed at aligning the ITTF Constitution with the modern standards upheld by other well-established international federations.

  1. World Table Tennis (WTT) update

The Executive Committee was updated on the significant progress made regarding World Table Tennis – the entity that will run the ITTF’s commercial business in the future.

The WTT event structure, branding and vision for the sport are close to being finalised and due to be released before the 2020 ITTF World Team Table Tennis Championships in March.

  1. To circulate to the member associations a call for candidates for the Sustainability Working Group.

Following the establishment of the Sustainability Working Group and the appointment of Mrs Petra Sörling as Chair at the last Executive Committee meeting, the ITTF intends to make a call for applications for membership through the national associations, in order to identify suitable profiles.

  1. ITTF Professional Staff Drive

To continue the professionalism of all ITTF activities, the ITTF will be opening several new staff positions, including integrity and administration.

The next ITTF Executive Committee meeting will be held on 21st March in Busan (KOR), during the 2020 ITTF World Team Table Tennis Championships.

Please follow and like us:

18 Events Set For RUSH Late Model Touring Series

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 14 January 2020 06:01

PULASKI, Pa. – The Sweeney Chevrolet Buick GMC RUSH Dirt Late Model Touring Series powered by Pace Performance has set its schedule of events for this season.

The point fund for the series will nearly double this year, with the series champion earning $12,000. The season will begin on April 15-18 during Battle of the Bay Mid-Atlantic Speedweek.

Highlighting the 18-event schedule is the $10,000-to-win Bill Emig Memorial, which returns to Lernerville Speedway alongside the Firecracker 100. Also featured in the schedule include the Jook George Steel City Classic and Bill Hendren Memorial events at Pittsburgh’s PA Motor Speedway. Six other weekends have two or more complete shows minimizing travel for competitors.

“After coming off our richest touring slate which resulted in our highest average car count in history we’re looking forward to keeping the forward momentum going in 2020,” acknowledged Emig. “Last year, the schedule of events went to a different level and that translated into an average of more than 38 cars for our events, often exceeding 40 plus cars and over 50 on three different occasions. With that said, we felt it was time to substantially increase our point fund and look forward to our 2020 champion earning a record $12,000 with all other points paying positions increasing greatly. Our slate of substantial paying tour events combined with our richest ever tour point fund is definitely going to create an awesome situation for both RUSH fans and Crate Late Model racers throughout the region.”

Speedweek and the season get underway on April 15 at Delaware Int’l Speedway in Delmar, Del., followed by events at Georgetown (Del.) Speedway on April 16, Potomac Speedway in Mechanicsville, Md., on April 17 and Winchester (Va.) Speedway on April 18.

The series will also visit additional tracks in New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio throughout the course of the season, with the season wrapping up at Pittsburgh’s PA Motor Speedway on Oct. 2-3.

2020 Sweeney Chevrolet Buick GMC RUSH Dirt Late Model Touring Series Schedule

April 15 – Delaware Int’l Speedway – Delmar, Del.
April 16 – Georgetown Speedway – Georgetown, Del.
April 17 – Potomac Speedway – Mechanicsville, Md.
April 18 – Winchester Speedway – Winchester, Va.
May 16 – Stateline Speedway – Busti, N.Y.
May 17 – Eriez Speedway – Erie, Pa.
May 29 – Outlaw Speedway – Dundee, N.Y.
May 30 – Genesee Speedway – Batavia, N.Y.
June 25-27 – Lernerville Speedway – Sarver, Pa.
July 4 – Pittsburgh’s PA Motor Speedway – Imperial, Pa.
July 18 – Sharon Speedway – Hartford, Ohio
July 19 – Eriez Speedway – Erie, Pa.
Aug. 8 – August 8 Pittsburgh’s PA Motor Speedway – Imperial, Pa.
Sept. 11 – TBA – TBA
Sept. 12 – Weedsport Speedway – Weedsport, N.Y.
Sept. 25-26 – Genesee Speedway – Batavia, N.Y.
Oct. 2-3 – Pittsburgh’s PA Motor Speedway – Imperial, Pa.

Capitals re-sign Backstrom to 5-year, $46M deal

Published in Hockey
Tuesday, 14 January 2020 05:32

The Washington Capitals have set up the scenario for Nicklas Backstrom to spend his entire career with the franchise, giving him a new five-year, $46 million deal.

The center was in the final year of 10-year, $67 million contract. He had been negotiating a new deal without an agent, saying that he has a "good enough relationship with the organization where we can be honest and talk."

Backstrom, 32, now has the second-highest AAV on the team behind Alex Ovechkin. Ovechkin's contract expires after this season.

He is only one of two Capital players to have 900 points (908), along with Ovechkin (1255).

Backstrom has been a model of consistency since starting with Washington as a 20-year-old in 2007-08. He is the Capitals' all-time assist leader with 668, recording more than 50 assists in six straight seasons.

With Ovechkin, he suffered through crushing playoff disappointments before the Capitals broke through to win the Stanley Cup in 2017-18. Backstrom had 23 points in 20 playoff games during that Stanley Cup run.

This season, Backstrom has nine goals and 26 assists. He has 240 goals in his career.

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates – The European Tour stepped up its attack on slow play by announcing that players will be given an immediate one-stroke penalty if they exceed time limits for taking shots on two occasions in the same tournament.

The initial plan was to apply the penalty for two so-called ''bad times'' within the same round, but that has been changed as tour officials get tougher on what they believe is the biggest problem in the game.

There also will be increased fines for players who are regularly timed by officials.

The changes were announced on Tuesday, two days before the start of the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship, one of the main tournaments on the European Tour schedule.

''Changing the regulation for an immediate one-shot penalty to now be triggered by two bad times in a tournament instead of a round will force slower players to consistently ensure they play within timing regulations,'' said John Paramor, the European Tour chief referee.

''This is part of our wider, robust policy to tackle slow play but our fundamental advice to all players remains consistent – they should be ready to play when it is their turn.''

The European Tour's four-point plan to crack down on slow play was announced in August, following a mandate from its tournament committee to take firmer action against slower players.

A new timing system was tested at the BMW PGA Championship in September, with a further trial taking place in Abu Dhabi. The aim is to use the system in several events this year, providing referees with the precise times for every group through every hole to make sure that no gaps are missed.

On-tee displays will also provide the players with information on their position in relation to the group in front.

Koepka ready to return after 'excruciating' knee injury

Published in Golf
Tuesday, 14 January 2020 00:53

After nearly three months on the sidelines, world No. 1 Brooks Koepka is ready to get back to work.

Koepka headlines the field this week at the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship, where he'll again attempt to return from a left knee injury that has plagued him since March. After undergoing stem cell treatment following the Tour Championship, Koepka returned in October only to re-injure his patella tendon while slipping on concrete at the CJ Cup in South Korea.

"In Korea I re-tore it, and the kneecap had moved into the fat pad," Koepka told reporters Tuesday in Abu Dhabi. "That's excruciating. It's a lot of pain. It's not fun."

The subsequent recovery kept him out of the Presidents Cup, as Koepka didn't start hitting balls again until just before Christmas. While he told reporters that his injured left knee likely won't feel the same as his right one "for a while," he's pleased with the progress he's been able to make.

"It does feel stable, which leaving Korea and all the way up to about a month and a half ago, it felt like it could go either way," Koepka said. "It could go left, out, back, it could go any way. Even when I got the green light, I just didn't know whether it was going to feel right, whether you're going to be the same, how is it going to feel."

Koepka will make two starts this month in the Middle East, as he's also playing in the Jan. 30-Feb. 2 Saudi International. He'll make his first start in the U.S. at the Genesis Invitational.

With Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm and Justin Thomas all picking up wins since his last competitive start, Koepka, who also missed significant time in 2018 (including the Masters) with a wrist injury, is eager to return to action this week with an eye on a healthier 2020.

"When you have something taken away from you, I think it makes you appreciate it more," he said. "I mean, I missed competition. I missed showing up to an event, preparing for something, because I haven't had anything to prepare for. Having three months off, it's not fun."

Why RB Leipzig is the most hated team in the Bundesliga

Published in Soccer
Wednesday, 08 January 2020 12:06

LEIPZIG, Germany -- RB Leipzig were almost done dispensing with TSG Hoffenheim one chilly evening in December when a few of its better-dressed supporters retreated to the VIP Lounge atop Red Bull Arena. Drinks in hand, they gathered around a video monitor to watch the waning moments of a different game.

Everyone knew what was at stake. If Bayern Munich could hold off Borussia Monchengladbach, upstart Leipzig would move atop the Bundesliga. More than half the season still remained, so it didn't mean too much -- and yet, it meant everything. Built from the ground up by Red Bull, the Austrian beverage company, Leipzig has become the most reviled club in Germany. If it isn't your favorite club, Leipzig is probably your least favorite. And if you are a Leipzig fan, the rest of the Bundesliga would tell you that you're one of a select few.

Deep into stoppage time, Bayern conceded a penalty. As Monchengladbach's Ramy Bensebaini calmly put the ball into the net, the crowd in the VIP lounge let out a groan. Now they'd need at least another week to stake their claim as the Bundesliga's best, and that was a shame. Hadn't they already been waiting to be German champions for ... nearly a decade?


RB Leipzig is Europe's equivalent of an American expansion team. Before 2009, it simply didn't exist. Then Red Bull -- already the owner of soccer clubs in Salzburg and New York as well as Formula 1 racing teams and other sports entities -- took control of SSV Markranstadt, which had been puttering along in the German fifth division. It changed the team's name and Red Bull'd its colors and logo. It bought a 10-year lease on the city's 43,000-seat stadium, broke ground on a palatial training facility and began its journey to the top of German football.

In just seven seasons, RB Leipzig reached the Bundesliga. By the eighth, 2018-19, it was competing in the Champions League. Fielding Germany's youngest squad, it deploys a high-octane style; this season, no team in the league has scored as many goals. As the Bundesliga resumes this week after its holiday break, Leipzig is well-positioned to depose mighty Bayern, which has won seven titles in succession but currently sits four points behind them in the table. That's big news for a competition that has crowned just two different champions -- Bayern and Borussia Dortmund -- in the past decade and only four this century.

You would assume the emergence of a new contender would be celebrated. It isn't.

"We would prefer our worst enemies," says Philipp Reschke, Eintracht Frankfurt's chief operating officer. "We would always not vote for the plastic. We would vote for a traditional club like Bayern. We would vote for the heart."

To understand that, it is necessary to realize that German football has barely changed since the 1960s. Sure, the stadiums are bigger and the shirts have advertising, but the game is still perceived as a sacred trust between a club and its fans. "Football is a glue in our society," says Carsten Cramer, Borussia Dortmund's chief executive. "It has a social responsibility."

To ensure that soulless corporations or free-spending oligarchs don't buy up clubs, as they're allowed -- indeed, welcome -- to do in most other nations, the Deutscher Fussball-Bund (DFB) bylaws require that individual members own a majority of voting shares, a "50-plus-one" rule unique to Germany. Exceptions, such as Volkswagen's ownership of Wolfsburg and pharmaceutical giant Bayer's of Bayer 04 Leverkusen, are allowed only when a company or individual has bankrolled a club for at least two decades. That obviously isn't the case with Red Bull and RB Leipzig, but in a shrewd move, and an entirely legal one, the company managed to meet the "50-plus-one" requirement by issuing a small number of shares, buying 49% of them itself, then pricing the rest prohibitively and choosing who could invest.

There also is a restriction against clubs adopting commercial logos, but a few tweaks to the taurine combatants on the drink cans proved enough to circumvent it. As for the rule forbidding teams to name themselves after corporations, Red Bull had an answer for that too. It turns out that the RB in RB Leipzig doesn't actually stand for Red Bull. Officially, at least, it is the near-nonsense word RasenBallsport, which literally means "sports played with a ball on a lawn." Almost everyone calls them Red Bull anyway. Such sleight of hand, coupled with the club's vertiginous rise, has led the rest of German football to treat Leipzig's success as an existential crisis.

"Is the purpose of football to serve the people who love football or to serve something else?" asks Axel Hellmann, who serves on Eintracht Frankfurt's board. When Leipzig plays in Frankfurt, Eintracht refuses to show its logo on the video board or anywhere else in its arena. "I'm not here to make an advertisement for Red Bull," Hellman says.

It isn't just Eintracht and Dortmund, two of Germany's most traditional clubs. The first time Leipzig traveled to Union Berlin, the page in the game program usually devoted to the history of the visiting club was replaced with a primer on bull breeding instead. Fortuna Dusseldorf has updated its bylaws to forbid the club from scheduling friendlies with Leipzig or offering recognition in any way "beyond what is required by the rules of the sport."

Fan groups around the Bundesliga routinely boycott trips to Red Bull Arena, and nearly all of them display banners with biting slogans. "Sometimes I feel that there's a competition between the fans of other clubs to do the strongest action against Red Bull," says Frank Aehlig, a former Bundesliga manager and executive at RB Leipzig, who now works at FC Koln. (The president of another rival, FC Augsburg, even formed his own group of investors in an attempt to wrest control of Leipzig, but failed.)

"We call Leipzig's supporters 'customers,' because that's what they are," says Sue Rudolph. A fan activist for Fortuna Dusseldorf, a team struggling to avoid relegation, Rudolph resents Leipzig's presence in the Bundesliga table, let alone at the top of it. "It just feels so unfair," she says. "What they've done is not a fairy tale. It's just money."

But then Leipzig scores a fairy-tale goal like the first one against Hoffenheim, a counterattack that seems to take only as fast as the head can swivel. It ends with Patrick Schick sliding the ball to Timo Werner at precisely the moment that the retreating fullback is forced to commit, with Werner punching the ball home with a thunderclap. "High-pressure soccer" is how the American midfielder Tyler Adams, who was transferred from MLS's New York Red Bulls to Leipzig last summer, describes it. "After winning the ball back," he says, "we want only a certain number of seconds to get to the goal and create as many chances as possible. That's how we play."

Adams, 20, is part of the second generation of emerging RB Leipzig standouts. It has come directly on the heels of the first generation, which includes Werner, who is just three years older. "We're all just a bunch of young guys running around on the pitch," Adams says. "We want to play a brand of soccer with the same kind of energy that Red Bull is known for."

Whether he was referring to the company's approach to football across its various teams or to the caffeinated drink was unclear.


Apart from fragmented Berlin, Leipzig was the largest city in the former East Germany and a significant center of sports. Much of the research into high-performance training (including, but not limited to, illegal doping in the Olympics) was performed at Leipzig's Deutsche Hochschule fur Korperkultur.

Once upon a time, Leipzig was a football town too. In the 1950s, crowds of more than 100,000 gathered for games in the old Zentralstadion, the shell of which now surrounds Red Bull Arena. As late as 1988, the year before the Berlin Wall came down, a Lokomotive Leipzig UEFA Cup game against Napoli and Diego Maradona drew 90,000 fans. After unification, football throughout the former East fell into disrepair. Occasionally teams would emerge in the Bundesliga for a season or two, but none was competitive. Before RB Leipzig took over first place for the 11th week of the 2016-17 season, its first in the Bundesliga, the last eastern team atop the leaderboard had been Hansa Rostock, early in the 1991-92 season. Until Leipzig, none of them had qualified for the Champions League, and none has won the Bundesliga.

By the time Red Bull turned its attention to Leipzig in 2009, football in the former East had deteriorated to a few struggling clubs in the nether reaches of the German professional structure. Each drew, at the most, a couple of thousand fans per game. Where had all those other fans gone?

"You could see that in the eastern part of Germany there was space for a professional soccer team," says Oliver Mintzlaff, Red Bull's head of global soccer. Still, success came more slowly than the company had anticipated. Barred from using the Red Bull logo, the club played its first season without any logo at all. Attendance was low. After a quick promotion, it languished three seasons in the fourth division before moving to the third.

By then, Ralf Rangnick had been hired as manager. Previously, Rangnick had engineered two successful Bundesliga promotions, at Hannover 96 and Hoffenheim. Backed by the Red Bull empire, he enjoyed an almost limitless budget. But rather than spend it on established players, he concentrated on gathering young talent, much of it poached from academies at smaller clubs around eastern Germany. Red Bull's war chest also meant that its scouts could operate further afield than those at similarly sized clubs.

Yussuf Poulsen was playing in the Danish second division at 17 when Rangnick arrived in Portugal for a U-19 tournament. "There was a big plan already -- how it was all going to develop," Poulsen recalls. "He told me they would go up to the third league the next season, and I would come into the team and be a big part of it. Then they would go up to the second league the following year. 'We can have one year to get to know the level in the second league,' he said. 'And then we will go to the Bundesliga.'"

The assumption that such an ascent could be scripted was startling. But the more Poulsen listened, the more it made sense. "Look at his résumé," he says of Rangnick. "He hasn't just done it once. This is the third time. He knows how you do it." When Poulsen visited Leipzig's training ground, the plan came into sharp focus. "It looked nothing like any other team in the third division had," he says. "They were Bundesliga-ready."

The young players Rangnick signed, like Poulsen and Werner and midfielders Marcel Sabitzer and Diego Demme, were primed to learn his system. They were also far less expensive than established stars. "If you look at our squad, many are players who came in when we were still in the second or even the third league," Poulsen says. "They came really, really cheap. We have five or six players who combined cost under €10 million."

Now Leipzig is playing in the Champions League round of 16, preparing to face Tottenham Hotspur in February. Yet to this day, it hasn't spent more on a player than the €20 million it gave to Bayer Leverkusen for Kevin Kampl in 2017. "We didn't do what people expected," Mintzlaff says. "'Oh, Red Bull is coming, taking over the Bundesliga, they're going to spend crazy money, they're going to buy the best-best-best.' No. We never, ever bought a star. We bought young players. At the time, every other Bundesliga team could have bought these players. Many of the 2. Bundesliga could have bought them. We did a good job of scouting, with a clear philosophy. And we still stick to that philosophy."

The massive financial commitment to everything from saunas to medical care provided a clear advantage. So did the ability to use Red Bull's other clubs -- in Austria and New York, but also South America (Red Bull Brasil) and Africa (Red Bull Ghana) -- as stepping stones, in similar fashion to City Football Group (which includes England's Manchester City, MLS's NYCFC, and five other clubs from Uruguay to India) and a few individual operators. Just as useful has been an autocratic organizational structure that enables decisions to be made far more expediently than at other German clubs.

"You can say, 'I want to have a video wall on the practice pitch,' and you don't have to ask 20 people," says Julian Nagelsmann, who is in his first year as manager of the club. "And there won't have to be a board meeting with 20 people having a discussion, 'Is it good?' 'Will it bring us an advantage in the future?'" For its rivals, Nagelsmann notes, the process is far more complicated. "They talk a long time," he says, shaking his head. "As a result, development may not be so fast. Here you can improve in a very short time. This is great."

It is also, Mintzlaff is quick to point out, the way football clubs operate in most of the rest of the world. He doesn't try to hide the fact that Leipzig's ambitions extend beyond the Bundesliga to the Champions League, which provides the glory and pays the bills. "This is where teams have to make the next step, to really compete against the Italian league, the Premier League," he says. "Our product is good, but other leagues are making progress. And of course, people want to see the best players. And the best players are expensive."

Any club that isn't willing to compete internationally, he infers, shouldn't try to restrain those who are. "We're not complaining about anyone," he says. "We're not complaining that we don't have as much money as Bayern Munich. We have a little more of the American mentality -- let's work harder, let's get it done, let's do it even better."


Each day, managing director Carsten Cramer arrives at an office that fills a corner of Borussia Dortmund's modern, glass-walled office building. The floor is hardwood. There is handsome, white furniture and a mounted video monitor. He could be running an ad agency.

Indeed, Cramer's background is in marketing, and it probably isn't a coincidence that Dortmund has profited handsomely during his tenure, using the presence of American standout Christian Pulisic to extend its reach across the Atlantic and emerge as Germany's most visible club after Bayern Munich. (Its €600m annual income more than doubles that of Leipzig.) Nevertheless, Cramer sees his role as less commercial than evangelical. "We think football belongs to the people," he says. He raises a finger. "It's a different approach."

The connections between German communities and their people have frayed, Cramer believes. Religion has been lost from daily life; so has much of public discourse. Football is all that's left, and overt commercialism poses a mortal threat. "What will happen to the clubs that are connected to Qatari investors after the World Cup in 2022?" he asks. "Is this a way that guarantees stability? Clubs have to be scared year by year that the sheikh or the investor or the owner doesn't pull the money out." He mentions Leicester City, where Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha invested tens of millions of pounds into the club, then died in a helicopter accident last autumn. "You had to pray that the family would continue to be interested," he said.

Cramer attends games around the world, but he is inevitably disappointed. England has fine stadiums, he admits, "but the atmosphere even at Anfield is not the same as the atmosphere in German stadiums." Perhaps his biggest letdown was Barcelona's Nou Camp, which he describes as "a stadium full of people who were not interested in football, but interested in a celebrity from Argentina." Far too many clubs, he believes, exist as investment vehicles for their owners or to serve a political or social agenda. "I could never work for a club like Paris," he says, alluding to PSG's position as a wholly owned subsidiary of the Qatari government.

No club in the Bundesliga disdains RB Leipzig's success more than Dortmund. Part of that might have to do with the emergence of a new rival not just for Bundesliga success, but for Champions League places and international appeal. But the culture clash runs far deeper than that. Dortmund, Germany's Pittsburgh, lost its way after World War II. Its coal and steel industries declined. So did its breweries. Its population fell. Only its football team continued to thrive.

These days, Borussia Dortmund acts as a lighthouse for the people of the Ruhr Valley. "And this lighthouse," Cramer says, "must be protected." He could rip out half the standing places in Signal Iduna Park's famous Yellow Wall of supporters and put in expensive seats. That would increase team profits, but at what cost to the social fabric? It is telling, he says, that no equivalent to the Yellow Wall exists at Red Bull Arena. "Where do the hardcore fans of Leipzig stand? Is it the west? The north? The south? The east? No one knows."

Nearly every game that Leipzig plays these days is a derby of sorts, one based on philosophies rather than geography, but none has overtones more bitter than the games at Dortmund. In February 2017, Leipzig's first visit to Signal Iduna Park, a mass of Dortmund supporters tried to block the visitors' bus in hopes that the game would have to be abandoned. To avoid them, police had directed the driver to an alternate route leading to the far side of the stadium. "I had been to Dortmund many times before with different clubs. I came with the team bus, and I kept saying, 'Where are we going?' We were taking a way to the stadium that I had never seen.

When they discovered that the bus had eluded them, the Dortmund supporters started throwing bottles and cans at any red shirt they could find. The official statement released by the Dortmund police said that "the violence was ... directed against any recognizable Leipzig supporter, regardless of whether they were children, women or families." Six were injured, and 28 Dortmund supporters were arrested. Inside the stadium was safer, but no less intense. "The atmosphere was heated up," says Liverpool's Naby Keita, who was then at Leipzig. "They didn't see Leipzig as a real club. It was a very difficult game for us -- 80,000 people in a sold-out stadium, everyone against us." Dortmund won, 1-0.

Aki Watzke, Dortmund's CEO, was quick to condemn the incident, but the club remains unrepentant about its belief that Leipzig shouldn't be allowed to exist in its current form. "The purpose of Leipzig is to sell cans of Red Bull by using a football entity," says Cramer. "Leipzig is a subsidiary of Red Bull. If you ask me why we do not feel comfortable, that's the reason why."

The Bundesliga also denounced the actions of the Dortmund supporters, but it has remained studiously agnostic about the issues that provoked them. RB Leipzig had joined its ranks as a fait accompli, promoted from the second division. And while German football's differentiation in the marketplace is exactly that from-the-heart football experience that contrasts with the sport's colder, more corporate feel in the Premier League, RB Leipzig's success is crucial to the Bundesliga. By giving the east representation among the elite clubs, it allows the league to finally stake a claim as truly national.

Red Bull's ties to America and its worldwide marketing might give it added visibility. And nobody at league headquarters in Frankfurt needs to be reminded that if Bayern Munich manage to defend their championship again this season, one club will have won exactly half the titles since the Bundesliga began in 1962.

"To have more than one big brand, or two if you include Dortmund, is good for the product that is marketed in America and Asia," says Eintracht Frankfurt's Hellmann. "For international marketing and communication, I really do see the point. But don't be fooled, there is collateral damage."


The week after beating Hoffenheim at home, Leipzig visited Dusseldorf for the Bundesliga's weekly Saturday evening game. Fortuna members were ready with banners and songs. Someone had printed up black T-shirts that read Love Football HATE RB, and many of the supporters were wearing them.

In the tunnel before the game, Leipzig's Mintzlaff appeared blasé about the shirts and the other insults. Back in Leipzig, Mintzlaff had characterized Dusseldorf as having "weak management. They put themselves behind the supporters. This is a mistake. We listen to our fans, we have discussions with our fans, but we have a clear plan." But on this visit, Mintzlaff reported, he'd had a productive meeting with Fortuna executives. He was confident that relations between the clubs would soon improve. He appeared less sanguine about returning home with a needed victory; in six meetings across two leagues, Fortuna had never beaten Leipzig and hadn't even managed a draw since 2014.

With Fortuna in the relegation zone and Leipzig just a point behind Moenchengladbach at the top of the table, that seemed unlikely to happen now. And in truth, even Fortuna's Ultras seemed almost half-hearted about their protests. After Leipzig's three previous visits to Dusseldorf, there seemed little left to say.

"First, we did all the legal things," said Rudolph, who is a member of the Ultras' advisory delegation to the club. "Then we realized that we can't change it, and the protests became a little more violent. And now we just don't know what to do. There will always be protests; there will always be banners. But at a point it becomes, what shall we do?"

Fortuna tried. When Leipzig's players came out to warm up, the O'Jays' "Money, money, money ... mon-n-n-ay" blasted from the speakers. Later, an official fan account sent out a sarcastic tweet with a photo of the small knot of Leipzig fans in the visitors section surrounded by a sea of empty seats. "Respect," it read. "The away end has never been so full." Mostly, though, the supporters submitted as meekly as their team was doing on the field. Two minutes into the game, Leipzig took the lead. Later, after Werner converted a penalty to double it, he ran over to the nearly empty section where the hundred or so Leipzig fans were gathered. He raised his arms aloft and shook them, as if he were communing with a full stand. The Ultras mocked him. Soon after, Leipzig scored again.

"If we make good decisions," Nagelsmann says, "there's no problem at some time in the next five years for Leipzig to be German champion." But Werner is likely to be gone soon to an even bigger club -- Bayern Munich or maybe Chelsea -- and a replacement will cost far more than €20m. Buying talent on the cheap is a lot more difficult when the players need to be capable of competing in the Champions League. The club has stockpiled talented, young players such as Adams and centerbacks Ibrahima Konate and Dayot Upamecano, all of whom are 21 or younger; but its best chance of adding to its achievements anytime soon is probably this season. That might be why the supporters in the VIP Lounge were monitoring Moenchengladbach so intensely.

The day after the game at Dusseldorf, they watched Monchengladbach lose to Wolfsburg. The result left Leipzig alone at the top of the table.

Soccer

Ronaldo, Mane lead Al Nassr to first ACL victory

Ronaldo, Mane lead Al Nassr to first ACL victory

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsCristiano Ronaldo scored the winning goal as Al Nassr of Saudi Arab...

Pep: 'No doubts' Foden will rekindle City form

Pep: 'No doubts' Foden will rekindle City form

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsManchester City forward Phil Foden has struggled so far to scale th...

Griezmann announces shock France retirement

Griezmann announces shock France retirement

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsAntoine Griezmann has retired from international football after 10...

2026 FIFA


2028 LOS ANGELES OLYMPIC

UEFA

2024 PARIS OLYMPIC


Basketball

LeBron refreshed, 'living in the moment' in Year 22

LeBron refreshed, 'living in the moment' in Year 22

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsEL SEGUNDO, Calif. -- For a team that needed a second-half surge ju...

Luka, Kyrie say Klay key to Mavs' title aspirations

Luka, Kyrie say Klay key to Mavs' title aspirations

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsDALLAS -- Asked for one word to summarize the Dallas Mavericks' app...

Baseball

Sources: 1B coach Napoli among Cubs' staff cuts

Sources: 1B coach Napoli among Cubs' staff cuts

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsAfter missing the postseason for a fifth straight (full) year, the...

Bloom replacing Mozeliak as top Cards exec in '26

Bloom replacing Mozeliak as top Cards exec in '26

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsThe St. Louis Cardinals are making major changes to their front off...

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