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C.J. Leary Leads Arizona Sprint Practice

Published in Racing
Friday, 15 November 2019 05:23

SAN TAN VALLEY, Ariz. – USAC AMSOIL National Sprint Car point leader C.J. Leary got his weekend off on the right foot by setting the fastest lap during Wednesday night’s USAC AMSOIL National/CRA/Sands Chevrolet Southwest Sprint Car open practice at Arizona Speedway.

The practice was in preparation for the 52nd running of the Western World Championships presented by San Tan Ford on Friday and Saturday.

Leary ripped around the third-mile dirt oval with a top lap of 14.682 seconds in his Reinbold-Underwood Motorsports/AME Electrical – Mesilla Valley Transportation/Spike/Foxco Chevy, less than six-hundredths off the track record of 14.625 seconds set by Chad Boespflug in 2016.

Leary leads Tyler Courtney by 44 points in the standings entering the weekend’s final two-race set.  Courtney was fourth fastest in practice at 15.175 seconds.

Leary’s teammate Hunter Schuerenberg was second at 14.791 seconds, while Thomas Meseraull was third, Courtney was fourth and Charles Davis Jr. rounded out the top-five.

HSR Classic At Daytona Kicks Off

Published in Racing
Friday, 15 November 2019 05:34

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – The first five race winners of the HSR Classic at Daytona presented by IMSA and HSR Daytona Historics weekend were crowned Thursday in a competitive opening day of racing at Daytona Int’l Speedway.

A trio of back-to-back HSR sprint races late Thursday afternoon set the tone for a competitive weekend ahead at Daytona, which culminates with the fifth running of the HSR Classic Daytona presented by IMSA Saturday and Sunday.

Todd Treffert took the weekend’s first checkered flag in the Sasco Sports International/American Challenge sprint with a convincing overall and Porsche-class victory. Treffert anchored an all-Porsche overall top-three sweep in his Speedconcepts 1974 No. 441 Porsche 911 IROC. Mike Banz was second in class and overall in his Heritage Motorsports 1974 No. 13 Porsche 911 RSR and Frank Beck was third overall and in class in his Beck’s European No. 59 1972 Porsche 914/6.

The overall Sasco top five was completed by the American and International class winners. Hugh Boocher finished fourth overall and first in the American division in his 2012 No. 63 Ford Mustang GT while Ernie Wilding rounded out the top-five while taking the International class win in his FAS Autosports 1995 No. 82 BMW M3.

Other podium players in the Sasco race included Rob Albino and Aaron Nash who joined Wilding in an all-BMW sweep of the International class. Albino was second in his Hudson Historics 2000 No. 99 BMW Z3 Coupe while Nash finished third in his Crucial Motorsports 1997 No. 87 BMW M3.

Boocher was joined on the American podium by runner-up Steve Piantieri in his 1965 No. 95 Ford Mustang 2+2 and third-place finisher Walo Bertschinger in the 1968 No. 39 Chevrolet Corvette Roadster.

The Sasco Sports opener was immediately followed by the HSR Global GT race that was won by Sergio Pagliaruli in the 2006 No. 55 Porsche 997 Cup. Phil Gilsdorf was second in his 2005 No. 901 Porsche 996 Cup while Steven Davison spoiled another all-Porsche sweep with a third place showing in his Automatic Racing 2007 No. 22 Aston Martin Vantage N24.

The HSR Classic RS Cup sprint closed out Thursday’s race schedule and featured the best lead battle of the day. Jack Lewis led from the drop of the green flag in his 1974 No. 9 Porsche 911 RSR but was soon challenged by pro driver Billy Johnson in the Alegra Motorsports 1974 No. 58 Porsche 911 RSR. They twice swapped the lead at the halfway point of the eight-lap sprint before Johnson took control for good and crossed the finish line
with a 4.367 second margin of victory.

Third place in the HSR Classic RS Cup went to Brady Refenning in his 901 Shop 1974 No. 28 Porsche 911 IROC.

We're over one month into the 2019-20 NHL season, with a slew of trends emerging to either buy or sell. So, we gathered a panel of four of our NHL analysts to weigh in on whether they believe these early season statements. For this week, that includes:

  • Boston will have multiple 40-goal scorers this season

  • Cale Makar will win the Calder Trophy

  • The Flyers are a dark horse in the East

  • The Blackhawks will trade a big name by the deadline

  • Mitch Korn is the person most responsible for the Islanders' success


1. Boston will finish with multiple 40-goal scorers

Emily Kaplan, national NHL reporter: I'm buying that David Pastrnak and Brad Marchand will get there. I'm selling that anyone else will. The Bruins' top line is spectacular but bottom-lineup scoring is a looming issue.

Rick DiPietro, radio host and former NHL goalie: Buy. Pastrnak already has 16 goals and Marchand has 11, so unless either suffers an injury or the NHL stops calling penalties, both will score 40.

Ben Arledge, associate NHL editor: Buy. Fifty goals from Pastrnak, and at least 40 from Marchand. Marchand has never hit 40, but with 11 goals already and a spot-on seemingly unstoppable power play, this is the season he does it.

Sachin Chandan, fantasy hockey editor: Buy. Pastrnak will hit 40, so it's Marchand to watch. Marchand has a goals-per-game rate of 0.61 through Boston's first 18 games, which is a career-high pace. Needing 29 more goals, he would need to maintain a 0.46 rate for the rest of the season, which is in line with his career averages.

2. Cale Makar will win the Calder Trophy

Kaplan: Sell. Defensemen rarely win the Calder. Barret Jackman, Tyler Myers and Aaron Ekblad are the only blueliners in the past 20 years to do it. Makar might be the guy to buck the trend, but I'm not sleeping on my preseason pick of Kaapo Kakko; he's looking a lot more comfortable lately, with three goals in his past two games.

DiPietro: Buy. It's tough not to buy this. Makar is playing just over 19 minutes per game on a team that could end up winning the Central Division. Eight of his 18 points have come on the power play, so he'll continue to get plenty of opportunities to build on his six-point lead in the rookie points race.

Arledge: Sell. It looks as if Makar is running away with it, already posting 18 points from the blue line. But I picked Kakko in the preseason, and I still think he will end up on top after a 30-plus-goal campaign once he gets going.

Chandan: Buy. It's tough for a defenseman to win the Calder, but Makar has already come out of the gate hot. He has been playing at a point-per-game pace, more than twice what Ekblad was notching when he won the award in 2015, and just higher than last year's winner Elias Pettersson.

3. The Flyers are a dark horse in the East

Kaplan: I'm buying it. Alain Vigneault has a reputation as a quick-fix artist as a coach -- getting the most out of veteran players -- and it's starting to show. The best news for Flyers fans? The team is getting off to fast starts to games, something that eluded them the past few seasons.

DiPietro: Sell. The Flyers will battle for a playoff spot, but I'm not ready to call them a dark horse to win the East.

Arledge: Sell as a contender for the East crown. Travis Konecny is off to a nice start, and Claude Giroux is still Claude Giroux, but the Flyers don't match up with the high-end Eastern teams. And while Carter Hart will be a Vezina Trophy finalist someday, it just won't be this season. Dark horse to make the playoffs, sure. Serious dark horse? Probably not.

Chandan: Sell. The Flyers have a .625 win percentage in one-goal games, which can be fluky and they have only two regulation wins over likely playoff teams. I want to see more consistency from Hart in net and more non-shootout wins before I trust them.

4. The Blackhawks will trade a big name by the deadline

Kaplan: I'm selling this. The Blackhawks are trying to remain competitive as they retool. They're not parting with Patrick Kane or Jonathan Toews. I can't imagine anyone taking on Brent Seabrook's contract (and he'd have to waive his no-trade clause) while Duncan Keith is still their minutes-leader and an important piece to the blue line.

DiPietro: Sell. Corey Crawford or Robin Lehner could be moved to a team looking to upgrade or add depth in net, but their big-name, big-money skaters will stay put.

Arledge: Buy.. Both Crawford and Lehner will be free agents in 2020, and in a tough Central Division, the Blackhawks probably aren't going anywhere. I could certainly see Crawford heading to another team in need of goaltending help. San Jose makes a lot of sense if it is a buyer at the deadline and it can make the financials work, albeit a hefty task.

Chandan: Sell. I agree with Rick and Ben in that a goalie could be moved, but I think they have some strong movable assets further down the cap registry in Brandon Saad ($6 million per year until 2021) and Andrew Shaw, the latter of whom would be a good fit to reunite with coach Joel Quenneville in Florida.

5. Goaltending guru Mitch Korn (as opposed to Barry Trotz) is the secret to the Isles' success

Kaplan: It's a combination, for sure. Mitch Korn squeezes the most out of his goaltenders, but equally important is Trotz's stingy defensive system. What should scare other teams in the Metro: That blue line is young and disciplined. They're not going away anytime soon.

DiPietro: Sell. Mitch Korn deserves a ton of credit, but it all starts with Barry Trotz. Trotz's ability to get his team to buy into his defensive system has been the catalyst for the Islanders' success.

Arledge: Buy, but not as a knock on Trotz. A year after Robin Lehner went from castoff to Vezina finalist under Korn, Thomas Greiss is now leading the NHL in even-strength save percentage (.949), and Semyon Varlamov is posting some of his best numbers from the past five seasons. Korn's goalies are the driving force for New York.

Why the Blackhawks are turning it over to the kids this season

Published in Hockey
Thursday, 14 November 2019 11:27

After the Chicago Blackhawks drafted Kirby Dach at No. 3 overall in June, the 18-year-old visited Chicago. Dach met a few of his future teammates, including veteran defenseman Brent Seabrook. Dach and Seabrook talked about growing up in Western Canada and transitioning to a new life in the NHL, and Chicago. As the season grew closer, Dach asked Seabrook something bold: "Can I live with you?"

Seabrook had to think about it. The 34-year-old already had a few roommates: his wife, Dayna, their three kids -- ages 2, 4 and 6 -- as well as three dogs. Seabrook asked Dach to come over for dinner a few times to make sure it was a good fit.

"He has a young family, so he didn't want me to feel like I was missing sleep, or it was too loud in the house or too chaotic," Dach said. "But I grew up with a chaotic family. I have two siblings of my own, a bunch of dogs. I'm used to the chaos. It feels like home."

And so it was arranged. Dach got a bedroom in the basement, with his own bathroom. He would bum rides to the rink with Seabrook (which is good, because Dach doesn't have a car) and eat dinner with the family ("I might have to start chipping in soon," Dach said. "I'm definitely eating a lot more than his little kids do.") Seabrook instituted one major rule: Dach would have to do his own laundry.

The teenager had no idea how long he would stay. Turns out, it's going to be for a while.


When Chicago's season didn't begin as well as anyone hoped, management turned to the kids to help save the day. Over lunch in Nashville late last month, general manager Stan Bowman and coach Jeremy Colliton told Dach he would stick around instead of returning to his junior team, the WHL's Saskatoon Blades. Dach is the first Blackhawks player since Patrick Kane in 2007 to stick in Chicago his first season.

Two days after the conversation with Dach, the Blackhawks made waves by calling up 19-year-old defenseman Adam Boqvist, the No. 8 overall pick of the 2018 draft.

Boqvist had impressed in training camp, but started the season in the AHL. Chicago had a surplus of defensemen to rotate in on the NHL roster, and while Boqvist had elite offensive skills, his defensive game needed seasoning.

"I don't know if I would have planned it that way, no," Bowman said of bringing on the top two prospects this early in the season. "I always try to leave some room for surprises."

Boqvist's call-up came after Chicago had lost five of six; it was shut out in two of those games, and scored just one goal in another two. The Blackhawks' defense wasn't projected to be great this season, but the offense was supposed to compensate.

"Our team really needed a little bit of a boost," Bowman said. "We weren't scoring. We were having trouble transitioning the puck. Our power play was struggling, and that's really right up [Boqvist's] alley. We said, I don't know if he's 'ready,' [but] I'm also not sure when he would be ready. So we decided, 'Let's just see where he's at.'"

As for the message it sends the rest of the team?

The Blackhawks, after all, are holding onto a core that won three Stanley Cups. The team fired legendary coach Joel Quenneville on Nov. 6 of last season and opted for the 34-year-old first-timer in Colliton, but otherwise has resisted going full-on rebuild.

"As players, we view it as the young guys are here to help the team win," Kane said. "That's what we need, especially nowadays, if we want to make a run for the playoffs. We're going to have to go on a pretty good run, so they're going to need to help us win games."

Added Alex DeBrincat, himself just 21: "Maybe it changes the message a little bit, but I do think they're going to help us win at this point now, too. As a team, we're not really thinking, 'Hey, we want to be good in the future.' We want to be good right now."

It helped that Dach scored in his first game. And Boqvist scored in his second.

"I like that Dach tries to make plays," Kane said. "He's not a guy that just tries to push it ahead or chip it in every time he gets it. He can hang onto the puck, he can skate, and he wants to make plays out there."

Asked what he liked about Boqvist's game, DeBrincat said: "He has poise with the puck. Usually your first game or two you're throwing it away or something, so it's good to see him calm with the puck and know he can play at this level."

The Blackhawks can send Boqvist up and down through the minors as they please -- unlike Dach, who is not AHL-eligible due to CHL rules -- so the team hasn't made any long-term decisions on the defenseman yet. Boqvist played for the London Knights in the OHL last season, and Bowman knows the transition from a mostly weekend schedule in juniors to a hectic, 82-game NHL grind is often difficult on players.

"We probably won't play him every game, and that's OK," Bowman said. "But if it gets to the point where he's not playing at all, he's going to Rockford."

That came to pass this week, as Boqvist was sent back down to the AHL club again on Nov. 14.

Bowman reiterated that the message to the team is that the kids are here to help for now. "But maybe the bigger picture is, where they are going to be if they continue to develop -- how good could they be in February," Bowman said. "They're not a finished product. Exposing them to [the NHL] could give our team a boost knowing, 'Here's where they are today, imagine where they could be in a couple months.' Yeah, they're not going to be perfect every night, but as a player, you know that this guy can really be better in a couple months. I think that helps our team. If anything, I think it should bring excitement."

Dach and Boqvist -- as well as 21-year-old Alexander Nylander -- have become close, though Dach does gravitate to the veterans on the team as well. Dach finds himself seeking out conversation with veteran defenseman Duncan Keith as often as he can. "I really pay attention to how well he takes care of his body," Dach said. "It shows on the ice. I mean, the guy is 36 years old and he's playing 24 or 25 minutes a night and he looks like he could play more. Whatever he is doing, I want to do."

There's only one threshold to watch for now with Dach: whether he hits 40 games, which brings him one year closer to unrestricted free agency. As with Boqvist, the Blackhawks don't intend to play Dach every night. One of the biggest reasons: At 6-foot-4 and just 164 pounds, he can get pushed around, and needs to bulk up.

Dach was scratched at Pittsburgh recently for the first game of a back-to-backset. Instead of playing, he put in a tough weightlifting session.

"The hardest part for a player is to continue training your body during the season, because you are trying to maintain your strength," Bowman said. "For [Dach], we want him to continue to gain strength during the year. We do have to monitor his workload, how many games he plays."

It helps that Dach has been eating so much at Seabrook's house. Then again, the longer he stays, the more likely it is that he'll need to help pay for groceries.

Man City still face FFP probe after CAS ruling

Published in Soccer
Friday, 15 November 2019 04:17

Manchester City have failed in their attempt to block a UEFA investigation into alleged wrongdoing regarding financial fair play (FFP), the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) announced on Friday.

City asked CAS to throw out a case claiming they deliberately tried to cheat FFP.

- Ogden: How City changed football forever

But CAS ruled that the appeal to stop UEFA's case is inadmissable as all the legal avenues have yet to be exhausted.

A statement read: "An appeal against the decision of a federation, association or sports-related body may be filed with CAS (...) if the Appellant has exhausted the legal remedies available to it prior to the appeal, in accordance with the statutes or regulations of that body.

"In the present case, the decision rendered by the CFCB IC to refer a case to the CFCB AC is not final and can therefore not be appealed to CAS directly, because the AC is competent to take any of the decisions listed in Article 27 CFCB Procedural Rules, that are described as being final."

City will now face judgement from UEFA's adjudicatory chamber, although they can appeal any decision made there.

European football's governing body UEFA launched an investigation into a potential breach of FFP rules in March. The Premier League champions have always denied any financial irregularity.

The probe was launched after allegations made in German publication Der Spiegel, purportedly obtained by the platform "Football Leaks," that City circumvented rules by inflating sponsorship deals.

Der Spiegel said emails sent internally at City showed the manipulation of sponsorship revenue from Etihad Airways, the Abu Dhabi state-owned airline which is the naming rights sponsor of City's stadium and training campus as well as having its name on City's shirts.

The sponsorship was said to generate £67.5 million annually for City. But City's holding company, the state-backed Abu Dhabi United Group, channelled £59.9m back to Etihad, according to Jorge Chumillas, the club's chief financial officer, in an internal email to director Simon Pearce.

City were referred to the Club Financial Control Body (CFCB) adjudicatory chamber and could potentially face a ban from the Champions League or spending restrictions if they are found guilty.

The club denied any wrongdoing in a statement released in May which said: "Manchester City is entirely confident of a positive outcome when the matter is considered by an independent judicial body."

In 2014, City were punished for violating FFP, striking an agreement that saw them fined rather than banned from the Champions League for inflated sponsorship deals with companies linked to the club or their ownership.

Information from the Associated Press was used in this report.

Chris Lynn, Jaydev Unadkat, Robin Uthappa, Shimron Hetmyer, Chris Morris, Mohit Sharma and Colin Ingram are some of the high-value players that IPL franchises have released as they prepare for the 2020 auction, scheduled for December 19 in Kolkata.

Royal Challengers Bangalore released some big overseas names such as Marcus Stoinis, Nathan Coulter-Nile, Colin de Grandhomme and Tim Southee apart from Hetmyer. Sunrisers Hyderabad let go of a few big names too, including Yusuf Pathan, Shakib Al Hasan and Martin Guptill.

This is how the eight squads stack up with slots and purse available (all monetary figures in INR):

Chennai Super Kings

Released players: Chaitanya Bishnoi, David Willey, Dhruv Shorey, Mohit Sharma, Sam Billings, Scott Kuggeleijn

Squad: Ambati Rayudu , KM Asif, Deepak Chahar, Dwayne Bravo, Faf du Plessis, Harbhajan Singh, Imran Tahir, Jagadeesan Narayan, Karn Sharma, Kedar Jadhav, Lungi Ngidi, Mitchell Santner, Monu Singh, MS Dhoni, M Vijay, Ravindra Jadeja, Ruturaj Gaikwad, Shane Watson, Shardul Thakur, Suresh Raina

Player slots left: Five (three domestic, two overseas)

Money spent: 70.40 cr

Purse remaining: 14.60 cr

Delhi Capitals

Released players: Ankush Bains, B Ayyappa, Chris Morris, Colin Ingram, Colin Munro, Hanuma Vihari, Jalaj Saxena, Manjot Kalra, Nathu Singh

Squad: Ajinkya Rahane, Amit Mishra, Avesh Khan, Axar Patel, Harshal Patel, Ishant Sharma, Kagiso Rabada, Keemo Paul, Prithvi Shaw, R Ashwin, Rishabh Pant, Sandeep Lamichhane, Shikhar Dhawan, Shreyas Iyer

Player slots left: 11 (six domestic, five overseas)

Money spent: 57.15 cr

Purse remaining: 27.85 cr

Kings XI Punjab

Released players: Agnivesh Ayachi, Andrew Tye, David Miller, Moises Henriques, Prabhsimran Singh, Sam Curran, Varun Chakaravarthy

Squad: Arshdeep Singh, Chris Gayle, Darshan Nalkande, K Gowtham, Hardus Viljoen, Harpreet Brar, Jagadeesha Suchith, Karun Nair, KL Rahul, Mandeep Singh, Mayank Agarwal, Mohammed Shami, Mujeeb ur Rahman, M Ashwin, Nicholas Pooran, Sarfaraz Khan

Player slots left: Nine (five domestic, four overseas)

Money spent: 42.30 cr

Purse remaining: 42.70 cr

Kolkata Knight Riders

Released players: Anrich Nortje, Carlos Brathwaite, Chris Lynn, Joe Denly, KC Cariappa, Matt Kelly, Nikhil Naik, Piyush Chawla, Prithvi Raj Yarra, Robin Uthappa, Shrikant Mundhe

Squad: Andre Russell, Dinesh Karthik, Harry Gurney, Kamlesh Nagarkoti, Kuldeep Yadav, Lockie Ferguson, Nitish Rana, Prasidh Krishna, Rinku Singh, Sandeep Warrier, Shivam Mavi, Shubman Gill, Siddhesh Lad, Sunil Narine

Player slots left: 11 (seven domestic, four overseas)

Money spent: 49.35 cr

Purse remaining: 35.65

Mumbai Indians

Released players: Adam Milne, Alzarri Joseph, Barinder Sran, Ben Cutting, Beuran Hendricks, Evin Lewis, Jason Behrendorff, Pankaj Jaswal, Rasikh Dar, Yuvraj Singh

Squad: Aditya Tare, Anmolpreet Singh, Anukul Roy, Dhawal Kulkarni, Hardik Pandya, Ishan Kishan, Jasprit Bumrah, Jayant Yadav, Kieron Pollard, Krunal Pandya, Lasith Malinga, Mitchell McCleneghan, Quinton de Kock, Rahul Chahar, Rohit Sharma, Sherfane Rutherford, Suryakumar Yadav, Trent Boult

Player slots left: Seven (five domestic, two overseas)

Money spent: 71.95 cr

Purse remaining: 13.05 cr

Rajasthan Royals

Released players: Aryaman Birla, Ashton Turner, Ish Sodhi, Jaydev Unadkat, Liam Livingstone, Oshane Thomas, Prashant Chopra, Rahul Tripathi, Shubham Ranjane, Stuart Binny, Sudhesan Midhun

Squad : Ankit Rajpoot, Ben Stokes, Jofra Archer, Jos Buttler, Mahipal Lomror, Manan Vohra, Mayank Markande, Rahul Tewatia, Riyan Parag, Sanju Samson, Shashank Singh, Shreyas Gopal, Steven Smith, Varun Aaron

Player slots left: 11 (Seven domestic, four overseas)

Money spent: 56.10 cr

Purse remaining: 28.90 cr

Royal Challengers Bangalore

Released players: Akshdeep Nath, Colin de Grandhomme, Dale Steyn, Heinrich Klassen, Himmat Singh, Kulwant Khejroliya, Marcus Stoinis, Milind Kumar, Nathan Coulter-Nile, Prayas Ray Barman, Shimron Hetmyer, Tim Southee

Squad: AB de Villiers, Devdutt Padikkal, Gurkeerat Singh, Moeen Ali, Mohammed Siraj, Navdeep Saini, Parthiv Patel, Pawan Negi, Shivam Dube, Umesh Yadav, Virat Kohli, Washington Sundar, Yuzvendra Chahal

Player slots left: 12 (six domestic, six overseas)

Money spent: 57.10 cr

Purse remaining: 27.90 cr

Sunrisers Hyderabad

Released players: Deepak Hooda, Martin Guptill, Ricky Bhui, Shakib Al Hasan, Yusuf Pathan

Squad: Abhishek Sharma, Basil Thampi, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Billy Stanlake, David Warner, Jonny Bairstow, Kane Williamson, Manish Pandey, Mohammad Nabi, Rashid Khan, Sandeep Sharma, Shahbaz Nadeem, Shreevats Goswami, Siddarth Kaul, Khaleel Ahmed, T Natarajan, Vijay Shankar, Wriddhiman Saha

Player slots left: Seven (five domestic, two overseas)

Money spent: 68 cr

Purse remaining: 17 cr

More to follow...

WBBL round-up: Perry does it again for the Sixers

Published in Cricket
Friday, 15 November 2019 04:51

Ellyse Perry was again central to a Sydney Sixers victory as her 81 off 70 balls formed the cornerstone of their 40-run over in the local derby against the Sydney Thunder at Drummoyne Oval to, briefly at least, sit top of the table. On a surface where free-scoring was difficult it took the Sixers time to get into their stride with Perry and Alyssa Healy an understated 0 for 57 after 10 overs. Healy, who was dropped three times, then got going before Perry took charge of the latter stages including taking 19 off the final over. The Thunder were on the back foot early in the chase as Rachel Priest and the struggling Rachael Haynes fell inside the powerplay and the innings slumped to 6 for 67 with Sarah Aley taking out the key middle-order wickets of Alex Blackwell and Phoebe Litchfield.

Still to come this weekend...

Adelaide Strikers v Melbourne Stars, Nuriootpa (Saturday, 2pm local)
Sydney Thunder v Brisbane Heat, Drummoyne Oval (Saturday, 7.10pm local)

Perth Scorchers v Brisbane Heat, Drummoyne Oval (Sunday, 10am local)
Sydney Sixers v Melbourne Renegades, Drummoyne Oval (Sunday, 2.10pm)

The fourth Friday brings a fresh batch of 10 things:

1. The 9-1 Celtics, on a string

Boston has slid to 11th in points allowed per possession, and it was reasonable to expect slippage with Gordon Hayward out (and Enes Kanter back). Boston's bench is wobbly, and its core lineups ask a lot of an undersized point guard in Kemba Walker and a patchwork of backup center types.

But those core lineups -- the ones that will play the lion's share of minutes when it matters -- have been stingy all season. Daniel Theis has made a strong case to start even with Kanter healthy.

Boston's best defensive groups buzz around with ferocity and airtight connectivity:

Look at all the rapid-fire thinking -- non-thinking, really -- crammed into 10 seconds. It starts with Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum negotiating a DeMar DeRozan/Trey Lyles pick-and-roll. Brown and Tatum are as switchable as it gets; only three teams have switched screens more often than Boston, per Second Spectrum.

Tatum and Brown are probably primed to switch here. DeRozan might expect it. He veers away from the pick, a classic ploy to wrong-foot switches. Brown and Tatum read that, and stay home.

Tatum dips down to help Brown, and that leaves Lyles open one pass away. Walker, guarding Bryn Forbes up top, doesn't rotate to Lyles. He trusts Tatum to recover and run Lyles off the arc. Tatum pays off that trust. Lyles blows by Tatum, but Walker corrals him. Tatum spots that, and flies to Forbes -- who then zooms by Tatum. No matter. Walker is there to cut off Forbes without losing track of Lyles. He deflects Forbes' pass, and ruins San Antonio's possession.

That is awesome. One blip of confusion -- a slight lean the wrong way, a flat-footed pause to think -- and the entire scheme falls apart.

Tatum has grown into a good defender -- smart, rangy, with a knack for disrupting stuff away from the ball. Provided more help on offense, Walker is playing the best defense of his career.

Marcus Smart doesn't even have a position on defense anymore. He guards everyone. He's also shooting 39% from deep on (by far) a career-high attempt rate. Uh oh.

On the other end of the floor, Boston suddenly leads the entire stinking league in points per possession. The Celtics appear to be a level above Toronto (a remarkable story itself), Miami and Indiana. It might be time to consider them a legitimate threat to Milwaukee and Philadelphia. If they upgrade the frontcourt, look out.

2. Lauri Markkanen is lost

Chicago's putrid offense -- 27th in points per possession -- is confounding. The Bulls sport a tidy shot chart: the most attempts at the rim, an average number of 3s, the second-fewest midrangers. Their free throw, turnover, and offensive rebounding rates are in acceptable ranges. They are taking the fewest pull-up jumpers in the league.

And yet: Their half-court offense has been abominable. (They have been fantastic in transition, per Cleaning The Glass.) They have struggled shooting from almost every area. No team has underperformed its expected effective field goal percentage -- based on the location of each shot, the nearest defender, and the identity of the shooter -- by a larger margin, per Second Spectrum.

The Bulls' shooting isn't this bad. Some of their nominally good shooters -- including Markkanen -- are off to slow starts. Others -- Tomas Satoransky -- don't shoot enough.

I suspect this stems from luck, inexperience, and a dearth of plus playmaking at the perimeter positions. Satoransky hasn't been able to leverage his canny passing as effectively against opposing starters. Chicago's offense has little flow or continuity. The ball can stick after the first scripted action, leaving someone to create one-on-one. (No Bull gets more excited by this than Coby White, an inveterate chucker.)

Markkanen has been the chief victim. He hasn't been quite as involved in Chicago's pick-and-roll attack -- as screener or ball handler -- as last season. He badly needs an ace playmaker to get him the ball on pick-and-pops with space to shoot or drive. Even when the Bulls engineer those situations, Markkanen has looked sluggish and hesitant. His handle hasn't held up in traffic.

Jim Boylen told reporters Tuesday that Markkanen is suffering from a sore oblique. I felt some relief reading that. It would explain a lot.

3. Minnesota wings, ganging up

Karl-Anthony Towns' MVP-level play drew the early attention. Now the focus is on the reinvented Andrew Wiggins -- shooting 9-of-14 in the last three minutes of close games, and flashing new playmaking craft. (For more on Wiggins, here's Thursday's Lowe Post podcast with Howard Beck.)

Ryan Saunders' decision to play smaller, with four wings and guards around Towns, has been a boon for both. That infrastructure collapses if Minnesota's small-ball groups can't hold their own on the glass. They have managed thanks in large part to their wings -- especially Robert Covington and Josh Okogie -- rebounding at levels way above expectations for their size and traditional positions.

Covington hangs just outside the fringes of the paint in case the ball ricochets his way. Every night, he robs the other team of one or two extra possessions by sneaking in from behind and snatching the ball from over the head of an opposing rebounder. For a team with a thin margin for error, those possessions really matter.

If Covington is a good gang rebounder, Okogie is a one-man rebounding gang. He risks bodily harm flinging himself toward the scrum -- on both ends of the floor:

Minnesota ranks 20th in defensive rebounding -- just good enough to get away with playing small.

4. Jabari Parker, rude

When I was a high school teacher, one colleague wanted to assert his authority over a wiseacre student who was eating a bagel in class -- which was against school rules. My colleague silently walked to the student's desk, picked up the bagel, took a giant bite, and slam dunked it in the trash. He then resumed his lesson.

It was so audacious. It was the teaching equivalent of Daniel Plainview drinking a rival's milkshake. It was almost rude.

Parker, renewed in Atlanta, is announcing his power with a similar stone-faced blunt force. He has been perhaps the league's rudest dunker. I mean, this is just impolite:

(Poor Thon Maker has been the victim of a lot of rude dunks.)

Oh no, Anfernee Simons:

Parker sees Simons and does not care. He barely slows down. He does not alter his path. You are either getting out of Parker's way, or he's embarrassing you. Parker has 33 dunks, trailing only Clint Capela, Anthony Davis (34 apiece) and fellow surly dunker Giannis Antetokounmpo (38), per tracking data.

The suspension of John Collins transformed Parker from bench curiosity into essential replacement starter. (The Hawks are splitting the rest of those power forward minutes between Vince Carter and De'Andre Hunter -- with Bruno Fernando even sopping up a few.)

Lloyd Pierce has turned Parker into a single-minded finisher. Parker is setting 24 ball screens per 100 possessions, about two-and-a-half times his career rate, per Second Spectrum, and he's rumbling down the lane on lots of those -- with Atlanta's centers spotting up around the arc.

At the same time, Parker is barely running any pick-and-roll; the Hawks have basically given up on Parker as an off-the-bounce creator outside of fast breaks. (They have also given up Parker as a wing, but everyone but the Bulls had already gotten there before last season.)

He's also shooting more 3s (ignore the percentage!) and trying on defense. Trying is not the same as succeeding, but it's a start.

5. The strangeness of the Russell Westbrook-James Harden fit

The partnership of starry Thunder expats is working ... well enough? That's about what we tepid optimists expected despite the glaring overlap in pairing the two most ball-dominant players in history. Houston is 8-3 with the league's fourth-best offense. Westbrook has reignited a dormant transition game, and bought Harden on-court rest. (Seriously: Track Harden when Westbrook handles the ball. You might have a hard time finding him; Harden might be loitering around half-court, off your screen.)

Their defense has stabilized after a lazy, hazy first half-dozen games.

Houston has outscored opponents by only four points per 100 possessions when Harden and Westbrook share the floor. That margin probably needs to be beefier for Houston to get through the West. Their offense in those minutes is scoring at a league-average rate. They have soared when Harden goes solo, and flopped in Westbrook-only minutes.

Westbrook is attempting 2.3 catch-and-shoot 3s per game -- his usual average. That number should spike playing next to Harden; Westbrook has turned down a lot of looks like this:

New Orleans on Monday strayed farther from Westbrook than any other opponent so far. The Pelicans had Westbrook's defender in Harden's lap. More teams will do that when the stakes are higher.

No one is asking Westbrook to jack eight catch-and-shoot 3s per game. He's 3-of-23 on such looks. If his jumper is permanently broken, this is all moot. (Harden renders a lot of things moot when he goes supernova.) Westbrook is good at catching passes from Harden, and slashing through open space.

But some of those drives lead nowhere:

In good seasons, Westbrook nailed about 35% of his catch-and-shoot 3s. For Houston to hit its ceiling, he is going to have to take and make a threshold amount of those shots.

One wrinkle to watch: Super-small lineups with PJ Tucker at center and Westbrook on the floor -- and Harden on the bench -- have floundered; Houston is minus-22 in 38 such minutes. It's early, but I'm not sure Westbrook is as effective as Harden in five-out groupings. Harden is a much more polished isolation player. He can work without a pick. Westbrook can roast guys one-on-one, but that's hard even for him if his defender is waiting in the paint.

Houston might do better tethering Westbrook to a rim-running screen-setter. That would require fiddling with Capela's minutes, praying Tyson Chandler has something left, or scrounging someone similar from the scrap heap.

6. The refs are onto some B.S.

God, I love when the refs sniff out this chicanery:

Here's Bradley Beal pulling the fast-break version of the ol' Chris Paul "I'm going to slow down and veer sideways for no reason":

Referees are cracking down on close-range offensive fouls, including push-offs. (This is a big reason Antetokounmpo has been in so much foul trouble.)

Refs have whistled 5.3 offensive fouls per game this season, up from 4.5 at this point last season and 4.1 two seasons ago, per data the league provided to ESPN. Push-offs are up dramatically: an estimated 2.7 per game so far, up from 1.6 a year ago.

Refs might be a little overzealous now, but this feels like a healthy correction.

7. Anfernee Simons' follow-through and uncertainty in Portland

Simons' follow-through is somehow mesmerizing. There might be prettier ones, but Simons' is the longest, cleanest and snappiest. You can almost hear his wrist snapping.

Simons' defenders need to be wary of getting smacked in the head. One shooting coach theorized Simons' release looks that way because he is 6-foot-3 with a mammoth 6-9 wingspan.

Simons is starting to happen. He is shooting 38% from deep, and working a jitterbug pick-and-roll game. The injury-ravaged Blazers have played heavy minutes with Damian Lillard, CJ McCollum, and Simons all on the floor. Portland is plus-25 in 74 such minutes.

The Blazers are 4-8, and have lost six of seven games. They are about to start a six-game road trip. Lillard has carried (and managed!) an enormous load with McCollum scuffling a bit early; he leads the league in minutes. It wouldn't be shocking if a losing streak sparked urgency for a win-now trade to bolster the frontcourt -- something more consequential than Thursday's signing of Carmelo Anthony. The Blazers are surely hoping to stay afloat a little longer. The trade market doesn't really open until Dec. 15.

It's tempting to conclude Simons' emergence might push Portland to finally investigate the market for McCollum. But Simons has barely played. He's 20! Portland made no secret of its championship ambitions. Dealing McCollum to go younger imperils present-day championship ambitions.

Losing imperils them, too. Lose too much now, and Portland's short-term goals could change. Even if Portland surges, continued strong play from Simons could bring some interesting -- and unavoidable -- offseason dilemmas.

8. Have some fun, Tristan Thompson

Send this sequence to Springfield!

The 4-7 Cavs have been frisky. Their starting five -- Collin Sexton, Darius Garland, Cedi Osman, Kevin Love, and Thompson -- has blitzed opponents by 11 points per 100 possessions.

The young guards can get a little dribbly -- Garland loves him some floaters -- but the offense looks nice when the ball moves. Osman and Sexton are shooting well from deep. (Sexton is a scorching 13-of-24 on catch-and-shoot 3s.) Love is a stabilizer.

Full disclosure: The amount of Thompson happening on offense was slated for a "dislike" here after the first week of the season. Thompson dribbling, passing and shooting this often cannot be a healthy indicator. Right? But those floaters and shot-put hooks just keep going in! He's shooting a preposterous 56% from floater range! Thompson has always been an underrated passer, and one of the league's nastiest offensive rebounders.

Thompson is averaging 15 points and 10.5 rebounds after a silent performance in a loss to Miami on Thursday. He has canned three 3s after draining precisely zero before this season. He's contesting a lot of shots around the basket, and guarding whomever John Beilein asks. That might mean chasing quicker power forwards so Love can jostle with centers. He's making (and I can't believe I'm saying this) a legitimate All-Star case, though he will probably fall short.

Thompson and Andre Drummond are competing for Greatest Contract Year of All Time.

9. Dejounte Murray is a phantom, but the Spurs starting five isn't working (again)

Imagine throwing this apparently harmless entry pass, and realizing as it is in midair that the long-limbed blur who was just harassing you is trying to steal it -- and damn well might get there?

Most guys deny entry passes by sagging way off ball handlers. Some hop back and forth in a cat-and-mouse game. Point guards can digest all of that stuff. They can't read Murray's intentions because he doesn't telegraph them. He's in your face, and then, like some sort of ghost, he's intercepting your pass. He races the ball:

He is, almost literally, in two places at once.

Murray is a threat to invade any nearby passing lane. When opposing point guards scoot ahead of him on the pick-and-roll, he's long enough to swat their shot from behind. He's second overall in deflections, and averages almost 2.5 stocks per game. His ability to defend all three perimeter positions allows Gregg Popovich to deploy his guards in almost any three-man combination. (Even so, he won't play Murray and Derrick White together. Come on, Pop! Give the people what they want!)

Murray is a gambler, which always triggers delicious tension in San Antonio. Popovich yanked Murray against Memphis on Monday after one gamble gone bad. Popovich will eventually accept that Murray's roving mostly pays off. In that sense, perhaps Murray is the true Spursian heir to Manu Ginobili.

Murray does not bring Ginobili's derring-do on offense. He is gun-shy; Murray has attempted only 10 3s, and has barely busted out the improved midrange jumper everyone raved about a year ago. The Spurs' starting lineup could use some scoring punch. (Stop me if you've heard this before, but the Spurs are getting walloped with DeMar DeRozan and LaMarcus Aldridge on the floor. If Popovich has any desire to extend DeRozan's contract, the rest of the front office should confiscate all his computers, phones, and pens.) It bequeaths deficits upon the bench -- a big reason the 5-6 Spurs are reeling a bit.

Hopefully Murray grows more assertive with time.

10. The Clippers, honoring L.A. tradition

After each opening tip, Brian Sieman, the Clippers' new play-by-play guy, reminds viewers that the winning team will start the fourth quarter with the ball. That is an homage to Ralph Lawler, Sieman's predecessor and one of the NBA's truly iconic voices. (It's such a nice touch that the opening scene of "Drive," one of the all-time badass openings to any movie, is scored to Lawler calling a Clippers game.) Chick Hearn, the Lakers' legendary play-by-play voice, offered viewers the same tip.

I always liked that Lawlerism. It seemed a throwaway in the moment, but as one team ran the clock out at the end of the third quarter, you sometimes caught yourself thinking: Wait! They get the ball back to the start the fourth quarter! A double-possession! That suddenly felt important -- and all because Lawler implanted something in your brain a couple of hours earlier. Good on Sieman for carrying on the tradition.

In the fight to end South Africa's brutal apartheid regime, 15 November 1969 would prove a "seismic" day.

A peaceful demonstration against the visiting South Africa rugby team in Wales sent shockwaves not only around the sporting world - but the political one too.

The violence against protestors was branded the "Battle of Swansea", with hundreds hurt and arrested.

Yet exactly 50 years later Siya Kolisi lifted the 2019 Rugby World Cup In Japan.

Few in 1969 were even willing to contemplate, let alone imagine, a black player as captain of the Springboks - the pride of the white South African community.

Nelson Mandela had already spent five of his 27 years imprisoned under a political system of institutional discrimination.

A year earlier England had cancelled a cricket tour to South Africa after their mixed-race player Basil D'Oliveria was refused entry.

So when South Africa's rugby team - closed to black players - headed to the UK, protestors embarked upon a campaign of disruption.

"I knew we were in for a rough time but I had no idea how well organised it would be," said their vice-captain Tommy Bedford.

"We had never had to cope with these sorts of demonstrations in our country or in sport, so I didn't think it was going to be an easy tour.

"But I felt strongly that if these 30 men from the white South African community could go out and see how things are elsewhere, they may go back and say 'that's how things should be back home'."

Led by Peter Hain, then a 19-year-old student, and with the help of future Prime Minister Gordon Brown in Edinburgh, they were hell-bent on causing so much trouble that South Africa's cricketers - due to tour the following year - would not even step foot in the UK.

The world was slowly waking up to the horrors of apartheid - however rugby was not listening.

"Frankly it was a dialogue with the deaf between anti-apartheid protestors, and players and spectators," said Lord Hain, now a member of the House of Lords.

"We tried to engage with them to say they were collaborators with the most evil and racist system in the world, but they just thought we were interfering with their game - and they really hated us for it."

Demonstrations were held at the opening games at Twickenham, Leicester and Newport but the game against Swansea would prove a tipping point.

A protest at the city's civic centre passed without incident - until the march arrived at the gates of St Helen's rugby ground.

"We all felt it was so important to demonstrate, but it was peaceful and everyone was in a happy mood," recalled Mair Francis.

"But then there was a command by the police to turn into us and push us all into the sea wall opposite the grandstand.

"People were hysterical, screaming for the police to stop pushing because we couldn't breathe. Some boys climbed up the wall and started pulling us up."

Inside the ground, the cacophony of noise from the protest had an unnerving effect on the players preparing for - for some - the biggest game of their lives.

"It would be true to say that I, as captain, the rest of the team, the club and indeed rugby in general chose to ignore the moral issue, a stance which my daughters would not be happy with, if it happened today," said Swansea skipper Stuart Davies.

"Morrie Evans, the coach, and I were glad to usher the players into the dressing room to try to keep them calm, but the noise from the protest was daunting.

"There was an eerie feeling on the field throughout the match which affected us all and it would be true to say that the Springboks were saddened by the experience."

The anti-apartheid movement was accused of blighting sport with politics.

Nevertheless, early in the second half, protestors stormed the pitch en masse, lying on the turf to halt the match in passive defiance.

However the brutality of "vigilantes" - stewards hired by the club to bolster the police effort - made headlines around the world.

"Swansea was particularly nasty and became a seismic event," said Lord Hain.

"The protestors were thrown off the pitch to the vigilantes, who had been recruited from local clubs to give them a real belting.

"I was shocked when I discovered a friend had a broken jaw and a woman demonstrator almost lost an eye."

More than 100 people were hurt, including 11 police officers.

Such was the shock that, within days, Parliament discussed potentially halting the tour.

The then-Home Secretary and future Prime Minister James Callaghan stopped short, claiming cancelling events people disliked would be a "dangerous and slippery slope".

However he ordered a meeting of all chief constables to discuss policing the rest of the tour.

"Among the questions that I shall ask to be examined is the extent to which stewards are helpful," Mr Callaghan told Parliament.

"It is clear that their behaviour at Swansea caused a great deal of public disquiet."

Larger protests followed and every game was played in an atmosphere of violence and heavy policing - but there was no repeat of the Swansea violence.

Eyewitness and future MP Hywel Francis said what happened in Swansea was "unrepresentative".

"Our protest went over a lot of people's heads at the time but the violence grabbed the headlines and has resonated down the decades," he said.

"It was the beginning of an awareness, not just as progressive people showing solidarity with the black people, but of a worldwide campaign against South Africa.

"What we did was very small, but we did what we could. Rugby is important but it's not more important than people's human rights."

Manchester and Aberdeen witnessed large-scale demonstrations while a game in Belfast was cancelled.

In London, the Springboks team bus was even "hijacked" by a protestor on the morning of the Test against England.

"We spent all our time surrounded by police cordons and barbed wire, never mind having our bus hijacked," said Bedford.

"The shocking thing to me was no-one was defending us. Our management was saying nothing, the [home unions] were hardly saying boo to a goose. Although it wasn't an easy team to defend, you could defend the right to be there."

Despite a news blackout, the fallout even reached Nelson Mandela's prison on Robben Island, where the Springbok-supporting prison guards were furious.

"They took it out on Nelson Mandela and his comrades but didn't realise that in doing so, they were communicating something special - that there were thousands of people protesting for their freedom," said Lord Hain.

"He told me it was an enormous moral boost during very dark times for the anti-apartheid movement."

Tom Bedford also suspected change was in the air.

"On our last night in Wales I thought it's going to be very difficult for future tours to take place under such circumstances," he said.

"My feeling was there would have to be a political journey. But I was only playing rugby, this wonderful game that had been sullied. How could you approach and tackle this issue?

"For me it became a very difficult personal journey back to South Africa which got me into a lot of trouble in the end."

His anti-apartheid stance is suspected of causing the premature end of his international career just two years later.

The 1970 South Africa cricket tour was scrapped, the start of a worldwide boycott of South African teams and athletes in sports including football, cricket and the Olympics that would last 25 years.

Bedford would later defy his government by attending the historic Dakar Conference in 1987 with the exiled African National Congress, to set about the foundations for fundamental political change in South Africa - and the ultimate collapse of the apartheid regime.

Exactly 50 years on from that troubled tour the "unthinkable" happened when South Africa's first black rugby captain led the Springboks to the biggest prize in the sport.

For those former anti-apartheid demonstrators, it was an "emotional vindication" of their efforts.

"Fifty years ago we protested for exactly what we saw in Japan - a multi-racial team, led by a black captain from an impoverished township who, as a boy, didn't know where his next meal was coming from, let alone where his next rugby ball was going to be kicked," said Lord Hain.

Mrs Francis added: "Watching the World Cup final brought tears - and pride thinking in some little way I helped to bring down that dreadful regime."

Judge vetoes Villarreal-Atletico clash in Miami

Published in Soccer
Friday, 15 November 2019 02:15

A judge in Madrid has turned down La Liga's request to stage Villarreal's home game against Atletico Madrid in Miami on Dec. 6.

The Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) had not approved La Liga's proposal to move the game overseas, which has the blessing of both clubs, and would be the first-ever Spanish league game to be played outside of the country.

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La Liga, however, called for a court injunction in order to get the approval needed from the Spanish FA but judge Moises Guillamon has ruled against them.

The judge rejected La Liga's petition on Friday as there is already a court case pending regarding league games overseas that will be heard in February 2020. La Liga filed a lawsuit last year against the Spanish FA for not allowing Girona's home league against Barcelona to be played in Miami.

"La Liga respects this decision, which does not prejudge the substance of the matter, which will be permanently settled in February 2020," a La Liga statement read. "Staging an official La Liga match abroad is part of a long-term La Liga strategy for international growth."

La Liga need the support of the RFEF, as well as Spain's Sports Council, UEFA, FIFA, CONCACAF and U.S. Soccer in order to move the game away from Villarreal's La Ceramica stadium.

The Spanish FA have argued that a league game played abroad would "affect the equality and integrity of the competition."

Plans to have a league game overseas are part of La Liga's 15-year marketing agreement with Relevent Sports to promote the game in North America and expand its brand.

The Spanish FA, with FIFA's backing, already turned down La Liga's proposal to have Girona's home game against Barcelona last season in the United States.

While the Spanish FA oppose a league game played abroad because it would affect the other teams in the competition, they did stage last season's Spanish Super Cup in Tangier, Morocco, while they signed an agreement for a four-team Spanish Super Cup to be played in Saudi Arabia in the next three years.

FIFA expressed reservations about having league games overseas, with its president Gianni Infantino having said that "In football, the general principle is that you play a 'home' match at 'home', and not in a foreign country."

Real Madrid sent a letter to the federation and to the European and world football's governing bodies expressing their opposition to the game in the U.S. because it would alter the integrity of the competition.

The Spanish FA also believe it puts the two teams playing overseas at a disadvantage for the following round of games due to the consequences of travelling far while it would give their next opponents an advantage that other teams would not have.

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