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ANTALYA, Turkey – Matthias Schwab started with an eagle and finished with a birdie to lead by one shot after the second round of the Turkish Airlines Open on Friday.

The 24-year-old shot 5-under 67 to move to 12 under overall, leading a four-man group that includes Danny Willett (66) and Alex Noren (67).

Schwab, who has a tour-best nine top-10 finishes this season, begins the weekend with five more players within two shots. The 10-under group includes two-time defending champion Justin Rose (67).

Fired up by his selection by Tiger Woods for the United States' 12-man Presidents Cup team, Patrick Reed shot 7-under 65 to trail Schwab by four shots.

"It means so much to me," Reed said of playing the Dec. 12-15 event in Melbourne, Australia. "Representing our country and wearing red, white and blue is something I absolutely love and am so proud of. "

Nike to investigate runner's claims of abuse

Published in Breaking News
Friday, 08 November 2019 06:56

Nike is investigating allegations by former middle-distance runner Mary Cain that she suffered physical and mental abuse as a member of the Nike Oregon Project.

Cain joined the now-shuttered Oregon Project, which was run by coach Alberto Salazar, in 2013 after becoming the youngest American to qualify for the track and field world championships, where she competed in the 1,500-meter final as a 17-year-old.

Cain, now 23, told The New York Times that she was pressured to become "thinner and thinner and thinner" when she was with the Oregon Project. She said she was publicly shamed in front of her teammates if she did not hit weight targets.

"I joined Nike because I wanted to be the best female athlete ever," Cain said in a video published Thursday. "Instead, I was emotionally and physically abused by a system designed by Alberto and endorsed by Nike."

Cain said she stopped menstruating and broke five bones while being pressured to drop weight. She said she had suicidal thoughts and also began cutting herself. She ultimately left the Oregon Project in 2015.

"We take the allegations extremely seriously and will launch an immediate investigation to hear from former Oregon Project athletes," Nike said in a statement Thursday. "At Nike we seek to always put the athlete at the center of everything we do, and these allegations are completely inconsistent with our values."

The New York Times said Salazar denied Cain's allegations in an email.

Salazar received a four-year ban in September for, among other violations, possessing and trafficking testosterone. Nike shut down the Oregon Project last month.

Cain said not enough has been done to hold Nike accountable for "a systemic crisis" in which "young girls' bodies are being ruined by an emotionally and physically abusive system."

"That's what needs to change," she said.

Nike also has come under pressure this year for its treatment of pregnant athletes. A number of female athletes, including six-time Olympic gold medalist Allyson Felix, said Nike reduced or would not guarantee contracts if an athlete became pregnant.

In August, Nike announced that it would no longer apply performance-related reductions to pregnant athletes for a period of 18 months.

Rafael Nadal is "confident" of being fit to play - and battle Novak Djokovic for the number one ranking - when the ATP Finals start on Sunday.

Nadal, 33, pulled out of the Paris Masters last week with a stomach injury but has travelled to London.

The Spaniard overtook Djokovic at the top of the rankings this week but could lose his position as year-end number one to the Serb at the O2 Arena.

Nadal is confident of playing a "good level" in his first match on Monday.

"If we were thinking we would not be able to play, we would probably not be here," he told BBC Sport.

Nadal, who has never won the season-ending championships, meets defending champion Alexander Zverev on Monday but said he only started serving "very slowly" on Thursday following the injury.

"I am confident that I can be very competitive - but of course it's a tournament in which you will face the top guys from the beginning, so you need to be 100% ready," the 19-time Grand Slam champion said.

"But I really hope I will be able to serve every single day a little better and my hope is to be serving normally on Sunday."

Nadal did not play in last year's ATP Finals because of injury and pulled out of the 2017 event with a knee problem after one match.

If he wins the title, he is guaranteed to finish the year as number one - but otherwise, the door could be open for Djokovic.

The Serb will finish the year as number one if he wins the tournament and Nadal does not reach the semi-finals.

Alternatively, if the Spaniard does not play, or fails to win a round-robin match, Djokovic will overtake him if he wins two group-stage matches and reaches the final.

The Serb said ending the year number one is one of the "two biggest achievements" for a player, along with winning a Grand Slam.

"At this stage of my career, in terms of goals and achievements obviously that's right at the top," he said.

Djokovic, who could equal both Pete Sampras' record of six year-end number one finishes and Roger Federer's tally of six ATP Finals title wins, plays the first singles match on Sunday against Italian eighth seed Matteo Berrettini at 14:00 GMT.

The tournament features the top eight players of the year who are split into two groups, each playing a round-robin format. The top two in each group progress to the semi-finals.

Djokovic has been drawn in Bjorn Borg Group alongside Federer.

It means they will meet for the first time since Djokovic beat the 20-time Grand Slam winner in a tie-break in July in the longest Wimbledon singles final in history.

The debutants leading the 'next generation'

Nadal, Djokovic and Federer are the top three seeds in London, as they were when they first competed in the tournament together in 2007, but there are also three debutants hoping to take the title in the 2019 field.

The highest ranked of those is 23-year-old Russian Daniil Medvedev, the world number four.

He reached a remarkable six finals in a row from July to October, including a dramatic five-set defeat by Nadal at the US Open, plus wins in Cincinnati, St Petersburg and Shanghai, and he was the first player after the 'Big Three' to qualify.

World number six Stefanos Tsitsipas, 22, is the youngest player in the field and comes into the event with two titles to his name in 2019 - in Estoril and Marseille - after earning the biggest match victory of his career in January at the Australian Open, defeating Federer en route to the semi-finals.

Berrettini, 23, was ranked 57th in the world in March but has rapidly climbed the rankings and clinched his place in London last week.

Zverev returns to the finals again, having won the title on his debut appearance last year, and is the fourth player aged 23 or under to qualify.

The German has found 2019 more difficult than last year, winning only tournament this year, while Austrian Dominic Thiem, 26, is looking to make the semi-finals for the first time on his fourth appearance.

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Salisbury the sole British star

With Andy Murray absent as he continues his comeback from injury and brother Jamie failing to qualify with new partner Neal Skupski, Britain's sole representative in the tournament is Joe Salisbury in the doubles.

The 27-year-old Londoner and American partner Rajeev Ram are seeded fourth and open the tournament on Sunday at 12:00 GMT against Raven Klaasen and Michael Venus.

Salisbury and Ram only began playing together at the start of the season but made the final at their first tournament together, in Brisbane, before winning titles in Dubai and Vienna.

It will be Salisbury's first appearance at the ATP Finals, although he was a 'hitter' four years ago, helping singles players such as Djokovic and Stan Wawrinka practice.

Other notable pairs include top seeds Juan Sebastian Cabal and Robert Farah, French Open champions Kevin Krawietz and Andreas Mies and French pair Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut, who completed a career Grand Slam by winning this year's Australian Open.

Hearn To Manage OCFS, Cutting Back On Driving

Published in Racing
Friday, 08 November 2019 08:00

CONCORD, N.C. — This weekend’s Can-Am World Finals at The Dirt Track at Charlotte will mark the end of an era, not only in the Super DIRTcar Series, but in all of Northeastern big-block modified racing.

Brett Hearn, the only eight-time Super DIRTcar national champion and the series’ all-time winningest driver with 140 victories, plans to quit racing full time and become the promoter for the five-eighths-mile Orange County Fair Speedway dirt track in Middletown, N.Y.

It’s a fitting move for the proverbial “King of Orange County,” as Hearn is the track’s all-time winningest driver with 302 victories, including 174 in a dirt modified.

He also boasts 16 modified track championships there, including this year’s title.

Hearn’s decision, first revealed by Area Auto Racing News on Monday, was not a choice that came due to any sort of diminished passion for driving by the 61-year-old. That fire still burns as strong as ever.

“I’ve said from about from the time I was 45 or so that I’m never going to get tired of driving. I’m going to get tired of getting these cars ready to drive. You know what I mean? And that’s exactly how I felt,” Hearn told SPEED SPORT. “I was just getting to where I didn’t like the pressure and the grind to hurry up and get ready for the next race, with deadlines and lot of pressure, you know? It’s not a lot of young volunteer help that I’ve got … it just seemed right. It just seemed like the right time to do it.

“The opportunity (to go to Orange County) has been there for a couple of years and I didn’t want the opportunity to slip away,” he added. “I wanted that opportunity, you know? That was important also.”

Hearn will oversee all the motorsports activities that take place at the fairgrounds, working under Halmar International’s Chris Larsen, the current lease holder at the century-old race track.

The change was originally going to be announced during the recent Eastern States 200 weekend, but the timing wasn’t quite right, according to Hearn.

Thus, the news came at a BH Racing Reunion party in Middletown last weekend.

“We’d been talking about it for three years actually and I really thought that it was going to happen this year and then the conversation was on the amount of money that they were paying out this year and the Centennial race — which they paid $100,000 to win — and the longer we thought about it, the more we thought it might be better for me to race one more year and better for the track if I raced one more year.

“We weren’t on the cusp of making a decision that day, but I think the timing now … it’s all worked out.”

Brett Hearn in action during practice Thursday night at The Dirt Track at Charlotte. (Trent Gower photo)

Hearn begins his new position Dec. 1, but was quick to note that in all of his discussions with Larsen about stepping into Orange County’s management, a full retirement from driving was never an option.

“He (Larsen) told me I’m too good to do that (step away completely),” Hearn grinned. “At least, that’s what I’ve been told. So we’re going to do a limited schedule and just pick and choose what we’d like to do. It is way too early to know what that schedule is going to look like. But we’ll scale the shop back from six or seven cars to one or two and make it manageable.”

Hearn said that while there is a staff already in place at OCFS, he’s not against shaking things up.

“I want to look at everything,” noted Hearn. “I want to look at everybody and everything and just, you know, change the culture a little bit if I can.

“So that’s ultimately what I want to do, but I want to get partners and sponsors and friends and volunteers involved … and whatever else I can put together, you know?” he added. “I want to build this place up just like we did with the race team.”

After 45 years on the road racing full time, Hearn said emphatically that he won’t miss the grind of a year-long points chase. He’s been there and done that far too many times.

“I never realized how much of what I did was traveling … with Syracuse, Buffalo, Albany and further up into Canada, and how much of a disadvantage I was at by traveling from New Jersey all the time,” Hearn explained. “I won’t say it was wasted time, but you know, hours and hours of driving isn’t productive, you know? I won’t miss it. I’m not going to miss that part at all.”

Going forward, he’ll pick and choose his handful of races next year in a fashion that ensures the Sussex, N.J., native will be enjoying everything he’s doing — management and driving alike.

“I’ll make a lot of those (racing) choices by the amount of fun I think I’ll have,” Hearn said. “I’ve got a lot of relationships with different track operators and owners, and they’re already like, ‘Oh, you can come to my big race next year,’ and I’ll see how the schedule works … but that (racing) won’t be my priority.

“I don’t really want to get wrapped up in race prep, because I know once I do that, it will suck up all my time and I really want to concentrate on the track and on the speedway in 2020. That’s my main focus.”

But first comes two more outings as a full-time driver and a chance to secure a fifth win at The Dirt Track at Charlotte, as well as a much-needed victory to end the season on the Super DIRTcar Series tour.

“We haven’t won on the series all year,” Hearn pointed out. “It sure would be neat to cap off the full-time chapter with one more here in Charlotte. That would be pretty special, in my mind.”

Meyer Shank & Harvey Set For Full IndyCar Season

Published in Racing
Friday, 08 November 2019 08:11

PATASKALA, Ohio – Meyer Shank Racing will embark on its first full season of NTT IndyCar Series competition next year after forming a technical partnership with Andretti Technologies.

AutoNation and SiriusXM have both extended their sponsorship agreements with the team, which will see Jack Harvey continue as driver of the No. 60 Honda Indy car next season.

Meyer Shank Racing has run partial NTT IndyCar Series schedules the last two seasons as the organization built towards a full schedule in 2020.

“These last two years we have been taking the season in stride and really learning how to build our program to the point where we can run all 17 races,” said team co-owner Michael SHank Shank. “This year has been great and Jack (Harvey) has produced some spectacular results for us and we, as a team, are proud to have him back next year. And of course, all of this would not be possible without AutoNation and SiriusXM who have worked side by side with us from the very beginning and they are a big factor in getting our program to where it is right now.

“Of course sticking by Honda was a very important decision to me,” continued Shank. “We have stood by HPD and Honda for many years in both the sports car and IndyCar paddocks and to be able to continue to work with them in 2020 is something I am really grateful for.”

“It’s great that we are able to officially announce our full season effort for the 2020 IndyCar season,” said Meyer Shank Racing co-owner, Jim Meyer. “This team and Mike (Shank) have worked very hard over the last two IndyCar seasons to put us in a position where we can come back full time. It’s also exciting to have both SiriusXM and AutoNation return on board the No. 60; both have been outstanding parties to work with.”

Shank said a key reason the team will be able to go full-time next season is the new partnership with Andretti Technologies.

“We feel very strong about our partnership with Andretti Technologies and feel that will be a mutually beneficial program,” said Shank.  “Announcing our full season effort is a combination of a ton of work behind the scenes from our sponsors to our individual crew members, and it’s great to finally announce our full season schedule for next year in IndyCar.”

Harvey has played a critical role in bringing the team’s sponsors together and is excited to continue to build the already strong relationships that he has with the Meyer Shank Racing crew, AutoNation and SiriusXM.

“This is the moment that we all work so extremely hard for,” said Harvey. “I am beyond grateful for this opportunity to go racing with Meyer Shank Racing, AutoNation and SiriusXM full time. We have shown we can be competitive, and I can’t wait to build on that and get started on another multi-year program with this group. This is the first time in four years I’ll be competing full time, I owe that to Michael (Shank), Jim (Meyer), Marc (Cannon), my manager Bob (Perona) and my family for the support and belief. I’ve never been so excited to go racing.”

Brent Kaeding Shifting Gears

Published in Racing
Friday, 08 November 2019 09:00

It seemed like a typical night at Ocean Speedway.

The black sprint car with the white No. 69 across the tail tank was in the pits like it had been most of the summer. As the 30-lapper wound down to the checkered flag, that black car was running solidly in a podium spot and on pace with the race winner, something most fans expected.

All in all, it seemed like a routine night on the quarter-mile dirt oval in Watsonville, not far from California’s Monterey Bay. Routine, that is, until the top three drivers crawled out of their cars for interviews in front of the grandstands and fans realized that the driver of the black car was a generation older than they expected.

Being in the winner’s circle or close to it was familiar territory for Brent Kaeding, a spot he has claimed hundreds of times at race tracks across northern California during the last 40 years. And the black No. 69 sprint car is an icon, instantly recognizable as a Kaeding car just like a certain black No. 3 stock car is identified with Dale Earnhardt in NASCAR circles.

But on this night, the elder Kaeding was not on hand to add to his Hall of Fame legacy as one of the most winning drivers to strap on a sprint car. On this night, he was in an unfamiliar situation. He was a former headliner coming in from the wings as a stand-in, a substitute, an emergency backup, a pinch-hitter.  His name wasn’t even painted on the car.

On this retro night, the not-quite-retired Kaeding showed he could still hit the high notes as he whipped the black machine to a podium finish, working to preserve the chances of adding another championship to the family’s trove.

That black sprint car had raced at Watsonville all year, with Brent’s son, Bud — a multi-time champion in his own right — behind the wheel.

“We were just going to race now and then to get the car out of the shop,” Brent Kaeding said. But as Bud won — and won again — and backed it up with other podium finishes, they realized they were in contention for the track championship.

But on this night, Bud Kaeding had a scheduling conflict with his ride in the King of the West by NARC Fujitsu Sprint Car Series.

“The only way for us to honor our commitments to the people who support the car was for me to jump in and get it in the show,” said Kaeding, while Bud left the track in a helicopter headed for The Stockton Dirt Track.

“I didn’t even tell my wife I was going to drive the car until the night before,” the elder Kaeding confessed.

It had been more than two years since the 60-year-old Kaeding had raced a sprint car and about five years since he had raced regularly.

“I was in better condition then,” he admitted, “so I was a little sore the next day, but it wasn’t too bad.”

The Dynasty

There are some families that could be considered “dynasties” with racing success spanning generations.   Think Andretti, Unser, Petty and Earnhardt. In sprint car racing, the Kaedings have certainly earned that status with multiple championships and victories stretching across three generations.

Brent’s sons, Tim and Bud Kaeding, have racked up their fair share of track and series championships and are still winning races in California and with the World of Outlaws.

Brent’s father, the very youthful 80-plus-year-old Howard Kaeding (who pedals his way around the pit area on a mountain bike), was a three-time California state champion, racing rocket-fast supermodifieds on the high banks of San Jose Speedway in the 1960s and ’70s.

Howard Kaeding became such a legend that his shadow loomed over Brent Kaeding’s introduction to racing.

“Kaeding’s Son To Make Racing Debut,” heralded the headlines in the San Jose Mercury News.

(From left) Brent, Bud and Howard Kaeding. (NSSN Archives Photo)

Brent Kaeding’s first race car was one he built with his dad. A partner in the car backed out of the deal, creating the opportunity for Brent Kaeding to drive it.

At 20 years old, Brent Kaeding was somewhat late to the game. Ironically, watching his dad win every week didn’t motivate him to race any sooner.

“Growing up, I had no aspirations to be a race car driver,” Kaeding recalled. “I had no desire to race up to the age of 18 and by 20 I was racing.”

Hundreds of wins, dozens of championships and decades later, “Kaeding’s Son” has more than etched his name in the sport’s history books. When Brent Kaeding was inducted into the National Sprint Car Hall of Fame in 2008, years before he cut back on his schedule, he was credited with at least 375 race wins.

The tally incudes victories in some of the sport’s biggest events, including Skagit Speedway’s Dirt Cup (three times), the Trophy Cup (four times) and the Gold Cup Race of Champions at Silver Dollar Speedway (four times). He has even won one of midget racing’s premier events, the Turkey Night Grand Prix.

Kaeding’s championship trophies stack up like cordwood for an Alaskan winter. They include an amazing 13 in the Northern Auto Racing Club/King of the West series and another 13 in the Golden State Challenge, in addition to dozens of individual track titles, some of which he has won multiple times.

Kaeding doesn’t keep a tally of his victories, deferring to historians and stats guys while he focuses on the day in front of him.

Click below to continue reading the story.

Boespflug To Drive For TKS Motorsports

Published in Racing
Friday, 08 November 2019 09:20

LEBANON, Ind. – TKS Motorsports owners Troy and Tammy Renfro have named Chad Boespflug as the driver of the team’s No. 2KS winged sprint car beginning next season.

The team will compete weekly at Iowa’s Knoxville Raceway and at other big shows in the Midwest, including events at Jackson (Minn.) Motorplex.

“We sat down with our partners and decided that Chad was the best fit for our team and their needs,” said Troy Renfro. “We are looking forward to adding him to our team. We are extremely happy we took our time making our decision.”

“I am thrilled to have the opportunity to compete full time in a wing sprint car schedule with TKS Motorsports in 2020,” said Boespflug, a winner of five USAC AMSOIL National Sprint Car Series features during his career. “Troy Renfro’s extensive experience and knowledge is a huge benefit for me as a driver making the transition from non-wing sprint car racing. I look forward to representing TKS’ Marketing Partners in addition to those who continue to support my racing career.

“To be able to compete weekly at Knoxville Raceway is an honor in itself with the intense competition and history that surrounds one of the largest stages in wing sprint car racing.”

TKS Motorsports most recently fielded cars for Austin McCarl, which resulted in a 410 sprint car championship at Knoxville Raceway in 2018. The team parted ways with McCarl in late August.

Football not the priority at Man United - Herrera

Published in Soccer
Friday, 08 November 2019 08:35

Paris Saint-Germain midfielder Ander Herrera has indicated that he left Manchester United for the French champions this summer because of a lack of focus on football at Old Trafford.

The Spain international was picked up by PSG on a free transfer and has been featuring regularly for Thomas Tuchel's men at Parc des Princes after overcoming an early season injury.

Speaking with So Foot, Herrera refused to explicitly accuse United of focusing on business over football, and emphasised his happiness with the Premier League side, but expressed his feeling that football did not come first in Manchester.

"I was very happy at that incredible club," said the 30-year-old. "I am very grateful to the supporters. Frankly, I was immensely happy there. However, at the club, there were times when I felt that football was not considered the most important thing.

"I will not say it. That does not come out of my mouth. I do not know but football was not the most important thing in Manchester. I do not want to compare. All I know is that, here, I feel like I am breathing football on all sides -- I like it."

Asked about PSG's changes this season after the failure of last campaign, which included an embarrassing Champions League round-of-16 exit at the hands of Herrera's United side, the Basque welcomed the Ligue 1 giants' focus on football.

"I cannot talk about what was happening in previous seasons as I was not here," he said. "However, since I have been here, what I see is that I am in a club that thinks only and exclusively about football.

"I say it sincerely, as sometimes, seen from the outside, PSG can have a glamorous side that can irritate some. Here, though, we sweat, we train, and we work! When I arrive at the training centre, the physios, podiatrist and physical trainer are already at work -- football, football, football."

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Herrera then pointed out the presence of PSG sporting director Leonardo around the club every single day as a possible barb towards United's executive vice-president Ed Woodward.

"Leonardo is there every day!"

Herrera will miss Saturday's Ligue 1 clash away at Brest through injury but is expected to be fit for a return to action after the November international break.

BCCI CFO Santosh Rangnekar quits abruptly

Published in Cricket
Friday, 08 November 2019 07:36

A fortnight after Sourav Ganguly's new BCCI administration took charge, the board's chief financial officer has decided to quit. ESPNcricinfo understands Santosh Rangnekar, the second-most senior official on the BCCI's management team, communicated his decision to step down to the board CEO Rahul Johri on Thursday.

Ostensibly, Rangnekar is said to have wanted to move on professionally, but it is understood he was wary of working in the changed environment brought by the return of an elected administration. Rangnekar himself did not respond to ESPNcricinfo seeking comment on his decision.

The development is abrupt in that until a few days ago, Rangnekar had been working closely with the new office-bearers, including Arun Dhumal, the BCCI treasurer and brother of the former BCCI president Anurag Thakur. Not all the office-bearers are believed to have been aware of Rangnekar's decision to quit.

Only two weeks ago, on October 22, the Supreme Court of India had said that all the officials that had worked under the directives of the Committee of Administrators (CoA) were "immune" from any board action.

The court is likely to keep an eye on the development considering that a key reform of the RM Lodha Committee was that the BCCI have a corporate structure with an independent management wing. However, no sooner had the CoA disbanded that the BCCI's headquarters in Mumbai was serenaded by several former senior office-bearers, some of whom stood disqualified to contest for any position.

Rangnekar, it is believed, was already frustrated by the interference in the routine workings of the administration from subordinates, whom he suspected were being guided by people outside the BCCI.

Rangnekar was appointed as the BCCI's first CFO in June 2016 under Thakur's administration. Both his appointment, and that of Johri, were a result of the BCCI adopting the Lodha Committee's recommendation of separating the governance and management wings in the board.

The appointment of both, the BCCI said at the time, was part of an initiative called 'Project Transformation' aimed at improving governance, and operational and financial processes. That project was initiated by former BCCI president Shashank Manohar.

Both Johri and Rangnekar were given more powers in the daily running of the board by the CoA, which was appointed by the court in January 2017 as a supervisory authority.

In November 2017, the court heard that Rangnekar had filed a complaint against then board treasurer Anirudh Chaudhry, accusing him of issuing "death" threats while interfering with daily board affairs. Chaudhry said he was "shocked" by the complaint and suspected it had arisen because he had been asking tough questions about some aspects of the CoA's decision-making.

Barty to face Garcia on first day of Fed Cup final

Published in Tennis
Friday, 08 November 2019 05:53

Australia's world number one Ashleigh Barty will play France's Caroline Garcia on the opening day of the Fed Cup final in Perth on Saturday.

Barty, who won her first Grand Slam title at the French Open, is on a 14-match unbeaten streak in the event.

Ajla Tomljanovic will make her debut for Australia in Saturday's first rubber against Kristina Mladenovic, before Garcia and Barty meet.

"Fed Cup is in my calendar before any other tournament," Barty said.

Australia are seeking their first Fed Cup since 1974, while France last won in 2003.

Barty comes into the event on the back of winning the WTA Finals - and claiming its record $4.42m (£3.42m) prize money - in China on Sunday.

The reverse singles will take place on Sunday followed, if necessary, by a deciding doubles rubber.

World number 51 Tomljanovic, who was cleared to play for Australia in October despite having previously represented Croatia, has been preferred for the singles rubbers over Sam Stosur.

Stosur is due to partner Barty in the doubles rubber.

"It is an amazing achievement to be involved in a Fed Cup final, but we don't just want to make the final," Barty said.

"For all of us to be able to say that we are Fed Cup champions would be special."

The format will change to a 12-team event from next year, with the finals taking place in April.

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