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WASHINGTON -- One thing you haven't seen walking around Nationals Park before games in the postseason or in the stadium during games: Bryce Harper jerseys. The Washington Nationals organization moved on from Harper pretty much the moment he filed for free agency. The fans have apparently done the same. We all love our baseball history, but romanticizing the past -- even the immediate past -- doesn't help you win games today.

Indeed, Nationals fans are more concerned about re-signing Anthony Rendon than worrying about what Harper is up to these days:

What has helped the Nationals is signing Patrick Corbin this past offseason to a six-year, $140 million contract. Money that could have gone to re-sign Harper instead went to an elite left-handed pitcher who filled a bigger need -- the starting rotation -- and who has provided an invaluable No. 3 starter behind Max Scherzer and Stephen Strasburg.

Now Corbin, who went 14-7 with a 3.25 ERA in the regular season and has both started and relieved throughout the postseason, has a chance Saturday to put the Nationals within one win of their first World Series title and the first championship for a Washington ballclub since the Walter Johnson-led Senators won in 1924. It could be the perfect exclamation point on the season for a pitcher everyone thought at the outset of free agency would end up with the New York Yankees -- after all, the Yankees needed a starter, they have money, and Corbin is from the Syracuse area.

"No regrets," Corbin said before Game 3 about not signing with New York. "I obviously loved every second here. I always tell everybody I feel like I've been here longer, just such a great clubhouse."

The 2018 Nationals were a disappointment, finishing 82-80 after entering the season as heavy favorites to win the National League East. The rotation was a big reason why, dropping from third in the NL in ERA in 2017 to ninth in 2018. Scherzer was excellent, but Strasburg missed some time, Gio Gonzalez struggled and was traded to Milwaukee, and a couple of youngsters weren't ready for prime time. They wanted a third reliable arm.

Corbin gave them that. In essence, his annual average salary of $23.3 million replaced the $25.4 million average Harper will receive from the Philadelphia Phillies over 13 years. The Nationals arguably got the better -- if less famous -- player as well. Corbin, 30, was worth 5.7 WAR in 2019 per Baseball-Reference.com, and Harper was worth 4.2 for the Phillies.

Harper certainly provided a presence in the middle of the lineup. However, he had been unable to replicate his monster 2015 MVP season and hit .249/.393/.496 in 2018. More problematic was that his defensive metrics were a disaster. Juan Soto's precocious emergence meant the Nationals had a big lefty stick to fill the cleanup spot, plus they wanted to find regular playing time for rookie center fielder Victor Robles, one of the top prospects in the game.

"For me, Bryce chose to go elsewhere," manager Dave Martinez said on the off day before Game 3. "But the guys we've had, we knew that we had the right guys to be able to step in and do the job, we really did. I mean, a healthy Adam Eaton, as you all know, you can see what he can do. We have a young center fielder in Victor Robles that's had an opportunity to play every day this year, and has done well. And a 20-year-old that's going to be 21 here in a day or two that's been unbelievable."

Indeed, the Nationals' outfield defense was vastly improved this season. In 2018, they ranked 26th in the majors with minus-29 defensive runs saved. In 2019, they improved to seventh with plus-25. Via the Statcast measure of outs above average, the outfield went from minus-16 (26th in the majors) to plus-27 (first). Much of that was due to Gold Glove finalist Robles, who led all outfielders with 21 outs above average and 24 DRS. Robles was a big improvement in center field and Eaton was an improvement over Harper in right. Like Robles, Soto is also a Gold Glove finalist.

Corbin has started twice this postseason and relieved four times. He pitched a scoreless sixth inning in Game 1, but as the Nationals pulled away in Game 2 he wasn't needed. "This time worked out pretty well for us being able to throw Game 1 and then having three full days off," Corbin said. It's late in a long season, but his most recent start came Oct. 15, in Game 4 of the National League Championship Series, and Corbin says he feels good: "I didn't throw at all. So I was able to do my same routine, everything that I would have done. A little ways from my last start, too."

Corbin gave up two runs in six innings in his division series start against the Dodgers, and struck out 12 in five innings against the Cardinals. He has thrown more innings than he ever has in a season. Washington pitching coach Paul Menhart said this is the moment a starter works for all season, to leave it all out between the lines. "Not that they necessarily save stuff [in the regular season] -- because nobody really does -- but there is an emptying of the tank, with the thought, 'This is what I trained for, this is what I prepared for, I'm letting it go,'" Menhart said.

Corbin isn't a household name like Scherzer and Strasburg, but he ranks seventh in WAR among starting pitchers over the past two seasons. He had his breakout season for the Diamondbacks in 2018, going 11-7 with a 3.15 ERA and 246 strikeouts in 200 innings. His 2.47 fielding independent pitching ranked second in the NL and he finished fifth in the Cy Young voting.

Corbin said a conversation with Diamondbacks pitching coordinator Dan Haren helped transform him from a good starter into a terrific one. "Talking with Dan Haren one day walking in spring training and we just came up with a couple small things that we thought could help get better, and it made sense and ran with that," he said.

No mechanical tweaks. No invention of a new pitch or a new grip. "Being smarter in counts. You just learn every year, being around the game long enough, facing hitters more and more. Throwing a few more breaking balls," Corbin said.

Corbin had been an All-Star in 2013, his first full season in the majors. He missed 2014 because of Tommy John surgery and returned midway through 2015. In 2016-17, he went 19-26 with a 4.53 ERA. Then, suddenly, he became one of the top starters in the game. In April 2018, he went 4-0 with a 2.25 ERA. He was striking out batters at a higher rate than ever before. His slider had gone from great to nearly unhittable at times. In 2016-17, batters hit .184 against it, with a 44.8% strikeout rate. The past two seasons, batters have hit .150 with a 52.6% strikeout rate.

Corbin's slider is unusual in that it's not a power slider as you usually see from a guy with above-average velocity. In some ways, it acts more like a curveball: above-average movement with below-average velocity. Corbin said the key is that it looks like his fastball coming out of his hand.

The biggest change, however -- and this is perhaps what Haren was getting at -- is that Corbin started throwing fewer four-seam fastballs and more two-seamers (and more sliders, particularly compared to 2016). Batters had slugged .523 against his four-seamer in 2016 and .471 in 2017. It made sense to throw it less, to not rely on it so much when behind in the count. To get smarter.

It doesn't hurt being around a rotation that includes Scherzer, Strasburg and wily veteran Anibal Sanchez. Strasburg told me how he likes to watch other starters' bullpen sessions, even if they are different types of pitchers from himself. The other starters will do that as well from time to time.

"Sitting in the dugout, talking to whoever's not in there, I think it's huge," Corbin said. "What they see out there is maybe different from what we see, or vice versa, so it's great to have those guys with their experience."

The Houston Astros' win in Game 3 of the World Series stymied any shot at a sweep the Washington Nationals might have had in mind. The victory sets up a Game 4 showdown Saturday involving Patrick Corbin for Washington and a bullpen game from Houston to see if the Nats can get a game closer to the city's first World Series title since 1924, or if they've locked in a return to the Astros' home turf.

What's on tap

8:07 p.m. ET: Astros at Nationals, Game 4

The view from inside the ballpark

WASHINGTON -- MVP-level Alex Bregman has been noticeably missing from Houston's lineup, as the third baseman hasn't really put it all together for a long stretch this postseason. Could an intentional walk to the batter in front of him be what finally ignites Bregman?

Astros manager AJ Hinch said after Friday's game that he's sure Bregman will go to bed hoping the Nationals walk someone to bring him to the plate. Michael Brantley said he's ready to see Bregman break out, and we should be, too. -- Dan Mullen

A stat to impress your friends: The Astros' bullpen held Nationals hitters to 0-for-10 with runners in scoring position in Game 3, the first time a team went oh-fer in the World Series in that many opportunities since the Phillies set a World Series record for futility by going 0-for-13 in Game 1 of the 2008 World Series.

Two questions

1. What's the one thing you've never seen in a game that you think Game 4 could deliver?

Bregman with a three-homer game. OK, I've seen that before in a World Series -- I was at the Albert Pujols game in 2011 and the Pablo Sandoval game in 2012. The only others to do it: Babe Ruth twice and Reggie Jackson. But it never has been done before in Washington! It never has been done before by an Astros player. The bigger point: Bregman went 0-for-5 in Game 3 and is hitting just .208 in the postseason, but he did hit into some hard outs Friday. He's due. And he might deliver in a big way. -- David Schoenfield

A World Series game in Washington ... that takes less than four hours to complete. After a Game 3 that was anything but, I think Game 4 could deliver the first crisp and clean Fall Classic contest the nation's capital has seen in my lifetime (or the lifetime of anyone under 86 years old). -- Mullen

2. Are you buying or selling on Baby Shark mania?

What, you prefer those ThunderStix that Angels fans used to break eardrums in 2002? I'll take Baby Shark any day over ThunderStix, Homer Hankies or the Rally Squirrel. Baby Shark, however, is awesome. Pure joy. When Gerardo Parra pinch hit, my wife sent me a text with the Baby Shark theme. Heck, Mina Kimes got Tim Kurkjian to sing it on the ESPN Daily podcast. Victor Robles did the shark chop after his triple. Baby Shark forever. -- Schoenfield

You know what, I'm buying. It's ridiculous. I mean it's 45,000 fans screaming about a shark while moving their hands in unison. It's people of all ages rocking various levels of shark costumes in the stands. But it's fun. And it's something that became the Nats' thing completely organically, which is pretty cool in itself. -- Mullen

Predictions

Well, I just predicted three Bregman home runs, so I guess that suggests I will pick the Astros. I've also picked the Astros every game this World Series. It's time to pick the Nationals. In a wild game, the Nationals win as Juan Soto drives in five runs and never gets another strike the rest of his career. Nationals 8, Astros 6 -- Schoenfield

When Game 4 ends, we'll know that this series is headed back to Houston. Astros hitting had a mini-breakout in Game 3 and I think it's going to continue Saturday night even against the very tough Corbin. Houston batters hit six balls with plus exit velocity Friday night and only two of those were hits. Eventually those hard-hit balls are going to start finding outfield grass instead of Washington gloves. Astros 5, Nationals 3 -- Mullen

About last night

Stud of the night: Let's give Astros reliever Will Harris some love, because first he shut down a Nats rally in the sixth inning by retiring Trea Turner and Adam Eaton in the sixth with two men on base to protect Houston's three-run lead, then he notched a 1-2-3 inning in the seventh, getting both Juan Soto and Anthony Rendon while he was at it.

Dud of the night: Soto going 0-for-4 with three strikeouts set the tone for a Nationals offense that generated opportunities -- and then squandered almost all of them.

Highlight of the night:

play
0:52

Hinch: 'Jose is the heart and soul of what we do'

AJ Hinch explains how important Jose Altuve is to the Astros' lineup and how he's been the catalyst to help them make a deep playoff run.

Quote of the day

"He was very aggressive early like a lot of their guys were on secondary pitches, so as the game went on we had to adapt a game plan based on their aggressiveness on all our secondary pitches." -- Hinch, on how his pitchers changed up their approach to Soto in particular and the Nats in general in Game 3.

Best of the Fall Classic so far

Our running World Series MVP: Juan Soto, who went 3-for-4 with three RBIs, a home run and a key double in Washington's Game 1 win over Gerrit Cole. He followed that with a single, two walks and two runs scored in Game 2. It's no coincidence that when Soto was held hitless in Game 3, the Astros won.

The play of the series: George Springer's near miss in the eighth inning of Game 1. With Houston down 5-3 and a runner on second, Springer hit a long drive to right-center that hit off the glove of a leaping Adam Eaton and bounced away. Kyle Tucker scored, but Springer had to settle for a double. Could he have made it to third? Springer said he wasn't able to go full speed with Tucker tagging up. If Springer had made it to third, could he have scored on Jose Altuve's fly ball in the next at-bat? We'll never know. Springer got no farther than second, and the Astros' best chance to tie the score went by the boards.

Preparations complete, competition starts in earnest

Published in Table Tennis
Saturday, 26 October 2019 06:47

A two day team event commences proceedings; Asia and Europe fielding players, who despite their young years, are well versed in the rigours of international play.

Sora Matsushima leads Asia

Japan’s Sora Matsushima leads Asia in the boys’ team event; the winner of the cadet boys’ singles title on the ITTF World Junior Circuit earlier this year in Hong Kong and the runner up in the Czech Republic, he lines up alongside Iran’s Navid Shams, Korea Republic’s Jang Seongil and India’s Payas Jain.

Significantly, Navid Shams was a cadet boys’ singles semi-finalist this year in Bahrain and France; Payas Jain won in Bahrain, before later in the year emerging the runner up in Ulaanbaator at the Asian Junior and Cadet Championship. Similarly Jang Seongil impressed in the Mongolian capital city; he concluded matters a cadet boys’ singles semi-finalists.

Kaho Akae the name to note

Similarly, in the girls’ team competition, Asia fields a prominent selection. Very much the player to note is Japan’s Khao Akae. On this year’s ITTF World Junior Circuit, she secured the cadet girls’ singles titles in the Czech Republic and Chinese Taipei, whilst being the runner up at the Asian Junior and Cadet Championships.

In Wladyslawowo, Kaho Akae is supported by Korea Republic’s Lee Yeonhui, India’s Yashawini Ghorpade and Singapore’s Zhou Jingyi. Notably this year in cadet girls’ singles events, Lee Yeonhui and Zhou Jingyi were respective semi-finalists in Thailand and Hong Kong, Yashawini Ghorpade the runner up in Bahrain.

European champions on view

Impressive selections; it is the same from the old continent, with gold medallists at this year’s European Youth Championships heading the order. In the boys’ team event, Romania’s Darius Movileanu is the top name, in the counterpart cadet girls’ team competition the honour is bestowed on colleague, Elena Zaharia.

Also successful on this year’s ITTF World Junior Circuit in Poland, Darius Movileanu joins forces with Belgium’s Louis Laffineur, Russia’s Denis Izumrudov and the Czech Republic’s Simon Belik; Elena Zaharia, the cadet girls’ singles runner up in Poland, is supported by Hungary’s Dorottya Tolgyes, Croatia’s Hana Arapovic and Russia’s Vlada Voronova.

ITTF World Junior Circuit success

Success for the Romanian duo in cadet events on this year’s ITTF World Junior Circuit, it is the same for their teammates in Wladyslawowo. Louis Laffineur won in Thailand having been the runner up in Italy, Denis Izumrudov succeed in the Czech Republic prior to reaching the penultimate round in Spain; not to be overshadowed, Simon Belik was a silver medallist in Bahrain.

Likewise for the girls, in the Czech Republic, Ana Arapovic was a semi-finalist, Dorottya Tolgyes a quarter-finalist. Meanwhile, Vlada Voronina won in Spain, before at the European Youth Championships experiencing defeat at the final hurdle when facing Elena Zaharia.

Sharing top spot

At the 2019 ITTF World Cadet Challenge, in the boys’ team event, Asia occupies the top seeded spot with Europe next on the list; in the girls’ competition it is the opposite scenario.

The final outcome, the same, vice versa or a major surprise; we wait in anticipation.

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England made the All Blacks 'look like they hadn't got a clue'

Published in Rugby
Saturday, 26 October 2019 06:31

England's 19-7 win over New Zealand in the Rugby World Cup semi-final was a "team-defining performance" and made the All Blacks "look like they hadn't got a clue", says former England fly-half Paul Grayson.

Eddie Jones' side beat the defending champions to reach the final for the first time in 12 years.

It is England's first World Cup win over the All Blacks.

"Tactically, mentally, physically, they tore them to shreds," said Grayson.

England's previous victory over New Zealand had been a 38-21 win at Twickenham in December 2012, but that had been followed by six consecutive defeats.

They took an early lead when Manu Tuilagi crashed over for a try in the second minute, and had tries by Sam Underhill and Ben Youngs cancelled out by the video referee.

Ardie Savea crossed for the All Blacks following a wayward line-out throw in the second half, but nerveless penalties from George Ford saw England into their fourth World Cup final.

"This is a team-defining performance," said Grayson, part of England's World Cup-winning squad in 2003, on BBC Radio 5 live. "They've now played at a level that made the best team in the world look like they hadn't got a clue."

England's Billy Vunipola and replacement Joe Marler were advised by referee Nigel Owens to step back over halfway during New Zealand's haka just before kick-off, something which 2003 World Cup winner Matt Dawson felt helped set the tone for the performance.

"It was comprehensive," Dawson said on 5 live. "We're going to sound like arrogant Pommies here but from minute one, from the kick-off, from the haka, they were mentally in the right spot to throw something on the All Blacks. With the pressure they put on New Zealand, you saw them start to crack."

It was only England's eighth win over the All Blacks in 42 meetings, and just their third on foreign soil.

"This has got to be talked about as the greatest England performance of all time," added BBC rugby correspondent Chris Jones.

"The mad thing is they still haven't been really tested yet this World Cup. It sounds ridiculous, but only for about a five-minute period would England fans have had cause for worry, after Savea crashed over. They never actually looked in danger against the mighty All Blacks."

Reaction to 'immense' and 'special' performance

And, almost inevitably, the Cricket World Cup final was referenced...

'Phenomenal intensity' - how you reacted

SeriousFace: Imagine going 80 mins and not giving the mighty All Blacks a single opportunity at the posts. Incredible discipline, phenomenal intensity and controlled aggression in the tackle.

Enda: New Zealanders will be dressing up as Sam Underhill for Halloween...he caused nightmares

Boaty: Truly outstanding today boys. Take a bow everyone of you. What a proud day to be an Englishman and now onto next week!

Tifft Taken To Hospital, Crafton In No. 36

Published in Racing
Saturday, 26 October 2019 06:45

MARTINSVILLE, Va. – Matt Tifft was taken to a local hospital prior to opening practice for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series on Saturday morning at Martinsville Speedway.

Tifft, 23, was taken from the team hauler to the infield care center roughly a half hour before the scheduled start of the first practice session at the .526-mile oval.

He stayed in the care center for a short period before then being transported to the hospital.

A Front Row Motorsports spokesperson confirmed that two-time NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series champion Matt Crafton will fill in for Tifft behind the wheel of the No. 36 Ford Mustang until Tifft is able to return to action this weekend.

It’s the second time Crafton has filled in for an ailing driver in recent weeks. He substituted for Paul Menard in the Wood Brothers No. 21 Ford at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway two weeks ago, after Menard battled neck issues during that event.

As of press time, no information has been released on Tifft’s condition or what transpired to necessitate the infield care center visit.

Tifft, competing in his rookie Cup Series season, has one top-10 finish this year in 31 starts. That run of ninth came at Daytona (Fla.) Int’l Speedway in July.

This story will be updated.

Gundogan and Sterling help Man City past Villa

Published in Soccer
Saturday, 26 October 2019 07:43

Manchester City closed the gap at the top of the Premier League to just three points thanks to a hard-fought 3-0 victory over a resolute Aston Villa at the Etihad.

Positives

City had to be patient after a frustrating first half, but showed their class in the second as they upped the tempo and overwhelmed their dogged opponents. Notable mentions for full-backs Joao Cancelo and Benjamin Mendy, who both put in strong displays.

Negatives

Pep Guardiola's side could well have been behind in the first half following poor play by John Stones, while Fernandinho's late red card and suspension is the last thing his side needs as they battle with an injury crisis at the heart of defence.

Manager rating out of 10

7 -- Despite juggling multiple competitions and injuries, Guardiola will be pleased with what he saw as his side secured their eighth win in nine games in all competitions.

Player ratings (1-10; 10 = best, players introduced after 70 minutes get no rating)

GK: Ederson, 7 -- A brilliant double-save denied Villa duo John McGinn and Douglas Luiz in the first half, and the Brazilian almost released Raheem Sterling on goal with a glorious pitch-long pass soon afterwards. Another gigantic kick began the move for the opener in what was an excellent display.

DF: Joao Cancelo, 7 -- Cut inside and fired a stinging shot that was well held by Villa stopper Tom Heaton after 20 minutes, and was a bundle of energy going forward, while going untested defensively.

DF: John Stones, 6 -- Sloppily gifted the ball to McGinn deep in his own half and was fortunate to have Ederson behind him to save his blushes with a good save.

DF: Fernandinho, 6 -- Booked for cynically halting a Villa counter-attack early in the second half, before repeating the trick on Villa sub Keinan Davis to earn a red card in the closing stages of the game.

DF: Benjamin Mendy, 7 -- Given plenty to think about by Villa winger Trezeguet, who was the away side's most dangerous player at times, but City's left-back coped well and provided ample attacking support on the overlap. Brought off for Angelino for the final 18 minutes.

MF: Ilkay Gundogan, 8 -- City's best player in the first half in a deep-lying role that saw him at the heart of everything good about his side's attacking play, and got himself a deserved goal when he elegantly volleyed home for 3-0. Booked for taking down Trezeguet late on.

MF: Kevin de Bruyne, 7 -- Provided some wicked balls into the visiting penalty area, including a whipped cross that evaded everyone (possibly not David Silva) and squirted past Heaton for 2-0. Had his feet up for the final 15 minutes as he was replaced by Phil Foden.

MF: David Silva, 6 -- On a club-record 237th Premier League start for the club, the Spaniard somehow missed the target from 10 yards out following great work from Sterling in the closing stages of the first half. Not a game for the legend's bulging highlight reel.

FW: Raheem Sterling, 7 -- Had plenty of the ball inside the Aston Villa penalty area but was met with swarms of bodies during a frustrating first half, but found the breakthrough within 30 seconds of the restart with a clipped finish past Heaton. Replaced by Sergio Aguero after 75 minutes.

FW: Bernardo Silva, 6 -- Can sometimes find himself on the periphery of things while operating out wide, and will probably be the main beneficiary of Silva's departure at the end of the season, opening up a more central position.

FW: Gabriel Jesus, 6 -- Swivelled and struck just wide from six yards out in the opening five minutes, and it was the Brazilian's flick-on that released Sterling for the opener. Denied a goal of his own by an excellent goal line clearance from Tyrone Mings, as well as the crossbar late on following a lovely chip over Heaton.

Substitutes

Angelino, N/A - Slotted in and was untroubled.

Phil Foden, N/A - Forced two comfortable saves from Heaton in a bright cameo.

Sergio Aguero, N/A - Unable to get his name on the scoresheet in the final embers of the game.

Record opening stand sets up big win for Netherlands

Published in Cricket
Saturday, 26 October 2019 06:41

Netherlands 206 for 3 (O'Dowd 58, Cooper 58, Ackermann 43*) beat Bermuda 114 for 9 (Leverock 31, van Meekeren 3-26, Seelar 2-10, van der Merwe 2-23) by 92 runs

A Dutch record T20 opening stand between Max O'Dowd and Ben Cooper laid the foundation for their highest ever team total as Netherlands walloped Bermuda by 92 runs on Saturday afternoon in Dubai to clinch a playoff berth and keep pace with PNG at the top of Group B on eight points.

After Netherlands won the toss and chose to bat, O'Dowd and Cooper batted together until the 13th over in searing heat. The closest the stand came to being broken before it reached three-figures was in the eighth over when Kamau Leverock fooled O'Dowd with a slower ball to induce a prod back that was dropped at chest height on 35. Otherwise, the pair targeted straight boundaries for the bulk of their runs. Both raised their fifties in the 12th over, O'Dowd off 37 balls with a single behind square, before Cooper drove straight for back-to-back fours to reach his in 32 deliveries.

The stand finally ended when O'Dowd drove Delray Rawlins to extra cover where George O'Brien took a sharp catch diving right. Cooper fell an over later to a tired slog across the line to Rodney Trott's offspin. Ryan ten Doeschate and Colin Ackermann kept the momentum going for the Dutch though with a 52-run stand in just 29 balls. Ten Doeschate showed his ingenuity, reversing through third man with the back of the bat blade for a boundary during his 28 off 18 before he was caught at long-off in the penultimate over. Ackermann carried on to the finish to take Netherlands past 200 before hitting the last ball over square leg for six to end the innings.

Bermuda were never realistically in the hunt of chasing down the target after ending the Powerplay at 36 for 3. The biggest blow was struck on the final ball of the phase when Delray Rawlins went too far across his stumps trying to scoop Paul van Meekeren for a second boundary of the over through fine leg but was done in by a slower ball and bowled for 16.

At 65 for 5 in 12, Kamau Leverock provided another burst emulating his knock against Scotland, driving two sixes and flicking a third over fine leg in his 31 off 15 balls before falling to a skied drive to long-off against Timm van der Gugten at the end of the 16th. Van Meekeren followed up his wicket of Rawlins from the sixth over with two more scalps in the 18th, getting Okera Bascome driving to long-on before bowling Derrick Brangman. Bermuda's last wicket pair survived the last 13 balls after Pieter Seelaar spilled a return chance in the 19th over, ending on 114 for 9.

Netherlands trail top-placed Papua New Guinea on net run rate by +.208 heading into each team's respective final match. PNG plays Kenya on Sunday morning while Netherlands play Scotland on Sunday afternoon in Dubai.

England were the "better team" and deserved to reach the World Cup final, says New Zealand coach Steve Hansen.

England produced a dominant performance to beat the three-time world champions 19-7 in the semi-final in Yokohama.

It was a first defeat for the All Blacks at the tournament since 2007, having won the past two editions.

"There's a lot of hurt. That adversity will feed a lot of All Blacks teams in the future, so we'll find one positive out of it," said Hansen.

"Congratulations to England. They were deserved winners. You had two very good sides going at each other and the team that took the game won the game.

"We've got no regrets. I'm really proud of our team, they've done a tremendous job for their country and tonight they weren't good enough.

"We have to take that on the chin and so do the people back home."

Manu Tuilagi crossed after 98 seconds for England, who opened a 13-0 lead before Ardie Savea responded with a try 23 minutes from time.

George Ford kicked two further penalties to take his tally with the boot to 12 points and earn England a place in the final for the first time in 12 years.

Hansen was New Zealand assistant coach in 2007 when the All Blacks were beaten by France at the quarter-final stage.

"Having been here in 2007 it's disappointing," said Hansen, who took charge in 2012 and oversaw the All Blacks' 2015 success.

"The big difference is the fact that we stepped up to the plate today - we played as well as we possibly could and just got beaten by a better team.

"England created the go forward in the game, we struggled to dominate them at the set-piece or breakdown.

"When you're going forward you get all the 50-50 decisions - I'm not trying to make an excuse, that's just what happens in the game.

"You start making fundamental errors because you're desperate; you start offloading balls that you wouldn't have to if the scoreboard was in your favour. That's how I knew the guys were trying."

Hansen dismissed any suggestions his side were not "hungry" having headed into the match on an 18-game winning run at the World Cup and as two-time defending champions.

"The boys are desperately hurting," he added. "You put a lot of time and energy into trying to come and win the thing.

"If you don't achieve what you wanted to do you have to put your big boy pants on and stand up and be counted."

Head coach Eddie Jones promised an even better England performance in the World Cup final after their dominant semi-final victory against New Zealand.

Jones' side demolished the three-time world champions 19-7 to reach their first final in 12 years.

When asked if it was one of the best England showings of all time, Jones replied: "Give us another week".

"We're not historians, we don't know. We know we can play better next week," he added.

New Zealand had not lost a World Cup game in 12 years, but England took control of the semi-final immediately thanks to a Manu Tuilagi try in the second minute.

New Zealand flanker Ardie Savea took advantage of a line-out error to score the All Blacks' only try, but four George Ford penalties kept England out of reach.

It is the first time England have beaten New Zealand in a Rugby World Cup match and means they will now face Wales or South Africa in the final next Saturday.

But Jones is not getting ahead of himself, insisting that England are not thinking about the implications of their stunning victory.

"All that stuff you guys are talking about is for you to talk about so enjoy it because you won't be getting anything from us," Jones told journalists.

"We're ready for a good week. That's the only thing we have to be ready for.

"We've got the right focus. I remember our first meeting together four years ago.

"We wanted to be the best team in the world. We're not the best team in the world. We've got the opportunity to play in the game to prove that."

'We didn't want to just stand there'

England were seemingly trying to get a psychological edge over New Zealand even before kick-off.

As the All Blacks lined up to do the Haka England faced them in the shape of a V, with replacement prop Joe Marler reprimanded for standing too far over the halfway line.

And captain Owen Farrell explained that this tactic was to avoid New Zealand feeling as if they were on the front foot from the outset.

"We wanted to not just stand there and let them come at us," he explained.

"We knew we had to be within a radius behind them. We wanted to keep a respectful distance but we didn't want to just stand in a flat line and let them come at us."

England faced a daunting task against New Zealand - the winners of the previous two World Cups who had won their last 18 matches in the tournament.

But Farrell claimed that when Savea crossed, it was the calmest his side had ever been after conceding a try and that there will be more of the same next week.

"The feeling is calm going into the game," he added. "Building up into it we feel in control of what we're doing.

"That comes from our preparation because you can't fake that when you're out there, especially in a big Test match."

'Wales v South Africa will go to extra time'

Wales will face the Springboks in the other semi-final on Sunday and a Welsh victory would set up the first home nations final in Rugby World Cup history.

England were beaten by Wales as they crashed out at the group stage of a home World Cup in 2015.

Whoever his side face in the final on 2 November, Jones jokingly predicted their opponents will have had to play extra time to get there.

"We're looking forward to Wales and South Africa playing through to a draw, then they have to play extra time and if it's still a draw they have to play even more extra time," he said.

"I'll definitely come and watch the game tomorrow."

Watch the best moments from England's 19-7 victory over New Zealand to reach their first Rugby World Cup final in 12 years.

MATCH REPORT: Vintage England reach World Cup final

Follow text & BBC Radio 5 Live commentary of Wales v South Africa on the BBC Sport website & app from 09:00 GMT on Sunday, 27 October.

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