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Brady upset Netflix cameo seen as shot at Kraft

Published in Breaking News
Saturday, 19 October 2019 13:39

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady explained his cameo appearance in the new Netflix comedy series "Living With Yourself," expressing disgust Saturday with those who thought he was taking a shot at owner Robert Kraft.

The show stars actor Paul Rudd playing a depressed character who undergoes a spa treatment promising to make him a better person. In doing so, Rudd's character learns that he has been replaced by a new version of himself. The show switches back and forth between the new and old version of Rudd's character.

In Brady's cameo, he is seen walking out of the "Top Happy Spa," which is located inside a strip mall.

"First time?" Brady asks.

"Uh-huh," Rudd responds. "You?"

"Sixth," Brady says, smiling, in a reference to his six Super Bowl championships.

On Saturday, Brady grew angry when asked what he was thinking in filming the scene -- the suggestion that it was a dig at Kraft, who in February was charged with misdemeanor solicitation of prostitution at a Florida strip mall.

"That's not what that was about," Brady said. "I think that was taken out of context, just like you're taking it out of context and trying to make it a story for yourself, which has a negative connotation to it, which I don't appreciate. It was meant to be something different than that. The fact it's a distraction or you're bringing it up is not something I want to be talking about."

Brady explained that the scene wasn't filmed at a strip mall.

"It was shot on a green screen," he said, referencing a backdrop in filmmaking. "It was agreed to a year ago. It was written four years ago. Again, it's unfortunate that people would choose to think I would ever do something like that about Mr. Kraft. I think that's a very bad assessment of my relationship with him. I would never do that."

Although the scene was written years ago, it wasn't filmed until after the allegations came out against Kraft. Director Timothy Greenberg told Refinery29 that he thought Brady would pull out of the Netflix project once charges were filed against Kraft.

Brady relayed that he has yet to speak to Kraft about it, but he didn't seem to think it was necessary.

"I think everybody knows what our relationship is about. For 20 years, it's nothing but love and respect," Brady said. "I've been through a lot of tough things with him. I love him dearly. I sympathize with a lot of things that he's gone through in his life. I empathize with a lot of people that get taken advantage of and get used and understand that's part of what we're living in.

"... I think it's this type of media atmosphere that you create. The blame-and-shame media atmosphere that has kind of percolated for a while. I think there is a lot of things that are said that are taken out of context that you choose to make a headline of, as opposed to understand what it's actually about."

Greenberg told The Wrap that the scene was written when Brady was fighting his four-game suspension from the NFL regarding deflated footballs.

"There was this implication that maybe he's a clone and he's cheating," Greenberg told the website. "When I wrote it, he was 37 and had won four Super Bowls. And then by the time I actually make the thing, he's now 41 and he's just coming off his sixth Super Bowl win. So he became even more perfect."

Sources: Jazz give Snyder long-term extension

Published in Basketball
Saturday, 19 October 2019 13:52

Utah Jazz coach Quin Snyder has agreed to a long-term contract extension, league sources tell ESPN.

Snyder had two years left on his deal, and a new contract extends multiple years beyond that term, sources said.

After upgrading the team's talent base over the summer, locking Snyder into an extension had been a top organizational priority.

Snyder, 52, has evolved into one of the NBA's elite coaches, reaching the Western Conference playoffs in three consecutive seasons, including consecutive trips to the conference semifinals in 2017 and 2018.

This is the second time in three years that the Jazz have extended Snyder with two years left on his deal, including in 2016 before a developing young roster had allowed him to have his first winning season.

Snyder is 227-183 (.554) in six years with the Jazz, including 149-97 (.606) in the past three seasons --- sixth best in the NBA. In the past three years, the Jazz have had consecutive top-five rated defenses, including No. 1 (2016-17) and No. 2 rankings (2018-19).

The Jazz have solidified their leadership structure in the past several months, elevating Steve Starks to CEO, Dennis Lindsey to executive vice president and Justin Zanik to general manager.

Snyder's ability to work in concert with management and his players --- especially in the areas of player development - has been a boon to his success and staying power with the Jazz.

The Jazz are preparing for a serious run at Western Conference championship contention with a reshaped roster constructed around Donovan Mitchell, Rudy Gobert and the arrivals of Mike Conley Jr., and Bojan Bogdanovic.

Every time the NBA-China scandal seems to be fading, another eruption underscores the increasingly difficult tightrope leagues, athletes and media companies walk as they do business with communist China.

Just in the past few days, LeBron James unleashed a furor from fans in both Hong Kong and the U.S. when he described Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Morey as "misinformed or not really educated" for his seven-word tweet that ignited the initial uproar. Then, NBA commissioner Adam Silver acknowledged his league had lost millions since Morey's tweet and stated that the Chinese government had asked him to fire Morey. But the Chinese foreign ministry turned around and denied Silver's claim, putting another round of pressure on the commissioner, just as normalcy seemed to be returning.

And on Friday night, hundreds of activists attended the Nets-Raptors preseason games wearing shirts and holding up signs in support of pro-Democracy protestors in Hong Kong.

The NBA has far and away the largest Western sports presence in China, but it's hardly alone in having to navigate the challenges of doing business there. The NFL, Major League Baseball, the NHL, MMA, esports leagues -- virtually every professional sports entity has worked to establish a foothold there, wooed by the country's exploding economy and a population more than four times larger than that of the United States.

But according to experts, and as the NBA discovered swiftly, China's burgeoning power has wrought a government even more committed to controlling the flow of information to its people and stifling dissent.

"Both the state and Chinese people are aware of the leverage they have over profit-seeking entities that are desperate to maintain access to the Chinese market," Jonathan Sullivan, the Director of China Programs at the University of Nottingham Asia Research Institute, said by email. "Of course, it is the state that sets, adjudicates and enforces the rules. And if you transgress you can expect to be punished, at a time and method of the state's choosing."

Bill Bishop, a former media executive who has spent more than a decade living in China and analyzing the country, says the dynamics recently making headlines are not new.

"But the NBA events ... made it much more of a mainstream issue," he says. "In many ways, it's harder for the leagues to keep their souls but also expand into China."

Nevertheless, the NBA's numbers in China reveal why leagues have persisted in trying to find their footing there. Plainly, there's just so, so much money to be made.

Earlier this year, the NBA expanded its deal with internet behemoth Tencent to stream live games and make an array of content available to the company's 1 billion users. The new contract, which begins next year, pays the NBA $300 million annually for the next five years -- representing a threefold increase from the previous deal. (In 2016, ESPN and Tencent agreed to a five-year distribution agreement in which ESPN provided content to be shared across Tencent's many platforms in China.)

The NBA has a long-standing contract with government-run CCTV to broadcast games live throughout the country, and while the financial specifics of that deal aren't clear, the NBA has suggested the benefits are enormous.

"The value we generate from CCTV through sponsorships and all of our other initiatives --- it's hard to put a price on that," David Shoemaker, then the CEO of NBA China, told Forbes in 2017.

Beyond its broadcast and social media deals, the NBA makes money in China from corporate sponsorships. There also are NBA training academies, NBA-themed play zones for kids in malls, NBA-themed "lifestyle complexes," an NBA 2K League for gamers; an NBA youth development program, and more. On top of all that are the millions made by individual players through their own sponsorship contracts with Chinese companies.

Sports Business Journal recently estimated the NBA's presence in China was worth $5 billion to the league.

"I don't know a Chinese male that is not crazy about the NBA," said Jim McGregor, a marketing expert who has lived in China for three decades and previously served as the chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in China. "I'm telling you, living on the ground here, I'm from Minnesota and every time I meet somebody here, they talk about the Timberwolves."

This is exactly what every other league is chasing as they look to China.


MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL first opened an office in China in 2007. Ten years later, MLB announced a joint partnership with a Chinese state-owned real estate group to build 20 development facilities -- along the lines of the training sites baseball has set up throughout Latin America and other parts of the world.

The training centers are geared toward kids ages 7-12, as MLB tries to drive interest in the sport while taking advantage of growing disposable income among the Chinese middle class. Last year, Tencent signed a multiyear deal with MLB to stream 125 regular-season games, plus the playoffs and World Series. The agreement also has Tencent partnering on a traveling baseball show and hosting a digital MLB Fan Club, along with streaming a series of MLB-run youth events.

The Los Angeles Kings and Vancouver Canucks played exhibition games in China in 2017, the first NHL events held there. The owner of one of the game's sponsors is a Chinese billionaire who has invested heavily in the NHL. The league also signed a five-year deal with Tencent to stream games and provide sponsorships, merchandise sales and development of a mobile game.

While the NFL has made its move into Europe, with annual regular-season games now in London, its efforts in China have been mixed. Commissioner Roger Goodell recently described China as a "priority market," but plans to stage an exhibition game that began back in 2007 still haven't moved forward for a range of reasons, some political, some logistical.

"It's very difficult to put [a game] on there," says Marc Ganis, a longtime sports marketing expert whose company secures sports contracts in China. "London is a lot closer than Beijing or Shanghai are. And then the thing that can't ever be ignored is the political risk. ... How do you know that the political support you might have today in China might dissipate by the time the game is played? What if they don't allow you to broadcast the game out of the country?"

In 2017, the NFL and Tencent announced a three-year deal for the company to stream some preseason games, all Thursday, Sunday and Monday night regular-season games, assorted other regular-season matchups and the playoffs and Super Bowl. Goodell said the league has seen "double-digit growth" there, and the league says participation in the sport -- both contact and flag -- has been growing steadily. Three years ago, the league said research showed that interest in the NFL had grown from 1.6 million people to 19 million.

The NFL also has deals with several traditional broadcast partners there, as well as major media and merchandise partnerships with the Alibaba Group, which was co-founded by Hong Kong billionaire Joseph Tsai, who owns the Brooklyn Nets.


TSAI THRUST HIMSELF into the NBA controversy when he penned an open letter on Facebook. After Morey angered the Chinese government and some of its people with a tweet supporting Hong Kong residents who have been rallying for Democratic reforms and against Beijing's hold, Tsai wrote that Morey had touched on a "third-rail" issue in China. His post reflected the government's message that the protesters are separatists trying to undermine China's sovereignty.

"Had Morey made the objectively uninformed statement that 'HK rioters under the guidance of foreign black hands are seeking to undermine Chinese sovereignty' ... I have no doubt that this would have been a complete non-issue," Sullivan said.

"And that brings us to the crux of the issue for us in the West," he said. "How do we feel about, and how do we deal with, the fact that 'our' behavior and 'our' values are susceptible to the wonts of an authoritarian state?"

James, meanwhile, fueled the situation with his comments that Morey "was misinformed" in his tweet. James later tried to clarify his position by saying he wasn't addressing the substance of Morey's tweet but the fact that "so many people could have been harmed, not only financially but physically, emotionally, spiritually."

His comments were hailed in China and ripped and ridiculed in Hong Kong and in the U.S., where critics said he had put his own financial interests in China ahead of free speech and democracy. In Hong Kong, some fans stomped on James jerseys, and cheered as one burned.

In 2015, James signed a lifetime deal with Nike. His longtime business manager and partner Maverick Carter has said the deal could be worth more than $1 billion. Nike, with James as a primary spokesman in China, received 17% of its $37.2 billion in brand revenue from Greater China in fiscal 2019.

James earned a reported $32 million from Nike shoe sales last year, significantly more than any other active player, Forbes reported. And a year ago, he embarked with Nike on a clothing design collaboration with Chinese esports star Jian Zi-Hao.

James also has served Tencent as a spokesperson, consultant and endorser of the NBA 2K League there.


THE ESPORTS INDUSTRY is also grappling with this issue. Just days after Morey sent his tweet, Blizzard Entertainment suspended a professional Hearthstone player in Hong Kong after he expressed support for the protesters during a postmatch interview. Wearing gear often donned by the protesters -- goggles and a gas mask -- Chung Ng Wai (known as Blitzchung) shouted, "Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our times."

Soon after, Blizzard announced it had suspended Chung for a year and withheld his prize money from the event. Tencent owns 5% of Blizzard.

The action prompted a small protest by employees at the corporate offices in Irvine, California, elicited Twitter rebukes from at least two U.S. senators and prompted criticism from human rights organizations.

Blizzard ultimately announced Chung would be able to keep his prize money and his suspension was reduced to six months, but the company reaffirmed its position that its players essentially needed to stick to sports during official events and broadcasts.

Vice reported Wednesday that three American University college Hearthstone players received a six-month ban after holding up a sign during the tournament that read, "Free Hong Kong, Boycott Blizz."

Across the sports world, the message has become clear.

"The Chinese government has been very good about exporting their campaign of terror, if you will, to corporations, including sports entities, around the world," says John Pomfret, a former Washington Post Beijing bureau chief and author of a book that traces the history of U.S.-China relations. "Everyone is afraid, and they're afraid because the red line has been moving in a negative direction for a long time."

If that wasn't already clear to the NBA, it is now. After the Morey tweet, 11 of 13 Chinese companies that have sponsorship deals with the league temporarily halted them. Long-planned broadcasts of two exhibition games were canceled, and the broadcast partnerships, including with Tencent, appear in limbo. CCTV and Tencent have said they would not show or stream Rockets games, and Silver made his comment Thursday at the Time 100 Health Summit that the Chinese government had asked him to fire Morey.

"We said there's no chance that's happening," Silver told ABC's Robin Roberts. "There's no chance we'll even discipline him."

He added, "Our games are not back on the air in China as we speak, and we'll see what happens next." All of this serves to underscore the push and pull league officials, coaches and players are facing as they try to weather the controversy.

"These players have a real issue if they're very active speaking out in the U.S., but then when they come to China, they clam up," says Bishop, the former media executive. "From a business perspective, that makes sense, but from a reputational perspective, that's trouble.

"You have political systems that diverge, and the players are stuck in that divergence. Obviously they want to keep China's money and the Chinese market, but they can't do both and not look hypocritical."

With the NBA regular season set to start Tuesday and no word yet on whether games will be streamed by Tencent or aired by CCTV, or whether any of the sponsors will return, the NBA's status there is uncertain. There's one school of thought that says basketball is simply too popular and important to China for the government to punish the league further. In the past couple of days, Tencent has returned to streaming at least two preseason games.

"Look, this is bad for the Chinese government right now," says McGregor, the marketing expert who has written two books on doing business in China. "The NBA is nothing but good; it provides entertainment, keeps people busy, gives them something to talk and be passionate about, and if they're doing all that, they're not on the streets complaining about the government."

At the same time, it's unclear what, if anything, the league could or would do at this point if asked to mollify the Chinese.

Says Bishop, referencing the pingpong diplomacy that initiated a warming of relations between the countries back in the early 1970s: "One of the jokes going around is, U.S.-China engagement started with pingpong and ended with basketball."

Producer William Weinbaum and researcher John Mastroberardino of ESPN's Investigative and News Enterprise Unit contributed to this report.

Peacock, Green get calls to open ALCS Game 6

Published in Baseball
Saturday, 19 October 2019 14:48

The Astros will open Game 6 of the AL Championship Series with right-handed reliever Brad Peacock on the mound Saturday night in Houston.

The Astros lead the best-of-seven series against the New York Yankees, 3-2.

Both teams arrived in Houston on Saturday morning, just hours after the Yankees stayed alive in the series with a 4-1 Game 5 win.

Peacock actually closed out Friday night's contest in New York, pitching a scoreless inning of relief after starter Justin Verlander went the first seven innings.

Peacock will be the fourth pitcher ever to finish a postseason game and start the next day on zero days' rest, and the first since 1924, according to ESPN Stats & Information.

The Yankees also will be using their bullpen in Game 6, but have yet to announce who will open.

Astros lineup for Game 6: 1. CF George Springer; 2. 2B Jose Altuve; 3. LF Michael Brantley; 4. 3B Alex Bregman; 5. 1B Yuli Gurriel; 6. SS Carlos Correa; 7. DH Yordan Alvarez; 8. C Martin Maldonado; 9. RF Josh Reddick

Britain's Andy Murray produced a fine comeback to beat Ugo Humbert at the European Open and reach his first ATP final for two years.

Murray, who had career-saving hip surgery in January, showed his trademark stubbornness to win 3-6 7-5 6-2 in two hours 23 minutes.

He will face fellow three-time Grand Slam winner Stan Wawrinka of Switzerland in Sunday's final.

"It's been a big surprise to me. I'm happy to be into the final," he said.

Speaking to Amazon Prime, he added: "It's been a long road to get back to this point

"I certainly didn't expect it to come so soon since I started playing again."

It is 32-year-old Murray's first final appearance since the Dubai Championships in March 2017, when he was then the world number one.

No player had ever returned from a hip resurfacing operation to play singles before Murray.

And he has managed to reach a final just two months after making his singles return, at Winston-Salem in August.

Determined Murray battles back

The Scot has played four tournaments in just over four weeks and showed signs of fatigue and frustration in the opening set.

He struggled on his serve, producing three double faults in the first six games, which allowed 21-year-old Humbert to force the first break of the match.

By contrast, Humbert wrapped up the first set with an ace, and kept up his aggressive play with some deep hitting in the second set.

The two traded breaks in the second before Humbert, serving to force a tie-break, lost his rhythm, and handed Murray the set on a double fault.

Five games in a row went to Murray, allowing him to open up a 3-0 lead in the decider, and his serving grew stronger as the match progressed.

He appeared to have some trouble with his right elbow, which may have affected his serve, but he finished the match with six aces and won 77% of points on his first serve.

Murray holds an 11-8 head-to-head record over Switzerland's Wawrinka, 34, and both players have struggled with injuries in recent years.

The Scot injured his hip in his 2017 French Open semi-final against Wawrinka, while the Swiss had a disrupted two years with a knee injury.

"Stan's a brilliant player. We've played against each other in some big matches in the past in big tournaments," Murray added.

"He's had his injury troubles as well the last couple of years and done great to get back to the top of the game."

Antwerp is likely to be Murray's last tournament of the year, with the possible exception of the Davis Cup, for which Great Britain will announce their squad on Monday.

He could still leave early if his wife, Kim, goes into early labour with their third child.

Chengdu Review: Lily Zhang stuns, reaches semi-final

Published in Table Tennis
Saturday, 19 October 2019 07:08

Beaten in her very first match of the tournament by Romania’s Bernadette Szocs (11-9, 8-11, 12-10, 11-7, 11-3); second place in the initial phase group and thus progress to the main draw gained courtesy of success in opposition to Puerto Rico’s Adriana Diaz (12-10, 11-8, 9-11, 11-7, 13-11), on the second day of action Lily Zhang excelled all expectations.

The no.18 seed, she beat Japan’s Miu Hirano, the no.4 seed and winner in 2016 in Philadelphia (12-10, 11-8, 8-11, 8-11, 8-11, 11-5, 11-5), prior to accounting for Austria’s Sofia Polcanova, the no.8 seed in yet another full distance encounter (11-9, 8-11, 11-8, 4-11, 8-11, 11-8, 11-8) to reserve her place in the penultimate round.

First player

Thus, Lily Zhang becomes the first player from the United States and only the second from the Pan American continent to progress to the semi-final stage of the tournament.

Also she is the first player not born in either Asia or Europe to reach the penultimate round. In 1997 in Shanghai both Canada’s Geng Lijuan and New Zealand’s Li Chunli advanced to the last four, as did Wang Chen in 1996 in Hong Kong when in Chinese colours. Later Wang Chen represented the United States at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games. However, all were born in China, as opposed to Lily Zhang who is native born.

Accepted that prior to 2009 in Guangzhou only 16 players competed, Lily Zhang is the lowest seeded player ever to progress to the semi-final round of the Women’s World Cup.

Feng Tianwei

A surprise semi-finalists and there was one more; Singapore’s Feng Tianwei, the no.7 seed, after overcoming Bernadette Szocs, the no.9 seed (11-8, 12-10, 11-8, 11-8), accounted for Japan’s Kasumi Ishikawa, the no.3 seed (12-10, 7-11, 11-8, 8-11, 8-11, 12-10, 11-7) to reserve her last four place.

Upsets but not where China was concerned; both Zhu Yuling, the top seed and Liu Shiwen, the no.2 seed, advanced smoothly to the penultimate round. Zhu Yuling beat Canada’s Zhang Mo, the no.14 seed (11-2, 11-3, 11-3, 11-4), followed by success in opposition to Germany’s Petrissa Solja, the no.11 seed (11-4, 11-1, 11-6, 11-7).

Meanwhile, Liu Shiwen ended Chinese Taipei’s hopes. She accounted for Chen Szu-Yu, the no.13 seed (11-9, 11-4, 7-11, 11-9, 11-6), before overcoming Cheng I-Ching, the no.10 seed.

Semi-finals

At the semi-final stage Zhu Yuling meets Feng Tianwei, Liu Shiwen opposes Lily Zhang; play concludes in Chengdu on Sunday 20th October.

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The American dream lives on in Chengdu

Published in Table Tennis
Saturday, 19 October 2019 09:21

The 23-year-old, born and raised in California, has captured the hearts and imagination of American, North American and international table tennis by achieving the extraordinary feat on Saturday 19th October at the Uncle Pop 2019 ITTF Women’s World Cup in Chengdu, China.

Wang Chen, who went on to represent USA at the Beijing 2008 Olympics, was flying the flag for China when she made the final four at the 1996 Women’s World Cup, so yes, there you have it: Lily is a record-breaker alright!

Moreover, she is creating history at a moment of enormous significance for American table tennis: in 2021 the World Championships Finals will be staged in Houston, Texas, for what will be the greatest and most innovative event the sport has ever known.

Bringing matters back to the here and now in Chengdu, Lily has set up a mouthwatering semi-final tie against the World Champion, Liu Shiwen, who is seeking her own piece of history by becoming the first ever player to win five Women’s World Cup titles.

If the Chinese superstar wants to achieve her dream, she will have to navigate her way past a seriously dangerous opponent in Lily, who already made the world of table tennis sit up and notice when she completed a clean sweep of four gold medals at September’s Pan American Championships in Asuncion, Paraguay.

Make no mistake, Lily is in red-hot form right now. Her opening group-stage defeat to Bernadette Szocs is a distant memory. Since then the world no. 49 saw off Puerto Rico’s highly-rated Adriana Diaz to reach the knockout rounds.

Then followed the biggest upset of the tournament so far: her 4-3 win over world no. 9 Miu Hirano of Japan sent shockwaves throughout international table tennis; not least because Lily had surrendered a 2-0 lead to trail 2-3, only to claw her way back for the biggest victory of her career.

“She (Hirano) is much higher than me in the world ranking, so I felt under no pressure at all. I just focused on my own game today. I led 2-0 which gave me a lot of confidence. When she won the next three games, I still believed that I had a chance and that I could come back. She is very fast, but I am speedy as well, so I feel very comfortable playing against her.” – Lily Zhang

Could Lily keep her nerve in the quarter-final against Austria’s imposing, 6ft tall Sofia Polcanova? Europe’s highest ranked player had beaten Lily’s USA team-mate Wu Yue in the previous round and had sights set on her first ever Women’s World Cup semi-final too. Just like Hirano, Polcanova also fought from behind to hold a 3-2 advantage and looking odds on to close out the win.

“I was a bit distracted when I was leading 2-1 then fell behind 2-3,” Lily admitted. “This was the toughest moment of the whole match, but I never gave up and remained confident that I could turn things around.”

Indeed, the problem for Polcanova was exactly that: Lily never knows when she is beaten.

She kept believing in herself and her unquestioned ability shone through: Lily it was who managed to express her game best on court once more, wowing the crowd with her daring strokes, switching from defence to attack at the blink of an eyelid.

“I could not believe it when her (Polcanova’s) last return hit the floor and the match was finally over. I really did not expect that I could get this far in the tournament. I am just so happy right now.”

Just like her audacious sky lobs, which have come to characterise her swashbuckling, never-say-die attitude, the sky is quite literally the limit for Lily, who now heads into the final day with an entire continent, even an entire world, watching on, waiting to see if even more history can be made.

You too can watch Lily continue her incredible journey in Chengdu by tuning into itTV and following all the news on ITTF.com and on ITTF social media: FacebookInstagramTwitterYoutubeWeibo

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Quarter-final excitement & naked hot springs - Parkes column

Published in Rugby
Saturday, 19 October 2019 05:32

In his latest BBC Sport column, Wales centre Hadleigh Parkes looks forward to Sunday's World Cup quarter-final against France and reveals how his team-mates have taken to Japan's naked hot springs.

Sometimes I have to pinch myself that I'm playing in a World Cup quarter-final, and this Sunday's match against France is right up there with the biggest matches of my career.

If we win in Oita, we know we'll be going to Yokohama with a chance to create history.

All of us know what's at stake. We either beat a tough French side and move on to Yokohama for the semi-finals and final - or we'll be flying back to Wales on Monday.

You just want to keep winning and winning and there's a big carrot at the end of it all. It's so exciting.

It's amazing to be here in the final eight and we're really hoping we can be there in the last four.

My parents, Bill and Janet, have come out to watch, as have my brother Greg and his wife Hayley.

It's mum's birthday on Friday and then, if all goes well against France, I'll have my two other brothers coming out next week, and it will be my parents' 40th wedding anniversary next weekend. So that's even more incentive to play well on Sunday!

No injury issues, just grief from team-mates

I took a bit of a hit to my shoulder in the win over Uruguay, but it was nothing too serious, the shoulder's good and everything seems to be okay, just a few niggles.

Sometimes with injuries you won't get any for ages and then other times you get a couple of different niggles at once - like I've had at the World Cup with the broken bone in my hand and the shoulder knock - and it's just about trying to manage them.

My body's feeling pretty good and it's just a case of making sure I do everything to be in the best possible shape for the game.

When I had all the strapping on different parts of my body, I mentioned in a previous column that I was getting called Robocop.

That only started with one comment from Ross Moriarty but, now I've mentioned it in my column, I've been getting more grief from the other lads.

Every now and then the lads will make a comment about my columns, but I'm just glad they're reading them. It all adds to the numbers!

Embracing Japanese culture - in the nude

There's certainly not as much happening in Oita compared to the other, bigger cities like Tokyo, Osaka and Kyoto. It's more of a quiet, beachy type place with holidaymakers here for the onsens, the Japanese hot springs.

The onsens seem to be the big attraction in Oita and nearby Beppu, where we were staying for the Fiji game.

The big difference between these hot springs and the ones you might see elsewhere in the world is that Japanese convention dictates that, in most onsens, you've got to be naked.

The boys started off in the onsens with their shorts on, then they got down to their budgie smugglers and now everyone's in the nude.

The boys are embracing it. It is a bit different and something you're not used to, but it's the culture out here. It's the way it's done.

Some onsens are a bit nicer than others and there are a few boys who are really enjoying them.

This is a nice area and we've had a couple of wins around here, against Fiji in Oita and against Uruguay in Kumamoto.

Now we're back in Oita, it would be amazing if we could get a second win in this city in Sunday's big match against the French.

We know how difficult it's going to be against them - they've got some great individuals, some big boys and a lot of talent.

Trying not to peak too soon

As a squad, you don't want to be chomping at the bit too early in the week. You can get yourself overhyped, then all of a sudden you're coming down and then you need to get yourself back up again.

So it's about building nicely, training well, ticking off the boxes that you usually tick off, a couple of meetings, a couple of walk-throughs and the boys will talk to each other to go through what we want out of the training sessions and to take into the game.

The start of the week is getting prepared and the end of the week is about finalising, making sure everything's in place.

It's nice to relax the day before the match. The boys will probably go for a coffee and watch the two Saturday quarter-finals, England-Australia and Ireland-New Zealand, in our hotel.

You don't want to play the game too early in your heads so when you wake up on the morning of the match, that's when you start to build and get excited.

I don't really have a set routine on match days. I'll get up, have breakfast and then it's just a matter of relaxing during the morning over a coffee with the boys, or the family if they're around.

Then we have the pre-match meal, which is pretty similar most weeks, and then I'll have a shower, get strapped up at the team hotel before the team meeting and then we're on the bus.

It's a fair distance to the stadium from our hotel here so, seeing as it's a 40-minute ride in, you don't want to get too hyped when you're on the bus.

You're relaxed at that point. Driving up to the stadium's pretty exciting and then you get into it properly with the warm-up.

Then it's the match. It's always amazing to pull on that red jersey, and to do it in a World Cup quarter-final on Sunday is going to be extra special.

Hadleigh Parkes was speaking to BBC Sport Wales' Dafydd Pritchard.

We haven't played at our best yet - England coach Jones

Published in Rugby
Saturday, 19 October 2019 05:36

England head coach Eddie Jones says his side have not hit their best yet after they powered past Australia to reach a first World Cup semi-final in 12 years.

After a strong start from the Wallabies, England stormed to a convincing 40-16 win with a performance that prompted Jones to compare his players to samurai.

"The best samurai had a plan they could adapt," he said. "They had a calm head but were full of aggression.

"We were pretty much like that today."

Jones added: "But the challenge is how do we get better because there's always a better samurai around the corner. We haven't played at our best yet."

The "better samurai around the corner" could be three-time champions New Zealand, who will be England's semi-final opponents after the All Blacks' 46-14 victory against Ireland later on Saturday.

England looked threatened when faced with a fast start by the Wallabies, but soon recovered to lead 17-9 at half-time thanks to two tries from Jonny May.

Their advantage was cut down to one after a brilliant solo score from Marika Koroibete, but tries from Kyle Sinckler and Anthony Watson and 20 points from the boot of Owen Farrell sealed the win.

The only worrying sight for England fans was May pulling up just before full-time, seemingly because of pain in his leg, but Jones said it was a "twinge" and that the wing "should be fine".

'We're making sure Billy's wife stays'

England coped well with their greatest test of the World Cup so far after cruising through the pool stages, recording their biggest winning margin in a World Cup knockout game.

There were stand-out performances in England's forward pack, with Jones particularly praising the back row.

Tom Curry was named man of the match after teaming up with Sam Underhill to take on veteran Wallabies Michael Hooper and David Pocock.

But Jones saved his highest plaudits for number eight Billy Vunipola, who played 80 minutes after not taking part in full training last week because of an ankle injury sustained against Argentina.

"The effort from Billy, given he's only done a couple of training sessions, was outstanding," Jones said.

"Maybe it's helped him having his wife here, so we're going to make sure his wife stays next week."

'George Ford was spectacular'

The absence of George Ford in the starting XV was the major talking point after the team announcement on Thursday, with the fly-half named among the replacements for the quarter-final.

Instead, captain Owen Farrell started at 10, with Henry Slade and Manu Tuilagi the centres.

The choice to include Slade, who had not played more than a half of rugby in five months because of a knee injury, seemed to be justified when the Exeter back placed a kick perfectly to set up May's second try.

Ford came off the bench in the 61st minute and the Australian said his performance was "spectacular".

"We were pleased with the selection," Jones added. "Slade did a great job and Ford came on and filled his job superbly.

"I did not drop Ford, I changed his role and it was brilliant. Are we vindicated? We're happy that he played his role well. Modern rugby is a 23-man game.

"Whether he plays 10 next week, we're not sure."

Analysis - a phenomenal England machine

Former England scrum-half Matt Dawson on Radio 5 Live: "We saw a phenomenal England machine. But I cannot believe anyone would do that and hand it to you like today. It was rugby suicide from Australia.

"England can improve, be more accurate. They gave six penalties away in the first half. There is room for improvement, but what England will get is that it was a genuine test, that brought them into this tournament. They won't train a lot this week, mentally they will be right for next weekend."

'We've gone up a gear - what the players said'

England captain Owen Farrell: "I thought Australia made that a brilliant game. They attacked throughout but our boys did well in defence and managed to get some field position off the back of it. We know when we have field position we can be pretty dangerous.

"We did what was needed. We had the lead and Australia were throwing everything at us again. We wanted to play the game at our pace and we did that in the second half.

England scrum-half Ben Youngs: "Australia play the way they play, you know they will chuck it about and they caused us problems.

We stuck in there, the key point was midway in the second half on our line when we pushed them back, pushed them back. We were probably cruising in second gear in those first few games, but we went through the gears today."

England centre Henry Slade: "There were a couple of sticky periods either side of the half-time but the heart the boys showed then was massive. The way we dug our heels in and then moved on is a great sign for the boys.

"It was a really good performance and result, we can rest up now, watch the other three games and prepare for the semi-finals."

Social media reaction - 'Very impressive England'

Former England centre Mike Tindall: Well played England, been asking for a performance that leaves the fans going 'we can win this!' Think that was pretty close!

Former England hooker Brian Moore: Very good performance by England. Most impressive aspects of the win were the decision-making and game management - mostly spot on.

You win a World Cup quarter-final by sticking 40 points on a team and people start talking - of what might be, of where all this might end. People look forward and people start to dream.

Which is why the most important stuff that was said in the aftermath of England's 40-16 win over Australia came from captain Owen Farrell, as he held his team in a huddle out on the Oita pitch long after the end of it all.

"It's low-key, this. It's 40 points - 40 points! Don't let it take anything out of you, this game. Because it was a brilliant performance, and it's coming again next week. And it's going to be even better."

Farrell has always been preternaturally mature, red-blooded when the tackles come flying in but cold and unencumbered by fear and doubt in those little silent moments when others wobble and crack.

And so he held on to what plenty of other Englishmen were letting go and letting fly. A big step forward but one that must be followed by others. Keep something back, because a quarter-final on its own is nothing to define a career.

The thousands of white-shirted England fans streaming back towards the cramped bars and ramen-shops of Oita and Beppu were skipping into next week all the same. A 24-point margin of victory is England's biggest in a World Cup knockout game. Never before have Australia lost so heavily at this stage or beyond. Only once before have they lost to England by so great a margin.

Forty points feels like domination. It sounds one-sided. So perhaps the most impressive aspect of England's victory was that they pulled it off as much by keeping the Wallabies at bay as by ripping them apart.

England had only a third of the possession and about the same of territory. Yet only for a few brief moments at the start of the second half, when Marika Koroibete skinned Elliot Daly on the outside like a big brother breezing past his kid cousin, did they ever look in any sort of trouble.

World champions New Zealand have made a habit of winning without too much of the ball. It is about striking when you have it rather than holding on when it's slow and sideways.

England absorbed all Australia could throw at them, which was a significant amount in the early minutes of each half. In two separate spells they felled gold-shirted runners with the sort of relentless enjoyment that makes ornery defence coaches dab away a happy tear.

The stats by the end were remarkable in any game, let alone one won by 26 points. Twenty tackles from Sam Underhill, 18 from Mako Vunipola. 17 by Jamie George, and Farrell.

No England player in World Cup history had ever made more than 16 in a single game. Tom Curry made 16 and only just sneaked into the top five in this match.

Farrell was right. It was a brilliant performance, way more comprehensive than England's win over the same opponents at the same stage in Marseille 12 years ago, less nervous than the quarter-final win over Wales on the march to the glory four years further back.

The grinds past France in the semi-finals of 2003 and 2007 were glorious feats of cussedness and game control. This was quicker and nastier and considerably more relaxing in its final quarter.

It was also not flawless. They gave away six penalties in the first half, which allowed Christian Lealiifano to keep his team in touch when their adventurous, frenetic approach kept presenting England with the most generous of offerings.

This was a team that England had beaten six times on the bounce. In each of the past three years they have also put at least 18 second-half points on Michael Cheika's men.

For all their ambition, this was a Wallabies team who lacked the ability to play the old-fashioned cavalier Aussie way that Cheika demanded.

Sometimes a straightforward kick-exit is a good idea. Sometimes tucking the ball under your arm and waiting a little longer is better than flinging it about with wide-eyed hope, particularly when your first-choice scrum-half is slowing too much possession down by taking two steps before each pass.

If you were able to choose a route to a World Cup semi-final you would happily take one that took in Tonga, USA, a 14-man Argentina and a team you have repeatedly cantered past.

But there was so much that was right that the All Blacks roadblock ahead next Saturday suddenly looks as enticing as it does intimidating.

Curry and Underhill, aged 21 and 23 respectively, have just 30 caps between then. David Pocock and Michael Hooper, 31 and 27, have a combined total of 182. It was the kamikaze kids who won that battle, just as Farrell's display - eight from eight off the tee, a pass of sweet timing to send Kyle Sinckler crashing away in Manu Tuilagi fashion for the score that stopped the comeback dead in its tracks - justified Eddie Jones' decision to drop George Ford to the bench and shift his skipper inside.

The only mistake Curry made all day was attempting to shake the hand of the Japanese woman presenting him with his man-of-the-match champagne. If he keeps this level up there will be plenty of others happy to bow down to him.

Farrell has now scored 154 points against Australia, more than other northern hemisphere player. The previous record was held by Jonny Wilkinson, and we all remember how that ended.

This is an English tight five that can do all the great things that old English tight fives could do, and carry and step and power as others would never have imagined. There is speed and menace on the wings in Jonny May and Anthony Watson and a depth on the bench that promises more still.

Farrell grew up in rugby and matured in its heart. He understands, as does anyone who watched the world champions' demolition of Ireland, what could yet go wrong. He knows, more importantly, what must come next.

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