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School booted for D-III success gets Div. I invite

Published in Breaking News
Friday, 04 October 2019 12:29

MINNEAPOLIS -- A Division III school that was "involuntarily" removed from its league because it was too dominant has been invited to make the jump to Division I athletics.

The University of St. Thomas, which was expelled from the Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference in May for "competitive" reasons, has received an invite to join the Summit League, a Division I mid-major conference, officials announced Friday.

Schools are barred from making the leap from Division III to Division I by NCAA rules, but St. Thomas has applied for a waiver. If granted, the school would begin to compete in the Summit League in 2021, following its final two years in the MIAC.

The fate of its football team has not been determined, however, since the Summit League does not sponsor the sport. North Dakota State, a seven-time FCS champion, plays football in the Missouri Valley Conference while its other sports, including men's and women's basketball, compete in the Summit League.

The Star Tribune reported St. Thomas is exploring the possibility of joining the Pioneer League or the Missouri Valley Conference, where four Summit League members -- North Dakota State, Western Illinois, South Dakota and South Dakota State -- currently compete. North Dakota, another Summit League member, will join the Missouri Valley Conference in football next year.

In May, MIAC officials threatened to disband the league if St. Thomas remained a member. The school has won six MIAC championships since 2010. The Tommies are 1-0 in league play after winning their first conference game, a 74-14 victory over Hamline University on Sept. 21.

"After extensive membership discussions, the University of St. Thomas will be involuntarily removed from membership in the Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference," the league said in a statement then. "The MIAC Presidents' Council cites athletic competitive parity in the conference as a primary concern. St. Thomas will begin a multi-year transition immediately and meanwhile is eligible to compete as a full member of the MIAC through the end of spring 2021."

The move to Division I will require a substantial investment from St. Thomas. Right now, St. Thomas spends about $1.1 million on football, per Department of Education data. South Dakota State ($4.1 million) and North Dakota State ($5.6 million) dwarf that number.

St. Thomas would become the second Division I football program in the state along with the Minnesota Golden Gophers, which could create a local rivalry between the two schools.

"Joining the Summit League would be a unique and exciting opportunity for St. Thomas, allowing us to significantly expand our impact and reach," Julie H. Sullivan, the school's president, said in a statement. "It is a strong Midwest Division I conference that includes both public and private competitors. Under the direction of Commissioner Tom Douple, the conference has grown in strength and success over the past several years."

Redskins tab McCoy over Haskins, ailing Keenum

Published in Breaking News
Friday, 04 October 2019 12:06

Washington Redskins coach Jay Gruden said Colt McCoy will start at quarterback Sunday against the New England Patriots.

McCoy has been inactive so far this season as he recovers from multiple surgeries to repair a fractured right fibula.

The 10-year veteran is 7-20 in career starts, and has a win over the Patriots (in 2010, while with the Cleveland Browns).

Case Keenum, who has started every game this season for the winless Redskins, is in a protective boot and has not practiced this week. He injured his foot in Week 3 against the Bears.

Rookie first-round pick Dwayne Haskins came on in relief for an ineffective Keenum against the New York Giants last week and struggled.

Andrea Lovotti showed "crass stupidity" when he was sent off for a tip-tackle in Italy's defeat by South Africa at the World Cup, says coach Conor O'Shea.

Lovetti was dismissed in the 42nd minute for his part in picking up the Springboks' Duane Vermeulen and dropping him headfirst to the floor.

Italy were trailing 17-3 but were close to their opponents' line before the red, but went on to lose 49-3.

"I'm destroyed for everybody because we worked so hard," O'Shea said.

"At 17-3, we had to hang in and do something and we get to the start of the second half, we're close to the line and then just crass stupidity.

"We are hurting massively because we came here to show our best and we didn't get that opportunity in the second half.

"I thought the boys fought valiantly but when you're down in numbers against a great side, it's just impossible."

A win would have seen Italy progress to the knockout stage but defeat leaves them likely needing to beat two-time defending champions New Zealand in their final pool game to go through.

Lovotti's dismissal came when both he and team-mate Nicola Quaglio lifted number eight Vermeulen at a ruck, and O'Shea said both of his players could have been sent off.

"It was just a stupid act," he added.

"You plan for a lot of things in rugby, but you can't plan for that. Andrea is more destroyed than us, but we are all destroyed."

Erasmus plays down Kolbe injury

Winger Cheslin Kolbe impressed again for South Africa, scoring two of the Springboks' seven tries.

"He played a wonderful game on attack and defence," South Africa coach Rassie Erasmus said.

"He must be one of the best players in the world, along with [New Zealand's] Sevu Reece and Damian McKenzie that have that X-factor to create something from nothing."

Kolbe limped off late in the second half after twisting his ankle in a tackle but Erasmus played down injury fears.

"His ankle is fine, he did roll it a bit and with a minute left, even having used all our substitutes, we thought it was best to get him off the field," he said.

WP Nel is the shape of a boulder and is just as hard to move, not so much in a physical sense, but in an emotional sense.

We are now at the point where players at this World Cup have been away from home for so long that some of them may be forgetting what normal life really feels like. Take Nel, for instance. He's got a wife and three kids back in Edinburgh. Henre is nine and will turn 10 next week. That's a birthday he's missing.

Then there's Arabella who is five and Kayla, the baby, only born in the middle of July. Not that he would want to consider this for too long but if Nel added the number of days wee Kayla has been in this world and subtracted the number of days he's been in training camps or out here in Japan then the reality is that he's been away from her for half her life.

So while we probe about the loss to Ireland and the damage it wreaked and the victory over Samoa and the relief it brought and the upcoming must-win games against Russia and against Japan, there is something else that's relevant in all of this and that's the psychological battle the fathers of young kids go through while living in this rugby cocoon.

Nel was asked about this on Friday. It's fair to say that he didn't exactly break down in tears at the mention of his absent family, but that's not to say that this stuff isn't another thing professional rugby players have to handle. It is. Some might be out of form or out of favour or missing home, but they still have to deal with those emotions like they don't exist. No visible signs of gloominess are encouraged in this environment.

"The mental battle is always there," he says. "You miss your family, you want them around you, but as a team we are close together and we are helping each other. Sometimes phone calls home can be difficult. The kids are getting emotional, it's getting long (the time away) but it's our job. Back home, even if you are a weekend away its tough for the kids. They don't like it, but you somehow need to get around it. It's part of the game. That's why you're playing - for the family and for the team around you.

"The next game is on Wednesday so they'll (Henre and Arabella) probably be in school. The Samoa was game on Monday but I know my boy will probably have watched it about 10 times by now, he will probably say to me what I did wrong.

"I'll need to bring them back presents. I need to empty my cases and put some stuff in there. I have got the list on my phone, a big list. It's all the way from cars to dolls."

Nel can't allow himself to dream about home just yet, not when we are now in the heart of the tournament from a Scotland perspective. Two pool games played, two pool games left. Russia first.

Russia getting 'better and better'

"With every game they have got better and better," says Nel of a side coached by the Welsh veteran Lyn Jones. "The have a good forward pack. If you see how they prepared they were for Ireland then you know that they are a well coached side and we need to be ready for them and we need to take our game plan and execute it. Their tighthead (Kirill Gotovtsev, who has also represented Russia in wrestling and bobsleigh) is playing well and is the anchor of the scrum. You can see that everything revolves around him at scrum-time. He will be a big factor for us in our preparation."

The rugby world is counting the days to Scotland playing Japan in what could be one of the most dramatic days in this tournament.

The first wave of Japanese journalists turned up at Scotland's press conference on Friday. Wave after wave will follow. They continue to carry with them an absolute reverence for Greig Laidlaw, as if he's some kind of modern day amalgam of Gareth Edwards, Nick Farr-Jones and Joost van der Westhuizen.

The fixation that dates four years to when the scrum-half starred against Japan in the last World Cup and then carried on in the summer of 2016 when Japan were looking like they might beat the Scots in Tokyo only for Laidlaw to come off the bench to save the day.

Before they both go to Yokohama there's business to be done. Russia will be surely be put away with a bonus point in Shizuoka but the evidence so far is that they'll take a bit of breaking down before the tries come. On the opening night of the World Cup, Japan only claimed their all-important fourth try against the Russians in the 68th minute. Jones's team were then dealt some cruel blows, literally, against Samoa who had two players sin-binned in the first half when it's now been acknowledged that the pair of them should have been sent-off. What a difference it may have made to the final score had Russia been playing against 13 men for more than 40 minutes.

Even against Ireland, they denied them a bonus point score until the 61st minute. They'd held the Irish scoreless for 25 minutes at that point. They shipped five tries and 35 points in the end, but they frustrated Joe Schmidt's team no end. Russia couldn't score, but they never stopped battling.

Scotland's forwards coach, Danny Wilson, is a Welshman and knows Jones well. "Russia are a very good defensive team, their contact area defence is a real handful," says Wilson. "Lyn will be heavily involved in that.

"They have grown throughout the tournament and we'll have to be right on top of our game to deal with that. Lyn is a very clever coach. We did a lot of our coach education at the same time and he's one of the brains of the game in my opinion. I'm sure he'll have something up his sleeve.

"At times they frustrated Ireland and I think they turned them over eight times, and five of those were around the breakdown. So we know what's coming. We're not seeing past that game at the moment. In the back of your mind you do need to prepare for a short turnaround to play Japan, but we won't be taking this first challenge lightly. It's one we relish."

Saturday marks their 114th day in camp since the summer. A veritable eternity with the most pressurised day of all, still more than a week away. Success rides on staying focused amid this rugby marathon.

Ally Financial Extends Pact With Hendrick Motorsports

Published in Racing
Friday, 04 October 2019 08:18

CONCORD, N.C. – Ally Financial has extended its full-season primary sponsorship of Hendrick Motorsports and the No. 48 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 team for three more years through the 2023 season.

The agreement all but guarantees that seven-time Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson will finish his full-time NASCAR career with Ally as his primary sponsor. Johnson, who is signed with Hendrick Motorsports through 2020, will announce his future plans at a later date.

On Oct. 28, 2018, it was announced that Ally would become the sole primary sponsor of Johnson and his No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports team in 2019 and 2020. This season, the leading digital financial services company has executed numerous marketing campaigns around the program.

“Our first year with Jimmie and the team at Hendrick Motorsports has been phenomenal,” said Andrea Brimmer, Ally’s chief marketing and public relations officer. “Jimmie’s the ultimate competitor, and Ally is proud to support him and the rest of the No. 48 team. We are thrilled to extend our contract and build on the incredible momentum we’ve established. This sponsorship goes way beyond just putting our logo on the car. It’s built on our shared values for doing right in the communities we race in, while growing our brand with passionate, new audiences. We look forward to many more exciting laps together.”

Ally is a leading digital financial services provider. Ally is also one of the largest auto financing companies in the United States.

“Ally’s values are our values,” said Rick Hendrick, owner of 12-time NASCAR Cup Series champions Hendrick Motorsports. “Working with integrity, being accountable to one another, and leading in both the workplace and in our communities are all core beliefs that we share. This is a tremendous relationship on many levels, and to see it have success and grow so quickly is truly meaningful. Jimmie sets the standard and is a wonderful representative for Ally. Today is a great day for all of us.”

Johnson, 44, has seven Cup Series titles, which include five straight from 2006-2010. That record is equaled only by NASCAR legends Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt. In 2009, Johnson became the first race car driver to be named Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year, joining the likes of Muhammad Ali, Michael Jordan and Tom Brady. The El Cajon, Calif., native has earned 83 points-paying race wins and led nearly 19,000 career laps.

“The energy Ally has brought to the No. 48 team, Hendrick Motorsports and the sport of NASCAR is contagious,” Johnson said. “They have embraced our fans, activated their program in unique ways and supported me at every turn, from racing my No. 48 car every week to running the Boston Marathon. It’s a true bond – not just a business transaction. We care about each other’s success. I’m proud to be associated with Ally and can’t wait to see what they do in the future.”

USAC Confirms Dates For 2020 Winter Dirt Games

Published in Racing
Friday, 04 October 2019 08:23

OCALA, Fla. – The United States Auto Club has confirmed that the USAC NOS Energy Drink National Midget Series and USAC AMSOIL National Sprint Car Series will both begin the 2020 season at Florida’s Bubba Raceway Park.

The USAC NOS Energy Drink National Midget Series season will begin on Feb. 7-8 at the three-eighths-mile D-shaped dirt track, with a practice day scheduled for Feb. 6.

Action will continue at Bubba Raceway Park on Feb. 13-15 with three nights of racing featuring the USAC AMSOIL National Sprint Car Series, with a practice day slated for Feb. 12.

The USAC NOS Energy Drink National Midgets made their debut at Bubba Raceway Park in 2018 with Tyler Courtney sweeping a pair of features. Meanwhile, USAC AMSOIL National Sprint Cars saw three different winners in as many nights during their Sunshine State trip with races won by Chris Windom, Justin Grant and C.J. Leary.

“Winter Dirt Games in February is one of USAC’s best traditions and is always one of our most looked-forward-to events,” said Levi Jones, USAC Series Coordinator.  “Last year was a thrilling two weekends with the addition of Midgets to the lineup and it’s made this great event even greater.  What a way to open up the season under the sunshine with both Midget and Sprint Car racing.”

“This has become a must-see event that everybody circles on their calendars,” said Bubba Raceway Park owner Tom Bean.  “We thoroughly enjoy the USAC fans and race teams that make the trip to Bubba Raceway Park each year for the Winter Dirt Games, and in 2020, the tradition continues while getting even bigger and better with two premier USAC divisions on board again.  We can’t wait to get the 2020 season started in a big way.”

WoO & CBS Sports Confirm TV Schedule

Published in Racing
Friday, 04 October 2019 08:51

CONCORD, N.C. — The World of Outlaws and CBS Sports Network have announced the schedule for this season’s broadcast package, featuring both the World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Car Series and the World of Outlaws Morton Buildings Late Models.

The series premiere will be Sunday, Oct. 6, with back-to-back airings of both nights of the 41st annual AGCO Jackson Nationals at Jackson Speedway.

The full schedule includes 16 different races from tracks across the country.

“This has been an incredible year for us, and for the sport, as we have significantly ramped up our efforts to bring dirt racing to fans far and wide through all mediums, including CBS Sports Network’s doubled coverage,” said World of Outlaws CEO Brian Carter. “Last year, we put Fairbury Speedway’s legendary Prairie Dirt Classic on national television for the very first time, and this year fans will be able to enjoy the Jackson Nationals, the Champion Racing Oil National Open, and the Gold Cup Race of Champions for the first time in years.”

While the schedule will maintain the crown jewel events from year’s past — the Kings Royal at Ohio’s Eldora Speedway, the Firecracker at Pennsylvania’s Lernerville Speedway and the Can-Am World Finals at The Dirt Track at Charlotte (N.C.) — new tracks this year include Jackson (Minn.) Speedway, California’s Silver Dollar Speedway, and Pennsylvania’s Williams Grove Speedway.

CBS Sports Network will air 16 races in total, covering 10 World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Car Series races and six World of Outlaws Morton Buildings Late Model Series races.

Events will air on Sundays from Oct. 6 through Jan. 19, with the exception of Thanksgiving Week.

CBS Sports Network World of Outlaws Broadcast Schedule

Sunday, Oct. 6 – AGCO Jackson Nationals Prelim at Jackson Speedway – 5:00 PM

Sunday, Oct. 6 – AGCO Jackson Nationals Finale at Jackson Speedway – 5:30 PM

Sunday, Oct. 13 – Firecracker Prelim at Lernerville Speedway – 5:30 PM

Sunday, Oct. 20 – Firecracker 100 at Lernerville Speedway – 2:30 PM

Sunday, Oct. 27 – Knight before the Kings Royal at Eldora Speedway – 7:30 PM

Sunday, Nov. 3 – Kings Royal at Eldora Speedway – 7:30 PM

Sunday, Nov. 10 – Prairie Dirt Classic Night #1 at Fairbury Speedway – 7:30 PM

Sunday, Nov. 17 – Prairie Dirt Classic Finale at Fairbury Speedway – 7:30 PM

Sunday, Dec. 1 – Gold Cup Race of Champions Opener at Silver Dollar Speedway – 7:30 PM

Sunday, Dec. 8 – Gold Cup Race of Champions Finale at Silver Dollar Speedway – 7:30 PM

Sunday, Dec. 15 – Champion Racing Oil National Open Opener at Williams Grove Speedway – 7:30 PM

Sunday, Dec. 22 –  Champion Racing Oil National Open Finale at Williams Grove Speedway – 7:30 PM

Sunday, Dec. 29 – Can-Am World Finals Night #1- Late Models – 7:30 PM

Sunday, Jan. 5 – Can-Am World Finals Night #2- Late Models – 6:30 PM

Sunday, Jan. 12 – Can-Am World Finals Night #1- Sprint Cars – 6:30 PM

Sunday, Jan. 19 – Can-Am World Finals Night #2 – Sprint Cars – 6:30 PM

Danny Dietrich: A Clear Mind Equals Winning

Published in Racing
Friday, 04 October 2019 09:00

In his 10th season of driving Gary Kauffman’s No. 48 car, Pennsylvania’s Danny Dietrich is one of the leading 410 sprint car winners in the country.

Dietrich and Kauffman are one of the longest-standing owner-driver combinations in all of sprint car racing, and the experience and longevity of the operation were on full display as the team enjoyed its best season this year.

Dietrich was very comfortable in a new Maxim chassis and his focus was better. He was more patient, saving his equipment to have a better race car at the end of features.

At the end of August, Dietrich was the leading 410 sprint car feature winner in the country with 14 visits to victory lane.

“I think overall it’s my best year,” Dietrich said. “Whether it’s my best money year, I don’t know yet. The season’s not over. The best money year was 2015. We won the National Open at the end of the year and a $10,000-to-win race at Susquehanna.”

Dietrich has been fast no matter where he raced this year, posting victories at seven different tracks including three outside of Central Pennsylvania.

With a fast race car and experienced crew, it didn’t matter where they showed up to race.

“Everybody’s got their jobs and everybody knows what to do on the race car, so I can focus on racing,” Dietrich said. “The communication with (crew chief) Jake Strignoli has been huge. My nephew coming to be the tire guy has taken a lot of pressure and time spent doing tires off of the two of us. We can more or less focus on the car and where I can hit my marks on the race track.”

Dietrich is more comfortable with everything and everyone around him this year. He believes those are some of the keys to his success.

“Jelling so well with the crew and Gary doesn’t put any pressure on us as a team. You’re able to roam around and race where you want to with confidence and I think that has a lot to do with it,” Dietrich explained.

The new Maxim chassis fits Dietrich’s driving style.

“I’m more comfortable this year with the taller cage,” Dietrich said. “I feel safer than I ever have and I have to thank Maxim for that. They went to bat and helped build a car that we worked on years ago. They made this thing work better and adjust for my likings and I think it shows.”

During the offseason, the 31-year-old from Gettysburg, Pa., made some personal improvements he believes have translated to the race track.

“After the first of the year, you set some goals, I think everybody does, and one of my goals was cutting back on some of the bad things you do in life,” Dietrich said. “Getting to the gym, getting in better shape, getting my mind a little better; I had some concussions and wasn’t thinking clearly the second half of the year last year.”

His mind is more clear this season.

“I quit drinking and got to the gym,” Dietrich said. “Not that drinking was a lot but sometimes you’re coming home you’re having three or four drinks, you don’t realize it, but if you can cut them out it makes a big impact on your mental performance. Getting to the gym and getting my physical health back. I think it all played into this.”

Dietrich has become a more patient driver, saving his equipment for the second half of races. This patience has helped him win some races.

“I think that’s part of thinking better and having your head on straight and being more focused on business and getting the job done rather than having a bad attitude or the wrong attitude going into a weekend,” Dietrich said.

Dietrich is one of the sport’s most outspoken drivers.

“I’m trying to grow up as a sprint car driver,” he said. “That’s kind of hard sometimes. You get a little hot-headed. Sometimes you have to be. You have to get your point across. You have to set an example, not just for yourself, but for all drivers. It isn’t always about standing up for me, it’s about standing up for us as teams whether you’re supporting sanctioning bodies or local race tracks.”

LAS VEGAS -- Jim Breus is standing in front of T-Mobile Arena, home of the Vegas Golden Knights, dangling a large, plush-toy shark from a stick, with a noose tied around its tail. Nearby, another stuffed shark is impaled on a medieval sword, and a mini plush mako has been repurposed as a chew toy for a Sin City canine.

The message was clear: Not even stuffed animals were safe from the searing rage Knights fans felt toward their team's newly-cemented archrival, the San Jose Sharks.

"I was born and raised here in Vegas. We never had pro sports. And this team is the best thing that's ever happened to this town," he said of the Golden Knights. "The way we got kicked out of the playoffs last year at the end ... it was an accident. It was a fluke. And now, we're pissed."

Breus is referencing the phantom major penalty for cross-checking called on Vegas center Cody Eakin in Game 7 of the Golden Knights' first-round series against San Jose. With 9:13 left in the third period, and the Knights leading a seemingly lifeless Sharks team 3-0, then-Sharks center Joe Pavelski stumbled to the ice after a faceoff, smacked his head and began bleeding profusely. The officials judged that Eakin caused the calamity and issued him a five-minute major penalty along with an ejection. San Jose would score four power-play goals within those five minutes, and go on to eliminate Vegas in overtime.

Do you know how to tell when the NHL realizes that one of its teams has been totally jobbed by a blown call? When the league literally rewrites the rulebook to make sure that it doesn't happen again, which is what the NHL did by expanding video review to all major penalties this offseason -- as well as apologizing to the Knights for the officiating mistake.

"The problem is, just like with the Saints, it was already over," said Vegas defenseman Nate Schmidt, referencing the missed call that cost New Orleans a Super Bowl berth last season and convinced the NFL to make pass interference calls reviewable on instant replay. "I'm glad that they changed it. You know, refs are humans. They make mistakes. It's not like they're any different than we are when we make a turnover. They don't want to be wrong. If you look back, I bet those guys felt awful."

None of this was solace for the Golden Knights fans who arrived for opening night with vengeance on their minds. Like Tony Miceli, who has a T-shirt with the word "TRAVESTY" written on it above the time of the Eakins penalty. (Please note that Sharks fans have their own shirts that list the power-play goals.)

"This has gotta be the No. 1 rivalry, based on what happened last year," he said.

Rivalries aren't supposed to look like this anymore in the NHL. Not in a league where fighting is at an all-time low and violence has been superseded by skill. Not at a time when the animosity between teams is superficial at best, and when pure hatred between franchises has gone missing.

"It's not missing anymore," said Vegas Golden Knights winger Ryan Reaves. "It's here."


Hate is a strong word, but one used liberally among the Sharks and Knights to describe their rivalry.

The Knights have faced the Sharks in consecutive postseasons, eliminating them in 2018 and then getting eliminated by them in 2019. In other words, Vegas has had playoff smackdowns against San Jose in both years of the franchise's existence. When the Knights were born, many assumed the Los Angeles Kings would be their biggest rival, mainly because of geography. But instead it's the Sharks, and it's not even close.

"When you play a team a few times in the playoffs, that's when you develop that hate a little bit," said Knights goalie Marc-Andre Fleury. "Between ourselves, and from the fans."

Fleury compared the growing animosity between the Knights and Sharks to what he witnessed when he played for Pittsburgh Penguins, as their feud with the Washington Capitals escalated. It's a flattering comparison, as the Sidney Crosby vs. Alex Ovechkin wars were arguably the hottest rivalry in sports for a while. It's also a fair comparison, aesthetically: T-Mobile Arena is littered with signs disparaging the Sharks, not unlike Capitals fans placing stickers bearing Crosby's face in the bottom of urinals at Capital One Arena.

"It just makes the game more interesting. More exciting. It's good," said Fleury of the rivalry.

Vegas forward Max Pacioretty saw his share of rivalries, too, while playing for the Montreal Canadiens.

"It's similar to Montreal and Boston," he said. "It seemed like there was a line brawl or a goalie fight each and every shift. This seems more like two really skilled teams. When there are times to be physical, it's there. But there are also times to play offensive. Both teams know when the other is slipping and they take advantage of it.

"This rivalry's up there. In game where there's not as many fights as there used to be, it's found its way to be pretty entertaining and physical and emotional. It definitely helps that our fan base has latched onto it and had a lot of fun with it. It seems each and every game it builds more and more."

That extends to games that don't even matter. The Sharks and Knights combined for 114 penalty minutes in a preseason game on Sept. 29, including six misconduct penalties and a fight between Valentin Zykov of the Knights (career penalty minutes: 4) and Sharks winger Evander Kane.

"It's never an exhibition game when these two teams play," said Kane.

That was also the game in which Kane earned a three-game suspension from the NHL for abuse of officials. Vegas defenseman Deryk Engelland held Kane's stick following a hit. Engelland cross-checked Kane, and Kane responded with a slash that appeared to also make contact with linesman Kiel Murchison. As Kane skated back up the ice, Murchison grabbed the front of Kane's jersey, apparently trying to prevent an escalation with Engelland, and they tumbled down to the ice.

"I get kicked out of the game for getting jumped from behind by a referee. I've never seen a ref take five strides," he said after the 5-1 defeat. "If you look at his face, he's getting all this power and he's trying to drive me into the ice, which is what he did. That's unbelievable. Talk about abuse of an official? How about abuse of a player? It's an absolute joke," said Kane.

The Knights found humor in it, too, but for different reasons. They turned Kane into a punchline on opening night, even though he was out of the lineup. The fans booed his image during a highlight montage. One fan created a sign that mimicked the back of a milk carton and read: "HAVE YOU SEEN ME? LAST SEEN WHINING UNDER A LINESMAN."

"Very disappointed" Reaves said, his voice dripping with sarcasm, of being denied an opportunity to face Kane. "It's too bad. Would have been nice to see him out there,"

The rivalry between Reaves and Kane is the molten core of their teams' feud and might be the most intense individual rivalry in hockey. They hated each other in the Western Hockey League, when Kane was with the Vancouver Giants and Reaves with the Brandon Wheat Kings. They hated each other when Kane was with the Buffalo Sabres and Reaves was an enforcer with the St. Louis Blues. They would jab at each other and jaw at each other -- Kane once called Reaves the team's "babysitter." Last postseason, they finally dropped the gloves ...

... and Kane continued the fight in the media, calling Reaves "the Muffin Man" and wondering if he "lost a bit of his allure" as a tough guy and saying that Reaves was less a hockey player than a professional wrestler in waiting. "For a guy who plays three-and-a-half-to-four minutes a night, he sure does a lot of talking. I think he thinks it's the WWE. He's probably going to end up there pretty soon with the way his game looks," he said.

Reaves took advantage of the suspension to get his shots in at Kane.

"Poor Evander. So tragic," he said. "He's weak. He gets taken down by a ref. It happens. Gotta get in the gym, no?"

Great rivalries feature these individual grudges. Sometimes they last as long as the rivalry does, and then players move on.

Pacioretty knows this better than anyone. In 2011, Zdeno Chara rammed him into a stanchion near the benches. Pacioretty was stretchered off the ice. Canadiens fans were so enraged that some called the local police to report Chara for assault. But they've spoken through the years, and Pacioretty said Chara has apologized for the hit.

"In the moment, it's a heated rivalry. Whatever it takes to fight for your team, you're going to do so," he said.

Could Kane and Reaves find that solace one day?

"We haven't liked each other for a long time," said Reaves. "I don't think me and Kane are getting a beer any time soon."

Their fans, on the other hand, have shared a few.


The bars around T-Mobile Arena on Wednesday night were filled with Knights fans and Sharks fans imbibing together, playing some cornhole and ribbing each other. Some rivalries manifest in fights in the stands. This one was decidedly more laid back -- and strangely costumed. Not just the Elvis impersonators taking photos with fans --- because Vegas, baby -- but the Knights fans who decided to wear their anger.

Fans like Pat Hudges. He's wearing a black-and-white-striped referee's shirt with a rubber shark's head draped over his own. He is sporting a large pair of sunglasses and a red and white cane. The joke is glaring as the Vegas sun.

"I think we all know it was a bad call at the end of the game. So this is a play off of what everyone didn't see," he said. And how do Sharks fans react to his getup? "There's confusion. And then they're wondering if the refs will be supporting us this time."

Hudges is doing an interview with a local TV affiliate when a man in a Sharks jersey walks by and hands him a business card. On one side: a photo of Sharks forward Barclay Goodrow scoring the series-winning goal in overtime to eliminate the Knights. On the other side, these words: "San Jose 5. Las Vegas 4. Final OT. Thanks for the memories."

Arthur Cardoza gave out stacks of these cards on opening night, to appreciative Sharks fans and ... less-than-appreciative Knights fans. "I've met some Knights fans that get it. But then there are some blind Knights fans, just like there are blind fans for every team," he said. "Hockey is all about the spirit of the game. All of these Knights fans? I respect them for their fan base. I would never attack them personally. But your team is s---, and they don't know the struggle," he continued. "The only reason I made those cards was [because of] the backlash against the refs, saying they cost them the game. No! [Coach] Gerard Gallant should have called a timeout after that second goal. Game got tied up. Everything that happened prior to that is now irrelevant."

An unlikely source agrees with Cardoza's take: Vegas defenseman Nate Schmidt, who got over the anguish of Game 7 by coming to the realization that his team's playoff defeat was caused by more than one terrible call and a penalty-killing collapse.

"I look at it a little bit broader than just one game," said Schmidt. "I thought we had chances to close that series, more than once, before that happened. If you put yourself in a situation where that can happen to you, you gotta be better than what you did. You win Game 6 at home, and you're never in that situation."

"We had chances," he continued. "We had chances to finish the job and we didn't. That's how I took it. I tried to make it a broader situation than to bring it down to one play, without trying to say 'Cody' ... 'five minutes' ... 'majors' ... 'all-you-can-eat power play' ... you get rid of all those words and you understand you lost that series for more than one reason."

Opening night offered a modicum of catharsis for Vegas and its fans. The Knights rolled the shorthanded Sharks -- without Kane or star defenseman Erik Karlsson, who missed the game for the birth of his daughter -- and skated away with an emphatic 4-1 win.

"We didn't want to give them too many in the first 10, and we gave them two goals," said Sharks captain Logan Couture. "And it's tough to come back in this building when you're down."

There were some intense moments, but the game was at a simmer rather than boiling over like some thought it could after that previous preseason game.

"This is what hockey needs, man. It doesn't have to be pure hatred. It doesn't have to be 'tomahawk the guy in the face' type of games. These are the type of storylines that make the games interesting and special and get the buzz back," said Schmidt before the game. "That's why a rivalry is a rivalry."

Another reason a rivalry is a rivalry? When one team absolutely despises losing to the other.

"Oh I hate [losing to the Golden Knights]," said Sharks center Tomas Hertl. "These are my favorite games. The fighting, the defense, I love these games. I'm just sad because it wasn't there, for myself [tonight]. I know I can do better."

It's not like there won't be a slew of other chances for redemption during the regular season and, potentially, in the playoffs for a third consecutive season.

"We know if we want to go far in the playoffs, we know we have to meet them," said Hertl.

Sarah Taylor was a genuine great, irrespective of gender

Published in Cricket
Friday, 04 October 2019 09:09

In August 2013, in an ODI against Australia at Hove, Sarah Taylor took what is still one of the best catches behind the stumps ever seen in international cricket, men's or women's - diving at full stretch to her left, after anticipating in a split second Jodie Fields' reverse sweep. The bowler, Dani Hazell, and the umpire, Ian Gould, could scarcely believe what they had just seen. The clip of the catch, posted on Twitter, instantly went viral on social media. That might not seem unusual today, but for the women's game six years ago it was an incredibly rare occurrence.

That catch and its aftermath sums up what Taylor - who a week ago announced her retirement from international cricket - has brought to the women's game. In a career spanning 13 years, which began in a different era - 2006 - her incredible keeping skills transcended the normal reach of the women's game, winning over many sceptics who did not previously believe that it was worthy of their attention. Last year Adam Gilchrist famously tweeted that Taylor was the best wicketkeeper in the world, male or female: those social media clips had done their job yet again.

It is a reflection of the state of cricket reporting in the twenty-first century that Taylor often grabbed headlines for her apparent ability to transition freely into the men's game. In October 2015 she became the first woman to play men's grade cricket in Australia; two and a half years earlier, a story about the possibility of her playing in the Sussex men's second XI made the front page of The Guardian. Mike Selvey's tribute to Taylor at the Cricket Writers' Club lunch on Tuesday summed up the situation: "she is the greatest female cricketer of all time," he said, "because she is the only one who could have held her own in the men's game". This was obviously meant as the ultimate compliment. Perhaps, though, the question we as journalists should be asking ourselves is why her world-class performances in the women's game did not garner the same levels of attention or prestige.

The incredible thing is that the majority of Taylor's international career - 158 of her 226 England appearances - took place at a time when central contracts did not exist for the England side. She did not have hours of top-level specialist coaching to hone her skills, either behind the stumps or in front of them. With Taylor it was all about natural talent, and the sheer insouciance at being able to pull off incredible feats while barely turning a hair. With the bat, she broke records at the start and end of her career: she retires having been part of England's two highest partnerships ever in international cricket, putting on 268 for the first wicket against South Africa at Lord's in 2008, and 275 for the second against the same opposition during the 2017 World Cup. The sweetness of her cover drive will remain long in the memory.

Even amidst difficult summers like the one which England Women have just experienced, when for the first time ever her automatic place in the starting XI came under scrutiny, she continued to provide social media fodder by pulling off a succession of leg-side stumpings, often standing up to the stumps - and, until the rules made wearing one compulsory, without a helmet - against the likes of Katherine Brunt or Anya Shrubsole. Her ability to make such a feat seem so commonplace meant that it was easy to take it for granted: in fact there are few other keepers in the history of the women's (or men's) game who would even attempt it. Unsurprisingly, nobody in women's cricket has ever effected more dismissals than Taylor's 232.

"It is a reflection of the state of cricket reporting in the twenty-first century that Taylor often grabbed headlines for her apparent ability to transition freely into the men's game"

The scrutiny on Taylor for the whole of her career, as the only household name in the side bar Charlotte Edwards, was at times immense. She took her first break from international cricket in 2010, spending time travelling in New Zealand, before returning the following year. Her performance at the 2013 World Cup in India, just days after the story about her playing for Sussex seconds had broken and with the eyes of the world looking on, included three consecutive ducks. As it turned out, below the insouciance lay something few had suspected: an anxiety disorder so crippling that in 2016 she found herself forced to take a second, 10-month break from cricket, unable to leave the house. Her subsequent bravery in speaking out about her condition has meant her legacy will extend far beyond just cricket, helping countless others who suffer similarly.

It is to the ECB's credit that she felt well enough supported to return to international cricket at all: coach Mark Robinson was there for her every step of the way, allowing her the option to sit out of certain tours or legs of tours, thus ensuring that she remained playing long enough to collect a World Cup winner's medal (the third global title of her career) in front of a home crowd at Lord's in 2017. Ironically Robinson's parting of ways with the ECB six weeks ago may well have hastened Taylor's decision to remove herself from the fray.

It is an understatement to say that Taylor will be missed - by the fans, no doubt, but also by England. Their reserve keeper, Amy Jones, will now make the step up as the permanent first choice behind the stumps; beyond that their options for reserves are scarce. Tammy Beaumont has not kept regularly even in domestic cricket for several years, and the only keeper remaining in the Academy, after Ellie Threlkeld was dispensed with last year, is 18-year-old Rhianna Southby, widely thought to be too young as yet to make the step up to full England duty.

For Taylor, though, this is the right time to go: her health must come first. "This has been a tough decision but I know it's the right one, for me and for my health moving forward," she said in the press release that accompanied her retirement. "I can't thank my team-mates enough, both past and present, and the ECB for being supporters and friends along my journey." Someone who has given us all so much joy should surely be allowed to bow out of the game when it no longer brings her that same enjoyment.

How should we as cricket fans reflect on Taylor's career? One small request, if I may: let's not valorise her as someone who almost, but not quite, "made it" in men's cricket. Instead, let's remember her as a player who was a superstar in her own right, and who along the way took our sport to new heights.

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