Top Ad
I DIG Radio
www.idigradio.com
Listen live to the best music from around the world!
I DIG Style
www.idigstyle.com
Learn about the latest fashion styles and more...
I Dig Sports

I Dig Sports

PHOTOS: All Stars 4-Crown Nationals

Published in Racing
Thursday, 03 October 2019 12:00

There was a talent exodus for the Winnipeg Jets this summer, leaving more questions than answers. Here's everything you need to know about the Jets heading into the 2019-20 NHL season:


The big question: Will Dustin Byfuglien return?

It feels like nothing in the Jets' offseason went well. Kyle Connor and Patrik Laine were the two important restricted free agents, and neither signed a deal by the start of training camp. The Jets traded one of their best defensemen, Jacob Trouba, to New York (they knew they likely wouldn't re-sign him) then saw another two blue-line regulars (Tyler Myers and Ben Chiarot) sign elsewhere in free agency.

And then on the eve of training camp, it was announced that top defenseman Dustin Byfuglien was taking a leave of absence from the team, reportedly to ponder his future. A team that looked like a juggernaut just one year ago is riddled with uncertainty.

Offseason comings and goings, cap situation

Byfuglien could return to the team. For now, he is technically suspended, which gives the team more financial flexibility. The list of free-agent departures is significant: Brandon Tanev, Myers, Trouba, Chiarot, Mark Dano, Matt Hendricks, Par Lindholm, Joe Morrow and Kevin Hayes (who was with the team only since the trade deadline). The Jets added forwards Andrei Chibisov, Gabriel Bourque, Mark Letestu plus defensemen Anthony Bitetto and Neal Pionk.

The Jets have $23 million in projected cap space (thanks in part to the Byfuglien suspension) but still need to sign Connor and Laine.

Bold prediction

Laine returns, and scores 50 goals. There have been plenty of rumors about Laine as his contract situation remains unresolved, including reports that he's disgruntled. What's not disputable is that Laine is one of the streakiest goal scorers in the NHL. And we think if he returns as a Jet, he'll get hot.

Breakout candidate: Neal Pionk

The 24-year-old, acquired from the Rangers in the Trouba trade, will get prime opportunity as a top-four defenseman. He's definitely a downgrade from Trouba, but Pionk's play will be particularly important for a depleted blue line.

Biggest strength

The first line. This is assuming Connor's contract situation gets resolved, of course. The chemistry among Connor, Mark Scheifele and Blake Wheeler is undeniable. They make up one of the most dangerous units in the league.

Biggest weakness

The defense. How crazy is it that a team that boasted perhaps the league's deepest blue line has now one of the league's weakest, all in the span of a few months. Depending on what happens with Byfuglien, the Jets could lose as much as two-thirds of their defensive unit from last season. It's hard to win with that type of turnover and replacements who are not as good.

Jets in NHL Rank

  • 27. Mark Scheifele, C

  • 29. Blake Wheeler, RW

Future Power Ranking: 14

Were it not for the somewhat barren prospect pipeline (No. 25), the Jets would've ranked even higher, as their ratings for NHL roster (No. 11), cap/contracts (No. 10) and owner/GM/coach (No. 14) were considerably better.

Prospect perspective

Pipeline ranking: 28

Prospects in top 100:

Fantasy facts to know

If management doesn't come to terms with restricted free agents Patrik Laine and/or Kyle Connor, the Jets will be forced to shuffle some bodies around up front. Winger Nikolaj Ehlers appears the early favorite to take over for Connor on the left side of Mark Scheifele and Blake Wheeler. There's little question Ehlers would likely challenge his career-best 64 points (2016-17) if that's how it shakes out.

Third-year skater Jack Roslovic is another one to watch if either Laine or Connor doesn't return, and perhaps even otherwise. Ready for his close-up, the 2015 first-round draft pick is coming off a 24-point campaign serving as a depth forward. The 22-year-old could start this season on the Jets' second scoring line.

Dustin Byfuglien potentially stepping away from the game, along with Jacob Trouba jetting earlier, sees the blue-line reins handed over to Josh Morrissey. The Jets' top defenseman, and undisputed member of their No. 1 power play, is easily facing down a campaign of better than 50 points. He's also going to shoot the puck more and play a ton of minutes. -- Victoria Matiash

The New York Rangers won the offseason, but landing Kaapo Kakko, Artemi Panarin and Jacob Trouba doesn't guarantee immediate success. Here's everything you need to know about the Rangers heading into the 2019-20 NHL season:


The big question: Is the rebuild over?

The Rangers infamously decided their winning window had closed in February 2018, as management parted with many familiar faces and stockpiled draft picks. Just 20 months later, is it possible they're back in the mix? An excited flurry of offseason moves has the Rangers at least relevant again. In the best-case scenario, the youngsters take a step forward and New York emerges as a dark-horse playoff team. More realistically, we see promise, but 2020-21 is when the Blueshirts actually level up.

Offseason comings and goings, cap situation

With the No. 2 pick of the draft, the Rangers selected dynamic scoring winger Kakko, an early favorite for the Calder Trophy. They also won free agency's top prize by signing Panarin to a seven-year, $81.5 million deal. New York's blue line improved with top-pairing defenseman Trouba (acquired via a trade with Winnipeg) while rookies Adam Fox and Libor Hajek will get the chance to prove themselves.

The Rangers said most of their big goodbyes at the trade deadline (Kevin Hayes, Mats Zuccarello, Adam McQuaid). Neal Pionk and Jimmy Vesey were traded over the summer. The team also bought out defenseman Kevin Shattenkirk. After inking restricted free agents Brendan Lemieux and Tony DeAngelo, New York has very little cap space.

Bold prediction

Kakko scores the most goals for a rookie since 2005-06, when Sidney Crosby scored 39 and Alex Ovechkin had 52. In that span, only Evgeni Malkin has topped 30. Kakko is only 18 years old but has already played with grown men -- and thrived. He put up 26 goals in 50 games in Finland's Liiga last season, then had an incredible World Championships performance, with six goals in 10 games playing against many NHLers.

Breakout candidate: Pavel Buchnevich

All eyes will be on Kakko on the right wing, but look for Buchnevich to take the next step. Buchnevich had 21 goals in just 64 games last season. He'll get a golden opportunity to up that total playing on the top line alongside Mika Zibanejad and Panarin.

Biggest strength

Youth. The Rangers are expected to have 13 players on the opening roster age 25 or younger. That includes some of their top prospects. After seeing significant action last season, New York is looking for improvements from 24-year-old Buchenvich, 23-year-old DeAngelo, 19-year-old Filip Chytil and 20-year-old Lias Andersson. Winger Vitali Kravtsov (19) will get a crack at the lineup, while Fox and Hajek (both 21) should get time on the blue line.

Biggest weakness

Center depth. Zibanejad has become a dependable and dynamic first-line center, and Rangers fans should be excited about the 26-year-old, who feels like he's just hitting his prime. But the guys stacked up behind him -- Chytil, Ryan Strome and Brett Howden -- won't intimidate many opponents.

Rangers in NHL Rank

  • 17. Panarin, LW

Future Power Ranking: 5

The Rangers landed in the top spot for prospects, No. 4 for cap and contracts and No. 10 for owner/GM/coach. However, they were dragged down by having the No. 20 ranked current roster.

Prospect perspective

Pipeline ranking: 1

Prospects in top 100:

Fantasy facts to know

Big upgrades on offense mean Panarin and Kakko will help lift all boats. If there is chemistry with Panarin, Zibanejad may be a top-30 fantasy play (He was almost top-50 last season without much help). Chris Kreider has sleeper potential depending on his role. And Buchnevich could finally break through on offense.

Trouba is going to announce his presence in a big way this season. Playing in the formidable shadow of Dustin Byfuglien for his entire career, Trouba takes over this Rangers team as the unquestioned leader on defense. Career highs should follow across the board.

With the outlook so positive for this Rangers team all of a sudden, what of the 37-year-old Henrik Lundqvist? Normally, you should run away screaming from goaltenders that reached adulthood prior to Y2K, but there might be something here. The only goaltenders to have solid fantasy seasons at Lundqvist's age are Hall of Famers (or soon-to-be Hall of Famers), such as Martin Brodeur, Dominik Hasek, Ed Belfour, Patrick Roy and Roberto Luongo. Lundqvist might be among the few whose name doesn't sound out of place with such a group. Don't count him out. -- Sean Allen

Veteran goal-scorer Phil Kessel was acquired this summer to ignite an Arizona Coyotes team that struggled offensively last season. Can he carry them to the playoffs? Here's everything you need to know about the the Coyotes heading into the 2019-20 NHL season:


The big question: Can Phil Kessel ignite the offense?

The Coyotes scored 2.55 goals per game last season, which ranked 28th in the NHL. Part of the problem: a woeful 8.3 shooting percentage, which was third worst in the league. Need goals? Go get a goal-scorer, which is what GM John Chayka did in acquiring right wing Phil Kessel, who had fallen out of favor with the Pittsburgh Penguins after helping them to two straight Stanley Cups. Only 14 players in the NHL have scored more goals than Kessel's 172 since 2013, and the trade reunites him with Coyotes coach Rick Tocchet, who helped get the best out of Phil in Pittsburgh as an assistant. He may not solve all the Coyotes' problems, but the durable forward -- our sweet Phil hasn't missed a game since 2010 -- certainly addresses their hunger for goals.

Offseason comings and goings, cap situation

Along with Kessel, which cost Arizona center Alex Galchenyuk, the Coyotes picked up Carl Soderberg from Colorado in a deal that sent defenseman Kevin Connauton to Denver. They retained a few of their own restricted free agents, too.

Under new owner Alex Meruelo, the Coyotes are capped out for the first time in recent memory, and have 16 players under contract for 2020-21 -- including Kessel, whose deal runs through 2022.

Bold prediction

The Coyotes' offense rises, but their goals-against average takes a hit due to injuries and Darcy Kuemper regressing after a career year.

Breakout candidate: Nick Schmaltz

Can someone re-breakout? Schmaltz, whom the Coyotes signed to a seven-year contract extension earlier this year, had a breakout season in 2017-18 with the Blackhawks (21 goals, 31 assists) before falling off the map the following season. He was acquired from Chicago for Dylan Strome (who promptly had his own breakout season for the Blackhawks). Schmaltz is a talented center who controls zone entries, and had 14 points in 17 games for Arizona last season. He'll be a vital piece for them on their second line.

Biggest strength

Penalty killing. Both seasons under Tocchet have seen the Coyotes have an outstanding kill, ranking third in the NHL overall during that span (82.3 percent). Full marks to Niklas Hjalmarsson and Brad Richardson as two major reasons why.

Biggest weakness

The "what ifs" on the roster. Kessel, Clayton Keller, Derek Stepan and Schmaltz should all provide offense. Oliver Ekman-Larsson and Hjalmarsson are both studs on the blue line. If healthy, and if there's no regression, Kuemper and Antti Raanta can be an effective goaltending battery. But there are so many other names on this roster that falls into the "boom or bust" category -- and unfortunately, some of them are signed well beyond this season.

Coyotes in NHL Rank

None.

Future Power Ranking: 24

Aside from the owner/GM/coach ranking (No. 27), this is a consistent -- it not overly impressive -- team, according to our panelists: No. 18 in cap/contracts, and No. 19 in both prospects and NHL roster.

Prospect perspective

Pipeline ranking: 16

Prospects in top 100:

Fantasy facts to know

The Kessel effect is about to take hold in Arizona. While Phil himself will undoubtedly score with habitual aplomb, it's more interesting to predict his influence on linemates. Although Derek Stepan appears first in line to center the former Penguin/Leaf/Bruin, Nick Schmaltz may eventually prove the better fit. Wingers Clayton Keller and Christian Dvorak both stand to benefit from Kessel's bent for production, depending on how the Coyotes' top six sorts out. Coach Rick Tocchet's preferred formation is worth monitoring right up until the start of the regular season.

Another player who will undoubtedly profit from Kessel's arrival is Oliver Ekman-Larsson. The Coyotes' top defenseman enjoyed his best season, notching 55 points, back in 2015-16. He'll better that tally with 'Phil the Thrill' playing on the top line and No. 1 power play. Fantasy managers shouldn't overlook Ekman-Larsson as an asset with much upside, including hefty on-ice minutes.

The Coyotes are purportedly happy enough to utilize their two competent netminders in tandem fashion, at least they'll start this campaign that way. As such, neither Antti Raanta nor Darcy Kuemper carry much fantasy weight, unless one grabs the gig and runs with it. Outside of the deepest of leagues, managers are advised against investing in either until then. -- Victoria Matiash

IRVINE, Calif. -- Dallas Eakins is used to these kinds of journeys. The ones that test your endurance. The ones that try to break your will. The ones where people doubt you can reach your destination, especially for a second time. The ones where you constantly battle against the self-doubt that they're right.

In December 2014, Eakins was fired after 113 games as head coach of the Edmonton Oilers. He arrived the previous season as a 46-year-old whiz from the AHL Toronto Marlies, the kind of coaching prospect for whom NHL success is assumed. He left humbled by the experience, but with a keen understanding of the mistakes he doesn't plan on repeating as the new head coach of the Anaheim Ducks.

"When I went into Edmonton, there was really no doubt that it was really messed up there. I was brought in there to change the culture," Eakins told ESPN at Ducks training camp last month. "I took a road that was not too familiar to me, and I went in there hard. The line was drawn in the sand. And it was on. And that was not a good way to build a culture. It doesn't take six weeks. It takes lots of time. So I should have gone slower on a lot of things."

How does a hot coaching prospect get his heat back? By signing with Anaheim's minor league affiliate in San Diego, where Eakins coached the past four seasons before replacing his general manager, Bob Murray, behind the bench in Anaheim. He got back on the journey, despite being knocked off course.

"I just took that in stride. I never thought I was hot s--- or anything. It's a big group that covers the game -- they were all on board that I'm the guy. It was 99% of those same people who, when I was gone, were like, 'Yeah that guy's horses---.' That's why I don't put much stock in [perceptions]," he said.

"You ask guys that played for me, and they're probably sick of hearing it. But I'm a big, massive believer in circumstance, choice and character. They go right in a line: You're put in a circumstance. You make a choice. And that choice reveals your character. So my circumstance was that I'd been punted to the side. I could go 'poor me' and blame everyone else. Be angry. But I thought it was important to maximize my time with my family, own what I could own and get a new plan for whatever's next."

Eakins paused for a moment, mentally connecting the different threads of his life.

"It's kind of like doing the Leadville 100. That's what it's like."


The Leadville Trail 100 is billed as "the race of all races." It's a 100-mile journey in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado that starts at an altitude of 10,152 feet and climbs as high as 12,424 feet. The terrain is rugged and steep. Many cyclists enter the race. Many cyclists never finish.

Eakins has. In fact, he did it for the 10th straight year this summer, earning a large golden belt buckle from the organizers with "100 MILES DALLAS" engraved on it.

We spoke with Eakins about the race and his experiences in it. Here's the Ducks coach, in his own words:

"It's interesting. I've done it 10 years in a row, which is a big deal by their standards. Once you get to seven or eight years, you start eyeing that up a little bit.

"It's been an amazing ride. I started on a challenge from a cycling coach. A guy who had an unbelievable background that we had hired as a consultant when I was with the Leafs. He would bug me about hockey players thinking we're so tough. 'You think you're so tough? Why don't you come to this race? And we'll race.' So I did, and he kicked the s--- out of me. So it started there.

"Leadville was a super-wealthy town when the mining industry was big, and then it went dry. They were worried it was going to become a ghost town. So there was this idea that they could bring people in to be part of their town, and that's why they started these endurance races.

"The altitude is a challenge. The first time I went there, my wife and I parked the rental truck, and literally on the second block, walking to a coffee shop, I started gasping.

"It's a 100-mile race. It's a ton of climbing. It's one of those races where no matter what you're doing, you're just thinking, 'I want to go downhill, I want to go downhill, I want something flat.' Then you start going downhill and you start bouncing all over the place and you're like, 'I just want to climb! I just want to climb!' You're never happy. You want to quit, like, 20-30 times. In my very first year, the founder of the race -- I'll never forget -- said there are going to be multiple times when you're going to want to quit, and you're just going to have to put your head down and battle. And so it's a great challenge. The interesting thing about it is that they have a bunch of different endurance races. A week after our race is the 100-mile run.

"What's happened to me over the years is that Leadville became such a special place for me. The people there are gritty. They're tough. They love their little town. They cheer us on. They open up their homes to you. And then the race has kind of been turned into my annual cleansing day. I haven't had a race yet where at the end, when you're battered physically and emotionally, I just have this guttural cry. This release. Where I'm literally just like 'Ugggh!' Everything kind of comes out of me.

"It's great. I feel renewed. And it's a great race because it's held in mid-August. It leads right into the hockey season. It's a special place. It's really hard for me to put into words. It's one of those things where when I run into somebody that's done Leadville, it's like, 'Yeah, I gotcha.'

"To be considered a finisher of the race, you gotta get it done in under 12 hours. If you do that, you get a belt buckle about the size of your phone. If you can go under nine hours, which is incredibly fast, you get a big, grande one. If you do 10 years in a row, you get the biggest one, which is the one that I've got.

"You know, there's been a bunch of other years when on the next day, when they were giving out the gold buckle and I already had like five or six, and I was like, 'I'm going to get on a plane instead.' But this time, I made sure I stayed around for it. I wanted to have ... it's not like I'll wear it often, but when you do show up to these endurance races, you might throw it on for a little bit of fun. It's like putting on elevated shoes. You just walk a little bit taller [laughs]."

MADRID – Kristian Krogh Johannessen of Norway shot a career-best 8-under 63 to match the course record and take a two-shot lead after the first round of the Spanish Open on Thursday.

Johannessen birdied four of his last six holes at the Club de Campo Villa de Madrid for the lowest opening round in the event's history. The only bogey for the Norwegian came on the par-4 16th hole, right after he made an eagle on the par-4 15th.

''It was a good round," Johannessen said. ''I didn't hit it perfectly but hit it in the right spots, even when I missed, and I holed some good putts. I'm out there having fun and playing smart. It's a tricky course ... I just need to keep cool and play my own game."

Adri Arnaus of Spain was in second place after a 65 that included five birdies and an eagle.

''It was such a fun round out there with the crowds following," said Arnaus, who started on the back nine. ''I was really happy with how I played out there, especially the front nine. That was a lot of fun. I was happy to finish with a birdie on the ninth."

Defending champion Joh Rahm was three shots back after a 66, in a tie for third place with five other players – including fellow Spaniard Rafa Cabrera Bello.

''It's a tough golf course," Rahm said. ''You need to drive it well and I did. The reason why I missed so many putts was because I was really trying to get the pace of the greens. It was so fast."

Sergio Garcia was six shots off the lead. Garcia had three birdies and a bogey in his round that left him tied for 30th.

''I hit it well, but in the afternoon it was complicated," Garcia said. ''It was difficult to predict how the ball would react on the greens. Some areas were hard and other soft."

Real Madrid forward Gareth Bale, an avid golfer, was among those in the crowd. Two days earlier, it was Garcia who was at the Santiago Bernabeu Stadium watching Bale play in Real Madrid's 2-2 draw against Club Brugge in the Champions League.

Don't cry for me Argentina: Messi's inspired speech

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 03 October 2019 04:05

Angel Di Maria has said what Lionel Messi told his teammates after Argentina's defeat to Brazil in the 2019 Copa America that left "everyone in tears."

Messi captained Argentina in the tournament but they lost 2-0 to would-be champions Brazil in the semifinals on July 3 before going on to finish third.

- Champions League group stage: All you need to know
- ESPN Champions League fantasy: Sign up now!
- ESPN Premier League fantasy: Sign up now!
- World Cup 2022 qualifying: All you need to know

"Messi said some beautiful words when we were eliminated by Brazil," Di Maria told ESPN Argentina. "Messi told us he was proud of the team we had built.

"That we had not been together much as some had not been called up [to the senior team] before. Yet, it felt as though we had all been together for many years.

"He said that we had all rowed in the same direction from the first day. That he was very proud of the youngsters for their commitment to this jersey and if they were there and gave what they gave at the Copa America, it was because they more than deserved to be there.

"Once he finished, everyone was in tears because it touched everyone's hearts, especially the youngsters.

"The young players are the ones that have to carry on in the same path. It will not be easy for them. They will have to work and continue giving their all as sooner or later, luck will be on our side."

Di Maria has represented Argentina since 2008 and like Messi, is yet to win a trophy with the senior team, having lost three straight finals in a three-year period, with the first coming at the 2014 World Cup against Germany.

Messi was criticised by his country men for not singing the national anthem and Argentina great Diego Maradona said the Barcelona star "lacked personality" to lead the Albiceleste.

While Argentina's trophy drought continued this summer, Di Maria said the Copa America showed "a new Messi."

"There was a lot of criticism that he didn't sing [the national anthem], that he didn't talk," Di Maria added. "This Copa America was different. He proved it. What made me happier was to see how he spoke in front of the group, how he spoke to reporters, what he said.

"The important thing is that Leo is like this. I like this Messi."

Messi is serving a three-month ban from international football and will only be able to return to play for Argentina on Nov. 3 after losing his appeal to have the punishment reduced.

The Barcelona captain was also fined $50,000 in August after accusing South America's governing body for football of "corruption" during the Copa America.

Dalot Man United's biggest threat in draw at lively AZ

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 03 October 2019 13:27

Manchester United played out a 0-0 Europa League draw against a spirited AZ Alkmaar side on Thursday, to heap yet more pressure on under-fire boss Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.

In a game in which many of United's regulars were rested, expectations were slightly dampened going in, with a number of the squad's younger members given a chance to shine. But it was to be a frustrating evening for the away side, who were unable to create many chances of note. It means that United remain unbeaten in the Europa League this season, with four points from two games. But the performance, and lack of impetus in attack, will surely be a worry for United, who may count themselves lucky to have left with a point following some late AZ pressure.

Positives

Defensively, United were much improved on the night, despite one or two hairy moments. Victor Lindelof looked composed while Marcos Rojo played a key role in denying a number of potential goal-scoring opportunities. Solskjaer will also be pleased by some good individual performances, with the likes of Diogo Dalot and Daniel James looking dangerous down the right-hand side.

Negatives

United were continuously poor in possession, giving the ball away far too frequently. The isolation of James and Mason Greenwood at times highlighted how United struggled to mount pressure with sustained periods on the ball.

Manager rating out of 10

6 -- Solskjaer came into the tie under pressure following a series of underwhelming results, but his rotation and faith in some of United's younger players may leave fans wondering how much the boss values the Europa League. That being said, the starting XI was a good blend of youth and experience, and the draw -- while not ideal -- isn't a terrible result given the team that was put out.

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

GK David De Gea, 7 -- A fine performance for the Spanish stopper. He was forced into action with a few good saves to keep the score at 0-0, but aside from that, it was a trouble-free night between the sticks for De Gea.

- Europa League group stage: All you need to know
- What if Man United kept Moyes for his six-year contract?

DF Diogo Dalot, 7 -- Was arguably United's biggest threat going forward in the first half, managing to get forward to provide width, whipping in a number of dangerous crosses in the process. A good return to form for the young right-back.

DF Victor Lindelof, 7 -- Was the more solid of United's centre-back pairing -- unsurprisingly. The Swedish international played a pivotal role in largely containing a dangerous AZ attacking trio.

DF Marcos Rojo, 6 -- An improved display from Rojo at centre-back, a position in which he has not looked entirely comfortable in on many occasions for United.

DF Brandon Williams, 5 -- A second ever first-team appearence for the 19-year-old left-back, who did struggle up against the skillful Calvin Stengs. He will have better nights ahead, with defensive duties limiting his ability to impact the game going forward.

MF Fred, 6 -- The Brazilian helped his side win possession back on a number of occasions, but once the ball was won, he struggled to stamp his authority on the game. Solid, if unspectacular.

MF Nemanja Matic, 5 -- Was responsible for a number of stray passes throughout the game, but otherwise it was an average night for the Serbian.

MF Juan Mata, 6 -- The former Spain star was United's biggest creator centrally throughout the first half, delivering a number of incisive balls in a game defined by frustrating passing. As the game wore on, his impact did diminish, especially after being moved to the right side once James was subbed off.

FW Angel Gomes, 6 -- Playing in his less-favoured position of left wing, Gomes had a mixed evening. Early on he looked a threat, drifting around the pitch in an attempt to find valuable space. But some frustratingly loose passing and a lack of composure in key areas keep his score down on this occasion.

FW Daniel James, 7 -- The Welshman has been one of United's best performers so far this season, and once again, he was lively going forward. James largely featured on the right side, and in doing so was able to link up well with Dalot. He was unfortunate to not have grabbed an assist in the first half, with Greenwood squandering a good chance from a James cross.

FW Mason Greenwood, 6 -- Missed a great opportunity to make it two goals in two Europa League games this season, having a shot blocked from close range in the first half. He cut an isolated figure at times as United struggled to maintain possession.

Substitutes

FW Marcus Rashford, 6 -- Replaced James with a half hour to go, but never appeared to get into the game, as United struggled to create chances late on. Went down in the box feeling he was tripped on 75 minutes, but no penalty was ultimately given.

MF Jesse Lingard, N/R -- Came on in place of Greenwood after 77 minutes, but couldn't alter the outcome of the match.

MF Scott McTominay, N/R -- Replaced Mata with a mere seven minutes of the 90 remaining.

LIVE: Can Arsenal brush off Standard Liege's challenge?

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 03 October 2019 12:56

Saves 1

  • Shots 0
  • 0 Shots on Target
  • Fouls Committed 0
  • 0 Fouls Against
  • Assists 0
  • Discipline
    • 0 Yellow
    • 0 Red

Goals 0

  • Shots 1
  • 0 Shots on Target
  • Fouls Committed 0
  • 0 Fouls Against
  • Assists 0
  • Offsides 0
  • Discipline
    • 0 Yellow
    • 0 Red

Goals 0

  • Shots 0
  • 0 Shots on Target
  • Fouls Committed 0
  • 0 Fouls Against
  • Assists 0
  • Offsides 0
  • Discipline
    • 0 Yellow
    • 0 Red

Goals 0

  • Shots 0
  • 0 Shots on Target
  • Fouls Committed 0
  • 0 Fouls Against
  • Assists 0
  • Offsides 0
  • Discipline
    • 0 Yellow
    • 0 Red

Goals 0

  • Shots 2
  • 0 Shots on Target
  • Fouls Committed 0
  • 0 Fouls Against
  • Assists 0
  • Offsides 0
  • Discipline
    • 0 Yellow
    • 0 Red

Goals 0

  • Shots 2
  • 0 Shots on Target
  • Fouls Committed 0
  • 0 Fouls Against
  • Assists 0
  • Offsides 0
  • Discipline
    • 0 Yellow
    • 0 Red

Goals 0

  • Shots 1
  • 0 Shots on Target
  • Fouls Committed 0
  • 0 Fouls Against
  • Assists 0
  • Offsides 0
  • Discipline
    • 0 Yellow
    • 0 Red

Goals 0

  • Shots 1
  • 0 Shots on Target
  • Fouls Committed 1
  • 1 Fouls Against
  • Assists 0
  • Offsides 0
  • Discipline
    • 1 Yellow
    • 0 Red

Goals 0

  • Shots 0
  • 0 Shots on Target
  • Fouls Committed 0
  • 1 Fouls Against
  • Assists 0
  • Offsides 0
  • Discipline
    • 0 Yellow
    • 0 Red

Goals 0

  • Shots 0
  • 0 Shots on Target
  • Fouls Committed 0
  • 2 Fouls Against
  • Assists 0
  • Offsides 0
  • Discipline
    • 0 Yellow
    • 0 Red

Goals 0

  • Shots 0
  • 0 Shots on Target
  • Fouls Committed 0
  • 0 Fouls Against
  • Assists 0
  • Offsides 0
  • Discipline
    • 0 Yellow
    • 0 Red

Goals 0

  • Shots 0
  • 0 Shots on Target
  • Fouls Committed 0
  • 0 Fouls Against
  • Assists 0
  • Offsides 0
  • Discipline
    • 0 Yellow
    • 0 Red

Goals 0

  • Shots 0
  • 0 Shots on Target
  • Fouls Committed 0
  • 0 Fouls Against
  • Assists 0
  • Offsides 0
  • Discipline
    • 0 Yellow
    • 0 Red

Goals 0

  • Shots 0
  • 0 Shots on Target
  • Fouls Committed 0
  • 0 Fouls Against
  • Assists 0
  • Offsides 0
  • Discipline
    • 0 Yellow
    • 0 Red

Goals 0

  • Shots 0
  • 0 Shots on Target
  • Fouls Committed 0
  • 0 Fouls Against
  • Assists 0
  • Offsides 0
  • Discipline
    • 0 Yellow
    • 0 Red

Goals 0

  • Shots 0
  • 0 Shots on Target
  • Fouls Committed 0
  • 0 Fouls Against
  • Assists 0
  • Offsides 0
  • Discipline
    • 0 Yellow
    • 0 Red

Goals 0

  • Shots 0
  • 0 Shots on Target
  • Fouls Committed 0
  • 0 Fouls Against
  • Assists 0
  • Offsides 0
  • Discipline
    • 0 Yellow
    • 0 Red

Saves 0

  • Shots 0
  • 0 Shots on Target
  • Fouls Committed 0
  • 0 Fouls Against
  • Assists 0
  • Discipline
    • 0 Yellow
    • 0 Red

Cricket's administrators love a good warehouse, don't they? From England's kit launch in the Tobacco Docks in May, to the arrival of the World Cup captains on the set of Dragons' Den later that month, and now back to that favoured hub of multiculturalism, Brick Lane, where the World Cup countdown had been set in motion back in 2018, the urban-chic metaphors were once again climbing the exposed brick walls as The Hundred took its most decisive step yet into existence.

Bedecked with funky lights and blocky fonts to fit the brutalist surroundings, the day's chosen venue was awash, quite literally, with snackable content. There were casually scattered team-branded helmets on the floors, and actual bowls of crisps and popcorn on every surface, as KP flexed its brand muscles and showed the gathered media that its sponsorship of the ECB's newest innovation wasn't merely a chance to have a very public giggle at one of the ECB's oldest betes noires.

But on this, the morning after the night before that was the PCA Awards dinner, England's icon players looked more in need of bacon than Butterkist - not least the heroically hungover Chris Woakes - as they rocked up to give their collective blessing to cricket's latest edge towards edginess.

The timing of this event was cruel but apposite for the players, for Woakes' eyes in particular bore testimony to the japes that had carried on into the small hours at the Roundhouse in Camden, where cricket's glitzy end-of-season bash had had more than your average summer to celebrate in 2019.

And thus, as he fronted up in his new team's garish orange-and-red kit - a "grower", as he obligingly put it - Woakes and his partied-out team-mates were already galloping gamely into the brave new world that awaits in the transformative summer of 2020.

ALSO READ: Russell, Maxwell but no de Villiers for main draft

The Hundred. It Is Coming. And that is a fact will continue to cleave the sport like a Brexit referendum. For some, this morning's unveiling was the opening of a new portal to hell; for others (mostly, but not exclusively, in the ECB high command) it was the most concrete development yet in a project that is as exciting as it is agenda-setting and, as some would claim, essential for the long-term health of the game.

As for the rest of those who know and love the sport in its current guise, the whole shebang remains deeply and uncomfortably conflicting - like the feeling I got as a kid, when Angus Fraser and Robin Smith were dropped for the 1994-95 Ashes tour and I briefly found myself wishing unspeakable and damning ills to befall a team that I could no longer call my own.

It didn't last, of course (my antipathy, that is, not English cricket's ills - those cracked on for another decade of Ashes misery) and that is the hope, or rather expectation, in and around the sport at this critical juncture.

The ECB's fervent belief is that, once the angst and the anger has subsided by this time next year, all that will remain is a top-class cricket tournament that gives some TLC to a sport that truly does need it - whatever you think of the existing merits of the county structure, and no matter how extraordinarily successful England's overworked elite players were in framing the zeitgeist this summer.

For the hosting of the World Cup was a once-in-two-decades opportunity, and the manner in which the trophy was won was a once-in-a-lifetime miracle. As in 2005, on the eve of cricket's disappearance from terrestrial TV, the sport got extraordinarily lucky at precisely the moment it needed it the most, and then as now, the ripple effect will be sufficient to sustain the game for the next five years at least.

But after that, where does the sport's next adrenalin shot come from? For, as the administrators have clumsily tried to explain for the best part of 18 months, this really isn't about those who already know what they like about cricket. It's about those who might not otherwise engage with it, but will stumble upon the odd match when they are expecting to see Homes Under The Hammer on the BBC next summer - or who might find themselves listening with unexpected interest to what Eoin Morgan has to say when he pops up on The One Show or Newsround.

And, in due course, it will be about those who pop out to the corner shop, or get the round in at the pub, or open their packed lunch on a school outing, and see cricketers being marketed on the backs of their packets of Skips, or Tyrells, or McCoys, or Pom-Bears (the toddlers' gateway snack). Without wishing to pay undue homage to a corporate giant (or to gloss over its contribution to childhood obesity) it has been easy to overlook quite what leverage The Hundred's title sponsor can offer to the fledging competition. With that calibre of stable-mate, and regardless of what else happens as this brave new world takes root next summer, it is not going to pass unnoticed.

Does any of the above justify the "massive punt", as Wisden put it, of shredding the fabric of the game to hand over the plum weeks of the English season to eight untested teams, and a format that has been played at a professional level in just a handful of trial runs? Self-evidently not. The only thing that is going to justify The Hundred's creation is the quality of the competition. On that note, the condensation of eighteen teams to eight, and the who's-who of international talent (India excepted for the most part, of course) that will make up the draft next month will form the truest means to whet the appetite.

ALSO READ: Harbhajan Singh throws hat into Hundred ring

That is not to say, however, that the animosity that already exists will be easily glossed over. I know colleagues who simply will never forgive the betrayal that has brought the game to this point, and as for the gaffe-ridden shambles that has been The Hundred's PR, it simply beggars belief that so many errors can be made so often by so few. Even Thursday's pre-announcement "sizzle reel" couldn't help but join the catastro-shambles, spluttering into three false starts like a petrol-starved Trabant as the assembled media arched those habitually cynical eyebrows once more.

But, once again, it's necessary to stop and breathe, and remember. It's not about us. It's not about people who will read this take of The Hundred's latest developments, and sigh. It's about people who don't yet know what they want from a game that has never previously appealed to them, and who won't instinctively know, for instance, that the Nathan Barley-esque hipster-wibble that screeches out of The Hundred's vapidly awful website is contrived nonsense.

Or is even that another observation that misses the point? Perhaps, as they announced on Thursday afternoon, Welsh Fire's "hunger will prove the haters wrong" (even those from Somerset and Gloucestershire?). Maybe Manchester Originals are able to "laugh in the face of limits", maybe Trent Rockets' "volume [is] up, ready for launch", whatever TF that means.

It's scary to look at such witterings objectively and realise that the sport has no option but to wish this new enterprise well, but it seems also that it is a vital part of the process. According to the American social psychologist Jonathan Haidt, interviewed on the BBC's Politics Live show on Thursday morning, the world has become so polarised in the social media era that we will "never again" have a shared sense of what is good, bad or downright ugly.

And if Haidt's analysis had in mind global events rather more weighty than a salty-bar-snack-themed cricket competition, then the fury that The Hundred has generated is an interesting test case - and certainly a telling rejoinder to the sort of unequivocal joy that this country felt when Jos Buttler whipped off those bails at Lord's, or when Ben Stokes belted that drive through the covers at Headingley.

We can only hope to feel that sort of communion again, and we surely will given half a chance. But it will not happen if the sport's relevance in the interim dwindles to vanishing point. That is the point of The Hundred. You can disagree with the solution the ECB have come up with, but you can't fault the realisation that the status quo is unsustainable.

Well, obviously, you can… and you can point out until you are blue in the face the strategic errors that holed the sport beneath the waterline in the early 2000s, and left it relying on miracle matches to keep the sport's fires burning in the interim. But it's probably time to start gargling the kool-aid, and accepting that what will be will be. Because this is the chosen path to a brighter future, and there is genuinely no going back from here.

Soccer

Play less, get paid less: Could that ease concerns of overworked players?

Play less, get paid less: Could that ease concerns of overworked players?

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsTwo things are pretty obvious when it comes to the question of whet...

Pep: City won't 'waste energy' on Carabao Cup

Pep: City won't 'waste energy' on Carabao Cup

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsPep Guardiola has said Manchester City will not "waste energy" on t...

Al Hilal coach downplays Neymar return hopes

Al Hilal coach downplays Neymar return hopes

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsNeymar is not ready for an imminent return for Al Hilal after spend...

2026 FIFA


2028 LOS ANGELES OLYMPIC

UEFA

2024 PARIS OLYMPIC


Basketball

Clippers to hold Kawhi (knee) out of camp drills

Clippers to hold Kawhi (knee) out of camp drills

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsINGLEWOOD, Calif. -- LA Clippers President Lawrence Frank said Tues...

Griz to retire Allen's 9, joining 'Grit & Grind' stars

Griz to retire Allen's 9, joining 'Grit & Grind' stars

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsThe Memphis Grizzlies will retire guard Tony Allen's No. 9 jersey o...

Baseball

Pads claim playoff spot on game-ending triple play

Pads claim playoff spot on game-ending triple play

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsLOS ANGELES -- Manny Machado and the San Diego Padres wrote their o...

O's best Yanks, clinch 2nd straight playoff berth

O's best Yanks, clinch 2nd straight playoff berth

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsNEW YORK -- The Baltimore Orioles clinched their second straight pl...

Sports Leagues

  • FIFA

    Fédération Internationale de Football Association
  • NBA

    National Basketball Association
  • ATP

    Association of Tennis Professionals
  • MLB

    Major League Baseball
  • ITTF

    International Table Tennis Federation
  • NFL

    Nactional Football Leagues
  • FISB

    Federation Internationale de Speedball

About Us

I Dig® is a leading global brand that makes it more enjoyable to surf the internet, conduct transactions and access, share, and create information.  Today I Dig® attracts millions of users every month.r

 

Phone: (800) 737. 6040
Fax: (800) 825 5558
Website: www.idig.com
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Affiliated