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NBArank: Predicting the best player this year, Nos. 30-11

Published in Basketball
Wednesday, 25 September 2019 07:03

For the ninth season in a row, ESPN.com is predicting the top players in basketball with NBArank.

Who will be the best player this season? To get the final prediction, we asked our expert panel to vote on pairs of players.

LeBron James vs. Kawhi Leonard. Zion Williamson vs. Luka Doncic. Devin Booker vs. D'Angelo Russell.

We asked, "Which player will be better in 2019-20?" To decide, voters had to consider both the quality and the quantity of each player's contributions to his team's ability to win games in the regular season and postseason.

We'll roll out our top 100 players over the next week. Here are Nos. 30 to 11.

More: 100-51 | 50-31 | Rising stars

NBArank: 30 to 11


30. Devin Booker

One big question: Will Booker find a way to make his teammates better and win? Phoenix's struggles haven't been all Booker's fault. Far from it. In 2018-19, he averaged career highs of 26.6 points and 6.8 assists, and now he's on his fifth head coach in as many seasons. However, at some point, if Booker is going to be a star, he will have to lift the Suns to more than 21 wins -- the number he has averaged over his first four seasons. -- Ohm Youngmisuk


29. Tobias Harris

One big question: Can Harris help make up for the loss of Jimmy Butler? As the adult in the room for the Sixers last season -- to use Brett Brown's words -- Butler averaged 4.1 field goal attempts in the fourth quarter, compared to Harris' 2.3. With Butler and his closing abilities now in Miami, can Harris and his freshly minted five-year, $180 million deal assume that role for a Philly team that is big on talent but small on shot creators? -- Dave McMenamin


28. Trae Young

One big question: Young is a voracious scorer and offensive mastermind, but in his sophomore season he will need to address his greatest vulnerability: defense. His defensive real plus-minus of minus-4.74 in 2018-19 was the lowest rating for an NBA starter in five seasons. While rookies often struggle to grasp the physical demands and nuances of NBA defense, Young must get up to speed if he aspires to lead the Hawks to the kind of success his brilliant offensive gifts portend. -- Kevin Arnovitz


27. Jamal Murray

One big question: It's a two-parter for Murray: what and when? What does the next evolution of his game look like, and when is it coming?

Year 2 to 3 is traditionally an important developmental stretch for a young player, and Murray took significant strides last season. Coach Mike Malone praised Murray for his poise, ball control and generalship of the young Nuggets, but for Denver to move up another rung in the Western Conference, Murray needs to start scratching the surface of being a star. -- Royce Young


26. D'Angelo Russell

One big question: How is Russell going to fit into the Warriors' system? This is one of the biggest questions in the league this season. If Russell can fit into Steve Kerr's offensive schemes quickly, he will help bridge the gap until Klay Thompson returns from his ACL injury. If he doesn't, Russell might be headed elsewhere before next season as the Warriors try to find their way without Kevin Durant. -- Nick Friedell


25. De'Aaron Fox

One big question: Can Fox make another leap?

Despite finishing third in Most Improved Player voting, Fox made the most dramatic transformation of any player last season, going from sub-replacement level as a rookie to a quality starting point guard. Our panel is expecting another jump from Fox, who won't turn 22 until December and made a strong impression with USA Basketball this summer. I'm a little wary given the possibility that his dramatic 3-point improvement (from 31% to 37%) might not hold up. -- Kevin Pelton


24. Mike Conley

  • Utah Jazz | PG

  • Previous rank: 44

  • Projected RPM wins: 3.8

One big question: Will Conley be able to lift Utah into title contention this season? That was the assumption by many when Conley was dealt to Utah. It's a lot to put on a point guard who will be 32 years old when the season starts, but with Conley (and Bojan Bogdanovic), Utah could make some noise in the West. -- Andrew Lopez


23. Blake Griffin

One big question: Can he stay healthy? There's no denying his talent. He's coming off a third-team All-NBA selection, and he displayed his overall skill set masterfully in Motown last season. Members of the Detroit Pistons training staff will be paying close attention to his load management this season, as they'll look to keep him fresh during the second half of the season. Griffin played in 75 games last season and averaged 24.5 points, 7.5 rebounds and 5.4 assists. It will be interesting to see how he gels with new teammates Derrick Rose and Tony Snell. -- Eric Woodyard


22. Pascal Siakam

One big question: What is Siakam's ceiling? Last year, he blossomed into a star next to Kawhi Leonard, helping the Raptors win their first title while earning the NBA's Most Improved Player award. Now that Leonard is gone from Toronto, this has become Siakam's team. If Toronto is going to remain a factor in the East, it needs Siakam to take another step and become an All-Star and All-NBA candidate this season. -- Tim Bontemps


21. Jimmy Butler

  • Miami Heat | SG

  • Previous rank: 13

  • Projected RPM wins: 7.2

One big question: Can he stay healthy? The Heat have a style that leads them to play so many close games. Butler is a game-changer in these moments; he could be worth five wins based on his clutch ability alone. However, he has to be on the floor to do it. He's missed an average of 16 games per year over the past six seasons, and he just turned 30. -- Brian Windhorst


20. Donovan Mitchell

  • Utah Jazz | SG

  • Previous rank: 22

  • Projected RPM wins: 7.7

One big question: Can Mitchell tap into his quick feet and 6-foot-10 wingspan to find some defensive consistency? Touted for his defensive potential when he entered the league, he's still evolving as an on- and off-ball defender. Last season, he ranked 204th overall in ESPN's defensive real plus-minus. That and how he meshes with Mike Conley are worth tracking. -- Mike Schmitz


19. Bradley Beal

  • Washington Wizards | SG

  • Previous rank: 29

  • Projected RPM wins: 9.2

One big question: How will the current state of the Wizards impact Beal, both mentally and physically, on the court? With John Wall out and a clear emphasis on player development, Washington will likely finish at the bottom of the Eastern Conference standings. Will the frustration of losing and playing heavy minutes (back-to-back 36 MPG seasons) take its toll on Beal to the point that he will ask out? Or will the All-Star embrace the challenge of trying to lead a young Washington team? -- Bobby Marks


18. Karl-Anthony Towns

One big question: Can Towns become as good on defense as he is on offense? His offensive numbers are grand -- he's a double-double machine -- but the league's best big men control the game on defense, too. Last season, Towns and the Wolves ranked 24th in defense. The season before, they were 25th. That isn't good enough, folks. Towns has the size and the talent to change his team's defensive culture, and the future success of the team is riding on him. -- Kirk Goldsberry


17. Kemba Walker

One big question: Just how good is Walker? We are about to find out. For years, he has been stuck in the definition of basketball purgatory in Charlotte. Joining the Celtics this summer as a free agent puts him at the helm of a vastly more talented team. And it will engender comparisons to Kyrie Irving all season. -- Bontemps


16. Luka Doncic

One big question: What kind of shape will Doncic be in at the start of the season? He played himself into Rookie of the Year condition after coming in with the excess weight that comes with being the king of Madrid. How Doncic maintains his body is a big factor in whether he's an eventual MVP candidate. -- Schmitz


15. Ben Simmons

  • Philadelphia 76ers | PG

  • Previous rank: 19

  • Projected RPM wins: 6.1

One big question: Can Simmons become a $170 million player? The Sixers didn't give him that money for the player he is today. They gave it to him for the player they believe he can become -- someone who is the best player in a playoff series. He's not there yet for a number of reasons, with his jump shot being at the top. But he's ranked here, essentially two seasons into his career, because he has a tremendous skill set. -- Windhorst


14. Rudy Gobert

  • Utah Jazz | C

  • Previous rank: 23

  • Projected RPM wins: 2.7

One big question: Can Gobert add to his offensive game? The two-time Defensive Player of the Year is a weapon in a limited offensive role, leading the league in screen assists (6.0 per game), field goal percentage (.669) and dunks (306) in 2018-19. He'll never be a go-to post-up threat, but it'd be a major plus if Gobert could reliably punish smaller defenders on switches even when he doesn't get to the rim, as he did in France's win over Team USA at the FIBA World Cup. -- Tim MacMahon


13. CJ McCollum

One big question: Is McCollum ready to step up as a co-headliner with Damian Lillard for an entire season? McCollum has long been the secondary scoring Robin to Damian Lillard's Batman for the Trail Blazers. The past two seasons, McCollum averaged 21.2 PPG in the regular season versus Lillard's 26.3. However, that story changed during the past two playoffs, with McCollum upping his scoring to 24.8 PPG versus Lillard's 25.2 PPG. If McCollum can maintain that raised level of shotmaking throughout the season, it would ease the load on Lillard and help Portland challenge for the top spot in the West. -- André Snellings


12. Russell Westbrook

One big question: It's the question as old as time: Will he change? Does he want to change? Can he if he does? In a new situation with the Rockets, if there was ever a time for some personal growth for Westbrook, it's now. People close to Westbrook say he has a refreshed mindset and is excited about the challenge of adapting to fit alongside James Harden. The chemistry will be there between the two, but sometimes a square peg and a round hole can be best friends and still not fit. Westbrook will assuredly make an effort, but can a trimmed down version of him still be the dominant player he has always been? -- Young


11. Kyrie Irving

One big question: Can he be an effective leader? Irving has made it clear that he won't set out to prove anything about his leadership or basketball abilities to people outside the team. That isn't important to him, and that's fine. He needs to prove to his coaches, teammates and the Nets' front office that he can be a force of unity. Irving has admitted that leadership was hard for him, but he has shown flashes of it. Last season, Celtics players told ESPN that Irving pulled them aside before the playoffs. Irving let the team's young players know that playoff basketball is a different, more urgent game. When he did that, Terry Rozier told ESPN that the locker room exuded a different energy. The team was together, Rozier said, "not like before." -- Malika Andrews


More: 100-51 | 50-31 | Rising stars

D-backs top Cardinals 3-2 in 19-inning marathon

Published in Baseball
Wednesday, 25 September 2019 03:23

PHOENIX -- Ildemaro Vargas had a game-tying, pinch-hit homer in the ninth inning on Tuesday and then singled with the bases loaded in the 19th at 1:34 a.m. local time on Wednesday to give the Arizona Diamondbacks a 3-2 win over the St. Louis Cardinals.

Carson Kelly and Nick Ahmed started the final rally with back-to-back singles off John Brebbia (3-4), who was the Cardinals' 11th pitcher of the night. Jarrod Dyson and Robbie Ray -- a pitcher who had to pinch hit -- struck out before Christian Walker was intentionally walked to load the bases.

Then it was Vargas' turn to be the hero again, smacking a single -- his fourth hit of the game -- through the left side of the infield. He raised his hands as players rushed the field to celebrate.

The game lasted 6 hours, 53 minutes and featured 24 pitchers and 48 strikeouts, with both teams plowing through bullpen arms thanks to September's expanded rosters. The Diamondbacks used a franchise-record 30 players. It was the longest game by innings and time in Chase Field history.

The two teams were set to play again in Phoenix 11 hours later.

It's a particularly tough turnaround for the Cardinals, who are locked in a playoff race with the Milwaukee Brewers. St. Louis is 2½ games ahead of Milwaukee in the NL Central. The Cardinals have four games remaining, and the Brewers have five.

The Cardinals' bullpen blew two one-run leads, once in the ninth inning and again in the 13th as they wasted a stellar outing from starter Jack Flaherty.

Paul Goldschmidt looked like he'd be the hero after giving the Cardinals a 2-1 lead in the 13th when he hit a homer for the second straight night in his return to Chase Field. The six-time All-Star spent his first eight seasons with the Diamondbacks before being traded to St. Louis last offseason.

Turns out, there was much more baseball left to play.

Ahmed started the D-backs' 13th-inning rally with a triple, and then Dyson drew a walk off John Gant. Pinch-hitter Caleb Joseph ripped a single through the right side of the infield to tie the score at 2-2, but the rally stalled when Walker hit into a double play and Vargas grounded out.

Several hours before the game's conclusion, Flaherty continued his run of outstanding pitching with seven brilliant innings, including a no-hitter through six, but Andrew Miller couldn't hold a 1-0 lead in the ninth.

With one out, Vargas stunned the Cardinals with a solo shot that just cleared the fence in right-center field and tied the game. Miller retired the next two batters.

The Diamondbacks looked like they might rally in the 11th when Tim Locastro hit a one-out single. With two outs, Vargas hit a high chopper for an infield single, but Locastro was thrown out at third when he barely slid past the bag while trying to take an extra base.

Flaherty, who finished with 11 strikeouts, has been brilliant for the Cardinals as they've charged to the top of the division. The right-hander has a 0.97 ERA during the second half of the season and has given up just seven earned runs over the past two months.

Dexter Fowler provided the Cardinals' early offense, leading off the game with a solo homer to right field. It was Fowler's 18th homer of the season.

Arizona was eliminated from the NL wild-card race after Monday night's 9-7 loss to the Cardinals. Diamondbacks starter Mike Leake gave up one run over six innings and struck out three.

LET'S GET HYPE

By the 15th inning, the D-backs' and Cardinals' benches appeared to be having a good-natured contest to see who could be the most raucous and obnoxious when cheering. It was easily heard because most of the Chase Field crowd was gone.

STARTS WITH A BANG

Fowler had the 26th leadoff homer of his career and second of the season. It came one day after he went 0-for-5 with four strikeouts in the Cardinals' 9-7 win.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: RHP Michael Wacha (6-7, 4.68 ERA) allowed one run over four innings and in his previous outing against the Chicago Cubs.

Diamondbacks: RHP Merrill Kelly (12-14, 4.31) will head to the mound to begin a game that starts at 12:40 p.m. local time. He'll bring a 15-inning scoreless streak into the game.

NEW YORK -- Brian Cashman told a story about a horse named Nifty. Cashman hated his summer job on his father's farm in Kentucky, hated mucking out stalls and cleaning fecal stains from barn walls with his bucket of ammonia and oversized brush. Young Brian loved baseball, and he wanted no part of his old man's life as one of the best breeders, traders and horse whisperers around.

Then he met Nifty. Before he would leave Lexington to study and play ball at Georgetown Prep in Maryland, the 5-foot-7 Cashman was charged to break in this brown quarter horse that was a lot bigger than he was. He would introduce Nifty to a saddle, lay on her back, and the horse would try and try to throw him off. Cashman said the process took at least six grueling weeks in the oppressive heat, but sure enough they bonded and he could finally ride that horse out of the stall and into an open field.

Cashman later got word at school that Nifty missed him dearly. In fact, Nifty wouldn't let anyone else in the saddle but the kid who couldn't wait to get a million miles away from those barns.

"One of the greatest experiences of my life," Cashman said of breaking in that horse.

He was sitting in his Yankee Stadium office near the end of a season that has constantly kicked and thrashed at him like old Nifty, forcing the 52-year-old general manager to hold on for dear life. Cashman was talking at around the time he learned that reliever Dellin Betances' season would be a one-and-done proposition, thanks to a freak Achilles injury, and that Major League Baseball was placing his 18-4 pitcher, Domingo German, on administrative leave while it investigates a domestic violence allegation against him.

The Yankees have watched an MLB-record 30 players go on the injured list this year, costing them, according to Spotrac, more than 2,500 days of service while those players earned more than $80 million. They won the American League East anyway, despite (or because of) Cashman's offseason choice to stay clear of Manny Machado and Bryce Harper. They won 102 games (and counting) despite his midseason choice to stand pat as his biggest threat from here to a parade, the Houston Astros, added Zack Greinke and compelled The New York Post to portray Cashman as a zombie to illustrate its back-page headline, "The Walking Deadline."

The Yankees' starting rotation might yet compromise their bid to win it all. But the moves Cashman did make in the offseason and late last summer -- for the likes of DJ LeMahieu, Adam Ottavino and Gio Urshela -- fortified a roster deep enough and flexible enough to overcome the staggering list of injuries, and to inspire an interesting question.

After Cashman won a dozen division titles and four World Series rings in his previous 21 seasons as the Yankees' GM, was this his best work ... ever?

"You could flip it and say, 'Is this my best or my worst?'" he said through a laugh. "I got 30 guys hurt. I picked a lot of broken guys."

The GM was the Yankee who didn't break, even after some overheated Connecticut cops pulled guns on him in August while mistaking him for a thief who had stolen Cashman's Jeep Wrangler. The GM thanked police for their efforts and dismissed the whole incident, if only because he has proved one thing, above all, across all these years of running the most relevant team in the most volatile market:

You can kill Cashman. You just can't kill him off.

"I expected to be attacked," he said of the zombie depiction, not the cops, after his trade deadline inaction. "I expected to be publicly humiliated and ridiculed. I didn't react to it. I've grown thick skin. I understood the context, and I can appreciate the humor it provides. ... I made tough decisions not to do what I consider horrible deals on players that, if we imported, I didn't think would make any difference whatsoever but would cost us a lot in talent. Basically if I did it, it would be to cover my ass ... Everything I wanted didn't get moved. And the stuff that did get moved hasn't played out as well as I think people would have hoped in their world."

Cashman figured out long ago that the cover-my-ass approach wouldn't get him very far in New York, which is one reason Marcus Stroman ended up with the Mets. (Stroman took a Twitter jab at Cashman on Tuesday in response to the GM telling Yahoo the Yanks would have used the starter in the postseason bullpen.) Only Ed Barrow, Yankees GM from 1920-1945, has survived longer in the job, and Barrow didn't have to fight octagon matches with George Steinbrenner. In Cashman's Yankee Stadium office, isolated on a wall near the door hangs a simple framed profile shot of The Boss sent by a fan who found it while cleaning out his garage. The GM put up the picture because, he said, "I didn't have anything from The Boss, and he had a massive impact on my life."

This photo of the late owner, with one forbidding eye still locked on his underling, advances the narrative of Cashman as a scarred product of Daddy Steinbrenner, whose volcanic eruptions hardened the GM for the battles to come with Alex Rodriguez, Derek Jeter, Joe Torre and the New York tabs. But Cashman's toughness shouldn't be traced to Steinbrenner. It should be traced back to that horse farm in Lexington, Kentucky; Castleton; and to a man who had tangled with the Yankees' owner before assigning Brian to go one-on-one with Nifty.

The man who ran a storied franchise in the bluegrass with the same firm hand his son uses to run a storied franchise in the Bronx.


AT 16, AFTER squabbling with his father over his career ambitions, John A. Cashman Jr. ran away from his Long Island home. He was not interested in college, or in following his dad as a stockbroker on Wall Street. John wanted a piece of his dad's second career -- John Sr., a father of nine, was also a presiding judge at Roosevelt Raceway. John Jr.'s dream was to become a horseman.

He reportedly spent his runaway time at New Hampshire's Rockingham Park, and did some grooming, training and driving for the harness Hall of Famer, Delvin Miller, in Pennsylvania and Orlando. In 1959, after winning three races as Vida Hanover's driver, the 19-year-old Cashman was named assistant racing secretary at Vernon Downs in Central New York. Two years later, Cashman became the country's youngest racing director, at Roosevelt, at a salary of $12,500. He helped pack a defining New York venue at a much younger age than his son would; Brian, at 30, would become baseball's second-youngest GM ever in the winter of 1998.

John Jr. was in the Army Reserve when he was set up with a Long Island girl, Nancy Pratt, who used to show her horse in local events. Their blind date took place at the racetrack, of course. They married in 1963 and effectively lived at Roosevelt. "It was big-time back then," Nancy said. "We would get 30,000 or more fans at night. ... John was so driven, just like Brian would be in baseball. He worked day and night. He'd wake up and it was all about the horses."

"If we were struggling or if George [Steinbrenner] was on my ass with the latest complaint or problem, just crushing me, my dad would just say, 'Hey man, you can handle it.' He'd prop me up. He'd tell me, 'Keep fighting. Just stick with what you believe. Tell him what you think.'" Brian Cashman on his late father, John

The third of what would be five Cashman children, Brian was seven months old when his father left Roosevelt after six years to make more money breeding and selling. John was part owner of the stallion Speedy Streak, the Hambletonian champ. The Cashmans lived in Goshen and Washingtonville, New York, for 10 years, and life was good, except when it wasn't. John had to defeat his most daunting opponent -- alcoholism. "The children were young," said Nancy, now 77, "and he just had to shape up, and he knew it. He did it by himself. I was very proud of him."

Nancy said her husband was sober for the last 40 years of his life.

Brian didn't know his old man was an alcoholic until he opened a drawer in his office one day and found literature on a path to sobriety. He never asked his dad about it. "We were the old Irish family," Brian said. "Whatever your problems are, you don't talk about it."

John Cashman got his big career break in 1980, when he was asked to become general manager of Castleton Farm. "A beautiful show place," said longtime horseman Bob Boni, a close friend of John Jr.'s. "The Yankee Stadium of harness racing."

Cashman was widely regarded as fair, personable, relatable. He was genuinely liked by those beneath him on the organizational flowchart. And yet he was never afraid to speak his version of the truth. Brian Cashman witnessed his father making tough calls while in charge of the country's premier standardbred farm. John once fired an employee out of necessity, Brian said, and that employee "went on a bender and then called the house and said, 'I'm going to kill you and your family.'" Brian recalled seeing a police car parked outside the family's home.

"Most people are wired in a way to avoid conflict," Brian said, "and my father, like everybody, was willing to do that. But when circumstances dictated it, he would not allow bulls--- to fly. He was allergic to bulls---."

John Cashman ran Castleton for more than two decades, and Brian likened his eye for talent to that of Gene Michael, the scout who helped shape the Yankees dynasty of the 1990s. Brian thought horse people had the same reverence for his father's scouting ability that baseball people had for Michael's. "He could spend a whole day watching a horse jog and break down his gait," Brian said, "and somehow get insight into his soul. He'd be able to tell you if that horse was someone he'd be willing to place bets on in terms of purchasing, or recommending someone to buy a piece of that horse or not."

Bob Boni never met anyone with a better read on horses and the people who managed them. In fact, after spending half a century in the industry, Boni, the owner of New Jersey's Northwood Bloodstock, called Cashman the greatest harness racing executive of all time, hands down. John was inducted into the harness racing Hall of Fame in 1992.

Cashman helped create the Breeders Crown series and ran the United States Trotters Association, and he won too many awards and served on too many important councils and boards to count. He oversaw various properties under the Castleton umbrella, including Pompano Park, just north of the Yankees' spring training base then in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Cashman had established a number of friendships with railbird ballplayers, including Yankees great Whitey Ford and former Dodgers pitcher Ralph Branca, who had landed young Brian a bat boy job with his old team. The horse game also connected John to Steinbrenner, a notoriously bad loser on the ballfield and at the track.

"Normally John and George had a good relationship," Nancy said. "Except one year George didn't think John sold him the right horse. For three months the horse wasn't doing well, and George didn't pay the sales company. He wouldn't talk to John until he took back the horse. And then the horse started doing well, and he talked to John again."

Brian recalled his father standing up to Steinbrenner every time the owner wanted his money back on a losing horse. He said his old man also refused a Steinbrenner request to fix a celebrity drive in advance so the Boss would end up starting on the inside rail.

Brian's older brother, John III, trained horses for Steinbrenner for five years and called that period "a nightmare." John III said his father warned him that he shouldn't train for the owner, that The Boss had a long history of refusing to pay his bills. Steinbrenner screamed at John III once when their horse got beaten by a nose. "He finished second!" John III responded. "You know what second is?" The Boss shot back. "The first horse to lose."

"Most people are wired in a way to avoid conflict, and my father, like everybody, was willing to do that. But when circumstances dictated it, he would not allow bulls--- to fly. He was allergic to bulls---." Brian Cashman

Steinbrenner made up for his attacks on John III by hiring his younger brother in 1986. Brian was on a Florida trip, playing Division III ball for Catholic University, when he lost all his travel money in a high-low card game. His father told him to head over to Pompano, where track publicist Allen Finkelson would loan him some cash. Finkelson told Brian that he was Steinbrenner's best friend before asking the college freshman what he had planned for the summer. "I'm going to play in a summer baseball league," Cashman said.

"What if I get you an internship with the New York Yankees?" Finkelson asked.

Cashman was a Dodgers fan who despised the Yankees; he eagerly took the job anyway. He was a gofer by day, and a 160-pound security guard hauling drunks out of the stands by night. "My brother was very much like my dad," John III said. "They both climbed the ladder from the very bottom to the top."

The top, for Brian, was Steinbrenner's stunning offer for him to become Yankees GM after Bob Watson decided he'd had enough of The Boss' verbal abuse. On the day he was promoted, Feb. 3, 1998, Cashman had the nerve to admit at his news conference that he was an administrator who didn't consider his scouting ability a strength. He also had the nerve to announce that he didn't believe star center fielder Bernie Williams was worth the money he was seeking.

Steinbrenner had blown through more than a dozen GMs in 25 years of ownership, and it was hard to see Cashman lasting longer than Watson did. But on the phone from Castleton that day, John Cashman said he was putting his money on his son to beat the longest odds.

"Whitey Ford told me Brian has the perfect personality to deal with George," John said. "I happen to agree with him."


IN A QUIET moment at his desk last week, as he faced a wall covered with the names of every player in his system, Brian Cashman's voice wavered when he talked about his father's final days in 2012. John had been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, and Cashman had enlisted the help of Yankees president Randy Levine and MLB commissioner Bud Selig in getting him the best available treatment. John agreed to be flown out to Arizona for an assessment. "He did everything we wanted him to do to try to beat this thing that was unbeatable at the time," Brian said.

A lifelong Yankees fan, John closely watched his son's club every day as he was dying. "He would lose himself in how the team was competing on a daily basis," the GM said. Brian played his father's favorite Frank Sinatra and Alabama songs in John's final hours in hospice. John didn't often express how he felt about his son and his four siblings -- "It's just not the Irish way," Brian reminded. But the GM appreciated it when a few mourners at the funeral pulled him aside and told him how proud his father was of everything he'd accomplished.

"I used to tell John, 'You used to be a big-shot harness racing executive, and now all you are is Brian Cashman's father,'" Boni said. "And every time I told John that, he loved it."

John Cashman used to start his day by checking in with his three sons and two daughters. With Brian, the conversation usually revolved around Steinbrenner. The Boss forever threatened Brian's job, berated him for allegedly getting outfoxed by counterparts and ordered him to perform humiliating tasks -- John III said Steinbrenner once demanded that his brother personally collect the players' spring training rental car keys before they headed north.

Brian wasn't hesitant to punch back, and to trade F-bombs with his employer. His father always knew the right thing to say to temper the storm. "If we were struggling or if George was on my ass with the latest complaint or problem, just crushing me," Brian said, "my dad would just say, 'Hey man, you can handle it.' He'd prop me up. He'd tell me, 'Keep fighting. Just stick with what you believe. Tell him what you think.'

"He had this little way of just telling you to keep getting after it, and doing what you think is right, and you will be fine. But there were many times I was ready to move on. George Steinbrenner was as great an owner as you can have, but as difficult a boss as you can have also. And because of that roller coaster ride of emotions, my dad was always there to counsel me or guide me. I know he never wanted me to leave the Yankees. He was really proud of that."

So Brian Cashman never did leave the Yankees. He has no timetable on how much longer he wants to do this ("Just living in the moment," he said); he's been their GM longer than Bill Belichick has been head coach of the New England Patriots. During Cashman's time running the Yanks, the Mets have had six GMs, the Jets have had six and the Knicks have had eight. Cashman has survived the transition from the old Yankee Stadium to the new Yankee Stadium, from George Steinbrenner to Hal Steinbrenner, from a philosophy of spending opponents into oblivion to making the money smarter through analytics. As much as anything, he has survived nine seasons without a World Series title, an eternity in the Bronx.

"I used to tell John, 'You used to be a big-shot harness racing executive, and now all you are is Brian Cashman's father. And every time I told John that he loved it." Bob Boni, longtime horseman and family friend

But Cashman has averaged 95 victories over his 22 seasons. He is chasing his sixth World Series ring, his fifth as GM, and his first without Jeter and Mariano Rivera, the iconic cornerstones acquired by other executives. If Cashman wins another championship with a third manager (Aaron Boone would join Torre and Joe Girardi), it might make him a mortal lock to match his father as a Hall of Famer. Cashman says he never thinks about the Hall and cannot fathom a place in a Cooperstown that doesn't include The Boss. In fact, he can't understand why recent Yankees inductees (including Torre and Rivera) haven't used their platform to campaign for the owner. "Why don't you openly talk to why is he not here during your induction speech?" Cashman asked.

Steinbrenner is always there, somewhere, in Brian's mind. So is his old man. He thinks about John Cashman every day. Brian is proud that the Meadowlands named a race after him, and that his daughter, Grace, sang the national anthem before it as a tribute to her grandfather. The GM still laughs over the notion that his dad "broke every child labor law" when Brian worked garbage detail at Castleton, or when Brian had to hold up a pregnant mare's tail while a veterinarian dug deep to inspect the health of the foal.

"He was a tremendous father," the GM said.

Brian replicated his work ethic. He said he either inherited or innately learned John's willingness to make tough choices and to say things important people didn't want to hear. When Brian ordered Jeter to fix his defense and his relationship with A-Rod, and challenged The Captain to test the market during turbulent contract negotiations, longtime horsemen knew that sounded just like John Cashman's son.

Given that the Cashmans have always lived by the scoreboard, a question needs to be asked: Who's the better sports executive, John the father or Brian the son? "A toss of the coin," said John III, the family member. "I'll make it a dead heat," said Boni, the family friend.

Maybe October will end up being the tiebreaker, maybe not. Either way, Brian Cashman will honor his father as tries to ride this pinstriped pony home.

Wuhan Open: Wimbledon champion Simona Halep retires with injury

Published in Tennis
Wednesday, 25 September 2019 01:43

Wimbledon champion Simona Halep retired from the Wuhan Open after sustaining a lower back injury in her third-round match against Elena Rybakina in China.

The world number six, who ended the year as world number one in 2017 and 2018, withdrew when trailing 5-4 in the first set against the Kazakh wildcard.

Meanwhile, Australian top seed Ashleigh Barty qualified for the quarter finals with a 6-3 7-5 win against Sofia Kenin.

Third seed Elina Svitolina also progressed against Svetlana Kuznetsova.

Ukrainian US Open and Wimbledon semi-finalist Svitolina, ranked ninth, won 6-4 6-2 as she continues her battle for a world top-eight spot that would allow her to defend her title at the WTA Finals in Shenzhen in October.

Romanian Halep, currently third in the race to Shenzhen, said that the "sharp pain" in her lower back felt in "the same zone" as the injury which kept her out for three months at the end of 2018.

World number two Karolina Pliskova will compete for a quarter-final spot against Dayana Yastremska later on Wednesday.

All roads lead to Rome, next stop for TTX

Published in Table Tennis
Tuesday, 24 September 2019 00:54

Quite simply, whilst competition is the very essence of sport, enjoyment and a fun are at the heart of the matter; just as in Denver and Varberg, in Rome everyone can compete, there are no restrictions.

Equally playing restrictions have been removed, for TTX rackets have no artificial covering; there are no limiting rules for serving, just hit the ball, make it bounce once at your side of the table and then hop over the net, you are all set. Each match can be as many odd numbered games as you wish, each game being timed to two minutes.

European Week of Sport

The Roma Ping Pong Fest is one of the events of the “European Week of Sport”, a campaign to promote activity where inactivity thanks to modern day technology has become the increasing norm.

An enjoyable day beckons in the Italian capital city, the TTX event will be a major part of an occasion that involves the performing arts, street artists, games and music.

Worthy cause

Moreover, the event supports the “Città della Speranza” Foundation and research into Paediatric Oncoematology, research that covers many psychological and social aspects, linked to the difficult experiences of having a tumor during childhood or adolescence

Roma Ping Pong Fest: Website
Roma Ping Pong Fest: Application Form
Roma Ping Pong Fest: Città della Speranza
Roma Ping Pong Fest: Paediatric Oncoematology

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Notably, in an event where the top 16 names advanced directly to the main draw and were not required to compete in the group qualification stage, all accounted for adversaries listed amongst the top eight names in the initial phase of proceedings.

Impressively, Matei Dumitrescu overcame El Salvador’s Diego Orantes (11-5, 11-5, 8-11, 14-12), Jakub Kaucky beat Porapat Thanmathikom (7-11, 11-5, 11-7, 11-7), Djordje Pavlovic succeeded against Lode Hulshof of the Netherlands (11-9, 6-11, 11-4, 5-11, 11-4). Similarly, Paul Szilagyi and Evgeny Tikhonov prevailed when facing adversaries from the Czech Republic; Paul Szilagyi was in form against Matyas Lebeda (11-6, 11-6, 4-11, 12-10), Evgeny Tikhonov defeated Dan Janovsky (9-11, 11-5, 11-6, 12-14, 11-9).

Unexpected outcomes but not for the remaining principal names on opening day junior boys’ singles duty; Thailand’s Napat Thanmathikon, Brazil’s Kenzo Carmo and Spain’s Juan Perez all emerged undefeatrd to secure first places

Conversely, for the leading names in the junior girls’ singles event, there were no such problems. In a competition where the top eight names advanced directly to the main draw, Ukraine’s Anastasya Dymytrenko and Serbia’s Radmila Tominjak reserved first places in their respective groups, as did the Brazilian duo of Laura Watanabe and Giulia Takahashi. In a similar vein for the next in the order of merit it was success. Russia’s Vlada Voronina, Serbia’s Reka Bezeg and Croatia’s Hana Arapovic all secured top spots in their respective groups, as did Russia’s Libov Tentser.

Meanwhile, in the boys’ doubles event, as play advanced to the semi-final round there were surprises. Brazil’s Guilherme Teodoro and Eduardo Tomoike, the top seeds, duly advanced to the last four as did the no.2 seeds, the partnership formed by the Czech Republic’s Tomas Martinko and Jan Mokreys.

Alas for India’s Raegan Albuquerque and Yashansh Malik, the no.3 seeds, it was a second round defeat. They were beaten by Russia’s Ilia Koniukhov and Miron Vasilev (11-8, 11-7, 11-9) who in their very next round experienced defeat at the hands of the Czech Republic’s Filip Cernota and Matej Stach (11-5, 11-8, 11-6). Filip Cernota and Matej Stach now meet Guilherme Teodoro and Eduardo Tomoike in the penultimate round.

Surprise semi-finalists in the top half of the draw; it was the same in the lower half; the pair to exceed expectations being the Russian combination of Damir Akhmetsatin and Rusian Cherkes; at the quarter-final stage they ousted Slovakia’s Filip Delincak and Kamil Pach, the no.4 seeds (8-11, 12-10, 11-6, 11-6). At the semi-final stage they oppose Tomas Martinko and Jan Mokreys.

Two surprise pairs through to the semi-final round of the junior boys’ team event, in the junior girls’ doubles it is just one; Giula Takahashi and Laura Watanabe upset the order of merit. In the quarter-final round they beat Russia’s Olga Vishiakova and Vlada Voronina, the no.3 seeds, by the very narrowest of margins in a tension packed full distance contest (11-6, 4-11, 11-9, 11-3, 15-13).

In the penultimate round at semi-final stage the Brazilians meet the top seeded combination of Croatia’s Ana Arapovic and Amy Wang of the United States; Russia’s Elizabet Abraamian and Liubov Tentser, the no.2 seeds, face Chloe Chomis and Isa Cok of France, the no.4 seeds.

The individual events in the junior age group conclude on Wednesday 25th September.

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Nour El Sherbini wins the world title in Chicago

Egyptian aces battle for Women’s World title on home soil 
By ELLIE MAWSON – Squash Mad Correspondent

THE draws for the 2019-20 CIB PSA Women’s World Championship and the CIB Egyptian Squash Open PSA Platinum tournament have been announced, with some blockbuster fixtures in store at the Great Pyramid of Giza, Egypt.

The PSA Women’s World Championship, organised by Egyptian event company I-Events, is the most prestigious women’s squash tournament and will take place between October 24 and November 1, while the men’s Egyptian Squash Open will be held alongside it between October 25 and November 1.

Sixty four of the world’s leading female players will compete in Cairo for the coveted trophy, with the likes of Egyptian World No.1 Raneem El Welily, reigning World Champion Nour El Sherbini, French World No.3 Camille Serme and British Open champion Nouran Gohar all set to feature at the iconic Pyramids, which will host a World Championship for the first time since 2006.

World No.1 El Welily has been drawn against wildcard and compatriot Sana Ibrahim in round one and is featured on the same side of the draw as World No.4 Gohar and could potentially meet in the semi-finals.

The 2018 World Champion is also seeded on the same side of the draw as England’s No.1 Sarah-Jane Perry and 2018-19 World Championship runner-up Nour El Tayeb with the two set to meet in the quarter finals should the draw go to seeding. The two Egyptians have already met once this season at the China Squash Open, where El Tayeb got the better of the World No.1 in a thrilling final.

Reigning World Champion and World No.2 El Sherbini is seeded on the opposite side of the draw to El Welily and Gohar and will take on England’s Rachael Chadwick in round one. El Sherbini has withdrawn from this week’s Oracle NetSuite Open in San Francisco because of a knee injury.

El Sherbini claimed her third World Championship title at the 2018/19 PSA World Championships held inside Chicago’s Union Station when she defeated compatriot El Tayeb in the final.

The World No.2 has the likes of New Zealand’s World No.6 Joelle King and United States’ World No.8 Amanda Sobhy on her side of the draw as she looks to claim her fourth World Championship title, while she is predicted to meet World No.3 Serme in the semi-finals.

Meanwhile, at the Egyptian Squash Open PSA Platinum event, World No.1 Ali Farag receives a bye into the second round where he will face compatriot and former World No.3 Omar Mosaad for a place in the last 16.

The reigning World Champion is seeded on the same side of the draw as World No.7 Mohamed Abouelghar, Germany’s World No.5 Simon Rosner and New Zealand’s World No.6 Paul Coll.

Situated at the opposite end of the draw is World No.3 Tarek Momen, who receives a bye into the second round where he will face Wales’ World No.12 Joel Makin.

On Momen’s side of the draw is former World No.1 Karim Abdel Gawad, who he could face in the semi-finals, along with Peru’s Diego Elias and Colombia’s Miguel Rodriguez. 

Squash at the Pyramids, one of the most spectacular sights in sport

CIB PSA Women’s World Championship (October 24-November 1).

First Round Draw:
[1] Raneem El Welily (EGY) v [WC] Sana Ibrahim (EGY)
[19] Olivia Blatchford Clyne (USA) v Menna Hamed (EGY)
[30] Julianne Courtice (ENG) v Liu Tsz-Ling (HKG)
[Qualifier] v [11] Alison Waters (ENG)
[14] Salma Hany (EGY) v Rachel Arnold (MAS)
[21] Emily Whitlock (ENG) v Alexandra Fuller (RSA)
[26] Rowan Elaraby (EGY) v Lucy Turmel (ENG)
Melissa Alves (FRA) v [5] Nour El Tayeb (EGY)
[7] Sarah-Jane Perry (ENG) v Jemyca Aribado (PHI)
[25] Rachael Grinham (AUS) v Sarah Cardwell (AUS)
[32] Coline Aumard (FRA) v Danielle Letourneau (CAN)
Nada Abbas (EGY) [9] Tesni Evans (WAL)
[12] Victoria Lust (ENG) v Aifa Azman (MAS)
[27] Tinne Gilis (BEL) v Enora Villard (FRA)
[18] Nele Gilis (BEL) v Sunayna Kuruvilla (IND)
Low Wee Wern (MAS) v [4] Nouran Gohar (EGY)
[3] Camille Serme (FRA) v Salma Youssef (EGY)
[22] Millie Tomlinson (ENG) v Lee Ka Yi (HKG)17] Joey Chan (HKG) v Milnay Louw (RSA)
Lisa Aitken (SCO) v [16] Yathreb Adel (EGY)
[15] Hania El Hammamy (GY) v Jasmine Hutton (ENG)
[28] Donna Lobban (AUS) v Ineta Mackevica (LAT)
[31] Milou van der Heijden (NED) v Menna Nasser (EGY)
Sivasangari Subramaniam (MAS) v [8] Amanda Sobhy (USA)
[6] Joelle King (NZL) v Tsz-Wing Tong (HKG)
[20] Zeina Mickawy (EGY) v Emilia Soini (FIN)
[23] Nadine Shahin (EGY) v Cindy Merlo (SUI)
Olivia Fiechter (USA) v [10] Annie Au (HKG)
[13] Joshna Chinappa (IND) v Haley Mendez (USA)
[24] Mariam Metwally (EGY) v Ho Tze-Lok (HKG)
[29] Hollie Naughton (CAN) v Farida Mohamed (EGY)
Rachael Chadwick (ENG) v [2] Nour El Sherbini (EGY)

CIB Egyptian Squash Open (October 25-November 1) Draw:
[1] Ali Farag (EGY) [Bye]
[9/16] Omar Mosaad (EGY) [Bye]
[17/32] Nicolas Mueller (SUI) v Vikram Malhotra (IND)
[17/32] Mazen Hesham (EGY) v Karim Ali Fathi (EGY)
[17/32] Max Lee (HKG) v Ivan Yuen (MAS)
[9/16] Daryl Selby (ENG) [Bye]
[17/32] Chris Simpson (ENG) v Edmon Lopez (ESP)
[6] Mohamed Abouelghar (EGY) [Bye]
[5] Paul Coll (NZL) [Bye]
[17/32] Lucas Serme (FRA) v Omar Abdel Meguid (EGY)
[9/16] Gregoire Marche (FRA) [Bye]
[17/32] Iker Pajares Bernabeu (ESP) v Mohamed ElSherbini (EGY)
[9/16] Saurav Ghosal (IND) [Bye]
[17/32] Tsz Fung Yip (HKG) v Mazen Gamal (EGY)
[9/16] Fares Dessouky (EGY) [Bye]
[4] Simon Rosner (GER) [Bye]
[3] Karim Abdel Gawad (EGY) [Bye]
[17/32] Greg Lobban (SCO) v Karim El Hammamy (EGY)
[17/32] Leo Au (HKG) v Ramit Tandon (IND)
[17/32] Adrian Waller (ENG) v Youssef Ibrahim (EGY)
[17/32] George Parker (ENG) v Nathan Lake (ENG)
[9/16] Marwan ElShorbagy (EGY) [Bye]
[17/32] Mostafa Asal (EGY) v Alan Clyne (SCO)
[7] Diego Elias (PER) [Bye]
[8] Miguel Rodriguez (COL) [Bye]
[17/32] Borja Golan (ESP) v Baptiste Masotti (FRA)
[17/32] Raphael Kandra (GER) v [WC] Moustafa El Sirty (EGY)
[17/32] Eain Yow Ng (MAS) v [WC] Yehia Elnawsany (EGY)
[17/32] Cesar Salazar (MEX) v Todd Harrity (USA)
[9/16] Zahed Salem (EGY) [Bye]
[9/16] Joel Makin (WAL) [Bye]
[2] Tarek Momen (EGY) [Bye]

Report by ELLIE MAWSON (PSA). Edited by ALAN THATCHER.

Pictures courtesy of PSA 

Posted on September 19, 2019

Uruguay's stunning win leaves Fiji facing World Cup exit

Published in Rugby
Wednesday, 25 September 2019 00:22

Uruguay left Fiji on the brink of exiting the Rugby World Cup at the pool stage as they pulled off a memorable win in Kamaishi.

In a frantic first half, Fiji were left stunned as Uruguay came from behind to lead through tries from Santiago Arata, Manuel Diana and Juan Manuel Cat.

Api Ratuniyarawa reduced the deficit for Fiji while Nikola Matawalu touched down to give them a losing bonus point.

Fiji remain fourth in Pool D but languish behind Wales and Australia.

Fiji came into the game off the back of a defeat by Australia in their first match of the tournament, but they started comfortably in Kamaishi as Mesulame Dolokoto crossed at the corner early on.

A win would have got their tournament back on track and they led again through Eroni Mawi after Arata quickly responded for Uruguay, but the Fijians were stunned by a resilient Los Teros side.

Uruguay, who were playing their first match of this year's tournament, seemed unfazed by Fiji and kept them frustrated as they comfortably led most of the match.

Felipe Berchesi's penalty just before the break put Uruguay 12 points ahead and left Fiji with a mountain to climb to avoid a second successive defeat.

Fiji could have clawed down the gap had Josh Matavesi's kicking been on target, however the Newcastle Falcons fly-half missed two conversions and a second-half penalty before Ben Volavola missed the extras from Matawalu's score.

A crucial tie against Georgia on Thursday, 3 October (06:15 BST) now awaits Fiji, whereas Uruguay face Australia in Oita on Saturday, 5 October (06:15 BST).

Uruguay captain Juan Manuel Gaminara:

"I'm really proud of my country. We're not the biggest, we're not the tallest, but we came here to win.

"We've been preparing for this for four years so I'm really proud.

"We've been working since we qualified on this and we never take anything for granted and you saw the passion. It's inside all of us and we had to go there and fetch it today and bring it through."

Fiji coach John McKee:

"You have to pay tribute to Uruguay for the way they played with the attitude and approach to the game.

"They got a great result. For us, we were off the pace and critical errors gifted them tries and we didn't have the mental toughness to get back into the game.

"They scored three tries off our errors and we were focusing too much on keeping the ball and not turning it over.

"We have to recoup now as we've got Georgia in eight days time and it's a massive game for us."

Fiji: Veitokani; Nakosi, Radrada, Vatubua, Goneva; J Matavesi, Seniloli; Mawi, Dolokoto; Saulo, Ratuva, Ratuniyarawa, Waqaniburotu (capt), Voka, Nakarawa.

Replacements: Vugakoto, Ma'afu, Atalifo, Cavubati, S Matavesi Matawalu, Volavola, Botia.

Uruguay: Mieres; Freitas, Cat, Vilaseca, Silva; Berchesi, Arata; Sanguinetti, Kessler, Arbelo, Dotti, Leindeker, Gaminara (capt), Civetta, Diana.

Replacements: Pujadas, Gattas, Rombys, Lamanna, J Ormaechea, A Ormaechea, Etcheverry, Inciarte.

Referee: Pascal Gauzere (Fra).

England can cope with short turnaround - Jones

Published in Rugby
Wednesday, 25 September 2019 01:15

Head coach Eddie Jones is confident his reshuffled England team will cope with their short turnaround as they prepare for Thursday's game against the USA, four days after battling past Tonga.

Only five of the team from Sunday's 35-3 win in their opening World Cup game are keeping their starting places.

"We've done a fair bit of homework for this turnaround," Jones told BBC Sport.

"We trialled a four-day turnaround against Japan last autumn, to make sure the players have experience of it."

George Ford captains the side at 10, with Billy Vunipola selected again at eight and there are World Cup debuts for wingers Ruaridh McConnochie and Joe Cokanasiga plus centre Piers Francis.

Speaking to the BBC's Rugby Union Weekly podcast, Jones added: "We've looked at selection pretty closely, looked at the players who could back up and who couldn't back up.

"We've tried to work out which players need a rest. Each player is different - some players need a longer time to recover, and some are much better off when they're in form to keep playing."

England secured a four-try bonus-point win over Tonga in the Sapporo Dome, however, they laboured at times, solid in defence but making 14 handing errors across the 80 minutes.

Conditions in the Kobe Misaki stadium are likely to be similar to last weekend, the roof closed specifically for the match here rather than a permanent structure but the humidity inside still noticeable to those used to English autumns.

The home of Top League rugby team Kobelco Steelers as well as football team Vissel Kobe, the current club of former Barcelona and Spain great Andres Iniesta, has a capacity of just over 30,000, with England supporters increasingly visible on the streets of the city over the last few days.

Jones had described facing the USA starting XV as "like facing 15 Donald Trumps" in that he expects them to come out "all guns blazing" but South African coach Gary Gold, who has also coached London Irish, Newcastle and Bath as well as the Steelers, has opted for the more familiar skills of eight England based players.

Harlequins' Paul Lasike starts at inside-centre, Saracens' Titi Lamositele at tight-head prop and Sale's AJ MacGinty at fly-half.

The 29-year-old MacGinty had an excellent record off the tee for Sale last season, landing 83% of his shots at goal, while full-back Will Hooley is another familiar name to fans of the Premiership, the former England under-20s man having had spells at Northampton Saints and Exeter Chiefs before dropping down to Bedford Blues in the Championship.

England's defence coach John Mitchell coached the Eagles from early 2016 to July 2017, helping them qualify for this World Cup before heading to South Africa to coach the Blue Bulls.

And Jones has been picking his assistant's brains as England look to find a fluency that evaded them in their tournament opener.

Jones said: "We've spoke to Mitch about the psychology of the team, how they approach their games, the psychology of some of their players.

"They're definitely playing a different sort of game to the one they used to play.

"I coached against the USA a fair bit with Japan and they were a much freer, athletic team.

"They're now a much more pragmatic team, a team that kicks the ball a lot, with a sharp operator in MacGinty at 10, who our boys know pretty well."

Veteran prop Dan Cole will win his 91st cap at tight-head to go joint-third with Jonny Wilkinson on England men's all-time list, scrum-half Ben Youngs joining him if he comes off the bench as expected.

Cole was left out of Jones' squad earlier this year but is back in his third World Cup, along with Youngs and Courtney Lawes.

Jones said: "We had a number of conversations, and I'm really proud of how Dan has fought his way back.

"At one stage it was going to be difficult for him to go to the World Cup.

"We gave him a number of things he needed to work on, he went away and worked on them tremendously hard, so it's a great achievement for him and his family.

"To get 91 caps at tight-head for your country - particularly England, which is such a scrummaging powerhouse - gives an indication of his influence in the game."

Ford is enjoying a run of starts at fly-half, having sat on the bench during the Six Nations as Jones preferred Owen Farrell at 10 with a Manu Tuilagi/Henry Slade combination at centre.

But his two starts in this tournament do not mean he will get the same opportunity when the sterner tests of Argentina and France come in the next two games, according to his coach.

"You should read a lot into it - George is the best 10 for the USA game," he said.

"He just keeps evolving as a player, as do a number of our players.

"That's what I'm most impressed about with our team - there's a real thirst within the team to improve, and George is at the head of the queue pushing that forward."

England have won all five of their previous meetings with the USA, beating them in the World Cups of 1987, 1991 and 2007.

DuBeau Files Entry For Vermont Milk Bowl

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 24 September 2019 13:30

BARRE, Vt. – The biggest late model event of the year in the Northeast has added another big name to the entry list.

Rich Dubeau, the current American-Canadian Tour point leader and winner of the Coca-Cola Labor Day Classic, has officially committed to the 57th Vermont Milk Bowl presented by Northfield Savings Bank on Sept. 28-29.

Dubeau had not originally planned to enter the Milk Bowl, in part due to work commitments on Saturday’s Booth Bros./H.P. Hood Qualifying Day.

However, his recent Thunder Road win and a now-comfortable lead in the ACT Late Model Tour point standings helped persuade him to take on the challenge of “The Toughest Short Track Stock Car Race in North America.”

“We’re going to find a way to make it work,” Dubeau said. “We’ve found ourselves in a position we didn’t think we’d be in – leading the points by a big margin. Having one car, we were a little bit nervous to go to a non-point race and wreck the car and not have it right for the last race of the year. But based on the way things went at Thunder Road last time out, which we didn’t expect at all, the points are looking really good for us. So even if something were to happen, then it probably wouldn’t change anything on the ACT side.

“The Milk Bowl has always been a race I’ve wanted to run – it just kind of comes at a difficult time of the year for me,” Dubeau added with a laugh. “But we decided that, because we had some much success at Thunder Road last time out, we’d go have some fun.”

Dubeau is actually making his second trip to the Vermont Milk Bowl. He attempted to qualify for the 2015 edition during his first year racing with ACT in a separate car from his normal Tour effort. Dubeau failed to make the show that year, but the situation entering this year’s event is leaps and bounds away from what it was four years ago.

Now, he has finished no worse than seventh in his nine ACT-sanctioned starts in 2019, with two wins and five podium finishes.

“This year has just been a whole new thing,” Dubeau said. “I didn’t expect to run this well, to be perfectly honest. To some degree, all our finishes this year have been a little bit of a surprise. We thought it’d be cool to run in the top-five here and there, but if you had told me at the beginning of the season we were only going to finish outside the top-five once to this point and have two wins, I’d have said you were crazy.”

The former ACT Rookie of the Year now has “Thunder Road winner” on his résumé to boot. He led 148 of the 200 laps at the Labor Day Classic on his way to becoming the 100th different late model winner in Thunder Road history.

Furthermore, his closest challengers in the ACT point standings, Jimmy Hebert and Scott Payea, were caught up in an early wreck. As a result, Dubeau only needs to start the ACT season finale at Thompson to be crowned the 2019 champion.

However, Dubeau will start Milk Bowl Weekend behind the 8-ball. He expects to arrive late on Saturday due to his work commitments and will have little-to-no practice before time trials. As such, he is counting on his team to help his No. 30NH Toyota Camry hit the ground running.

Despite this, Dubeau is optimistic heading into the event thanks to his Labor Day victory.

“I’m feeling way more confident now than I was even two weeks ago,” Dubeau remarked. “We didn’t expect to have the speed we did (at Labor Day). The competition is going to be great. I’m trying to go in with the mentality of hopefully just having some fun. Points racing can be a little stressful at times, and without having to worry about points, I’m hoping to keep it fun.

“I am an extremely competitive guy though, and so is the rest of the team, so we’ll be giving it our best shot.”

Dubeau joins a stacked Milk Bowl field that includes some of the most accomplished racers in the country. Former Milk Bowl winners Jason Corliss, Joey Polewarczyk, Patrick Laperle, John Donahue, and Brent Dragon have all entered.

Several ACT stars are joining Dubeau at Thunder Road, including two-time defending champion Scott Payea, Jimmy Hebert, and Christopher Pelkey.

In addition, super late model legend Bubba Pollard of Senoia, Ga., is coming to take on local standouts such as Scott Dragon, Trampas Demers, Kyle Pembroke, and Brooks Clark.

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