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Nelly Korda built a big lead lead Friday at the Lacoste Ladies French Open in a bid to win her first LET title.

The American went low in the second round, posting a 7-under-par 64 at Golf du Medoc near Bourdeaux. She is at 10 under overall, six shots ahead of Spain’s Azahara Munoz (72), England’s Charlotte Thompson (70) and France’s Joanna Klatten (70).

France’s Celine Boutier (69) is among four players who are seven shots back.

Korda, 21, was undefeated in her matches at the Solheim Cup in Scotland last week, going 3-0-1 in the American loss to Europe. She’s a two-time LPGA winner and the highest ranked player in the world in the Ladies French Open at No. 10 in the Rolex rankings. 

“There’s still a lot of golf to be played, but I played really well today,” Korda said. “I started off hot on the front nine . . . I ended with a nice eagle.”

Portland must improve home form as Minnesota comes to town

Published in Soccer
Friday, 20 September 2019 13:11

The Portland Timbers will try to get their house -- and home form -- in order before the playoffs slip away, while Josef Martinez aims to score for a 16th straight game and lead Atlanta to three more points in the chase for first in the East. Another big clash in the East featuring geographic rivals fighting for playoff positioning and that all-important home-field advantage highlights the weekend in Major League Soccer.

Here are the big storylines heading into the MLS weekend.

Portland on the brink of missing the playoffs

Giovanni Savarese's Timbers had a tough start to the season, thanks in large part to the long road trip forced upon them by the renovations at Providence Park. All those road games and the poor results they fostered were supposed to be balanced out by a back-loaded home schedule. With 11 of their final 12 games at home to finish the season, the assumption was that the defending Western Conference champions would grab the points they needed to make the postseason.

After a 2-0 loss to the Red Bulls on Wednesday night, however, Portland has taken only 12 of a possible 24 points during this run. It's starting to get a little desperate now, with the Timbers sitting in eighth place with four games left on the schedule. Sunday's visit of an ascendant Minnesota United team -- 3:55 p.m. ET, ESPN -- is the next chance to right the ship.

Goals have completely dried up, with even Diego Valeri struggling to make his chances count.

The Loons won't be pushovers, either, especially not with their improved defense led by Ike Opara. Minnesota is in a fight for second place in the Western Conference and the chance at home-field advantage all the way to a conference final. It will take the Timbers' best effort to down a confident and ambitious United. The recent return to Adrian Heath's good graces by Darwin Quintero makes the trip out to Portland extra intriguing for those keeping an eye on Minnesota.

Can Josef Martinez make it 16 games with a goal?

Atlanta's Venezuelan scoring machine gets his next chance to extend his incredible record of consecutive games with a goal on Sunday when the Five Stripes welcome the San Jose Earthquakes to Mercedes-Benz Stadium on Saturday. Josef Martinez made it 15 straight matches with at least a goal when he hit for both tallies in Atlanta's 2-0 win over FC Cincinnati on Wednesday night.

More importantly, the win kept Atlanta within touching distance of Philadelphia and NYCFC for the top seeds in the Eastern Conference. With the new MLS playoff format in place, securing a top seed and maintaining home-field advantage for as long as possible is top of the mind for Frank de Boer and his side.

Defending the championship gets a lot easier with a run of home games, and Martinez taking his streak to 16 would surely go a long way toward three more crucial points for the defending champions. Atlanta needs to grab back some mojo at home after last week's 3-1 defeat at the hands of the also-ran Columbus Crew. San Jose, meanwhile, has lost two straight, both on the road, and is in danger of slipping out of the playoff places in the Western Conference.

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Matias Almeyda remains confident, but recent results only highlight the difference between the Quakes on the road and the Quakes in the comfortable environs of Avaya Stadium.

Red Bulls vs. Philly: The other East Coast rivalry

The Philadelphia Union aren't anyone's first choice as rivals. DC United still has more animosity for the Red Bulls, ditto for the New England Revolution. NYCFC hasn't been around long enough to start anything with the Union, and the Red Bulls? Well they, have the blue team across the river to worry about.

But the Union's push to the top of the Eastern Conference makes them a target, and Sunday's tilt against the Red Bulls at Red Bull Arena on Sunday is a massive game for both teams. The Union have been on a credential-building run of late, with a win vs. Atlanta and a draw with LAFC. Taking that run on the road and getting three points against the Red Bulls would only increase belief that this Union team will be a force to be reckoned with when the playoffs start next month.

New York broke a three-game losing streak with a road win in Portland on Wednesday and needs that momentum to carry over into Sunday's game. Chris Armas cooled his warming seat just a bit with the victory, but his team is far from out of the woods when it comes to claiming a playoff spot.

Coming off of Wednesday's win, Kyle Duncan could be an X factor out wide for the home side. The Red Bulls Academy product made a massive impact with the game winner and a late interception against the Timbers to help secure the win.

Full MLS schedule

Saturday, Sept. 21

- Atlanta United FC vs. San Jose Earthquakes (3:30 p.m. ET)
- Vancouver Whitecaps FC vs. Columbus Crew SC (5 p.m. ET, stream live on ESPN+)
- FC Cincinnati vs. Chicago Fire (7:30 p.m. ET, stream live on ESPN+)
- New England Revolution vs. Real Salt Lake (7:30 p.m. ET, stream live on ESPN+)
- Houston Dynamo vs. Orlando City SC (8:30 p.m. ET, stream live on ESPN+)
- Sporting Kansas City vs. Colorado Rapids (8:30 p.m. ET, stream live on ESPN+)
- LA Galaxy vs. Montreal Impact (10:30 p.m. ET, stream live on ESPN+)
- LAFC vs. Toronto FC (10:30 p.m. ET, stream live on ESPN+)

Sunday, Sept. 22

- Portland Timbers vs. Minnesota United FC (3:55 p.m. ET, ESPN)
- FC Dallas vs. New York City FC (6 p.m. ET)
- New York Red Bulls vs. Philadelphia Union (6:30 p.m. ET, stream live on ESPN+)
- D.C. United vs. Seattle Sounders FC (8 p.m. ET, stream live on ESPN+)

As a metropolis, Milan is on the rise again. It has been for the past five years. The skyline is changing, the architecture at the cutting edge. From the World Expo in 2015 to the Winter Olympics in 2026, the city is hosting one major international event after another. Named top of a list of 52 places to go by the New York Times four years ago, Milan's momentum is unchecked and the past decade has been compared with the booming 1960s.

The city's football clubs are not on top of the world, but if Milan exudes confidence at the moment, it's because these bastions of civic pride are exhibiting the necessary ambition to restore themselves to their former glory. Run at a loss in a pre-Financial Fair Play era by local fans-turned-owners who could no longer compete in a transfer market inflated with money from state-funded clubs like Man City and PSG, Milan's clubs experienced a painful transition.

Inter and Milan have changed ownership twice this decade. They are now in the "right" hands, it seems, funded by multibillion-dollar companies from China (Suning, which bought Inter in June 2016) and the U.S. (Elliot Management Company, which bought Milan in 2018). After years of full immersion, the newcomers to football have figured out who they want to be, what they need to do and how to be competitive. Mistakes have been made along the way, but little by little, Inter and Milan are figuring things out.

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The rivals share a desire to build a new stadium adjacent to Saturday's venue, San Siro. In everything else though, Inter and Milan could not be any more different. Ten seasons on from the last of this city's 10 European Cups (only Madrid boasts more) something is stirring, making Saturday's 224th Derby della Madonnina -- stream live on ESPN+, 9/21, 2:45 p.m ET -- the must-watch game of the weekend in Europe.

Both sides spent big this year

Inter and Milan committed nearly €300 million to their teams over the summer. Six new faces at each club give them a vastly different look.

Inter broke their transfer record twice, first for Cagliari's all-action midfielder Nicolò Barella (€49m) and then for Romelu Lukaku (€65m), Belgium's all-time top scorer. From the outset of his appointment as manager on May 31, it was clear that Antonio Conte had a very precise idea of the players he wanted and the system he wished to play.

Diego Godin's arrival on a free from Atletico and Alexis Sanchez's loan from Manchester United -- a clear and obvious redemption project following 18 dismal months -- underlined Conte's desire for established names. He seeks high-profile footballers who are used to the big stage and the responsibility of delivering for elite clubs and nations. United, it's hoped, constitutes a blip in Sanchez's and Lukaku's careers.

Milan took a different tack, focusing largely on under-the-radar prospects with a high upside who can be developed into stars by coach Marco Giampaolo. The club's chief football officer, Zvonimir Boban, insists this is a worthwhile strategy, too: "Low profile does not mean a lack of ambition."

Midfield playmaker Ismael Bennacer stood out at Empoli last year and was named player of the tournament as Algeria won the African Cup of Nations in July. Fans are also curious to see what becomes of Milan's biggest signing, Rafael Leao, a precocious winger/striker who forms part of Portugal's new golden generation along with Joao Felix. It's notable that Milan's team is the youngest in Serie A.

Conte vs. Giampaolo: Serial winner vs. underdog

Leaving aside the €182.5m Inter spent on players this summer, they sacked Luciano Spalletti and his staff at an estimated cost of €26m and made Antonio Conte by far the highest-paid coach in Serie A. Paid €11m a year, almost double what Maurizio Sarri is earning at Juventus, he is Inter's star signing.

A serial winner, Conte wastes no time once he takes a job. The work begins immediately. He won the league with seventh-place Juventus, then 10th-place Chelsea in his first year at both clubs, besting Max Allegri and Zlatan Ibrahimovic's Milan in Serie A before outdoing Pep Guardiola's Man City and Jose Mourinho's Man United in the Premier League.

Inter dazzled on opening night this season against Lecce and are already alone at the top on maximum points. Recent performances have not hit the same heights but the team already feels like Conte's, something that can't yet be said of Juventus under Sarri and Milan under Giampaolo.

Milan's coach, by contrast, has won nothing in his career, but Giampaolo did seem long overdue for a big job given his career to date. His style of football captured the imagination at Empoli and Sampdoria. Sarri is Giampaolo's sponsor and he arrives with the blessing of Milan guru Arrigo Sacchi. Two wins from three looks good on paper but Milan's schedule has been easy. They've faced two of the three promoted sides and neither convinced nor created much. So far this season, Milan have played six halves of football and failed to record a shot on target in three of them, a far cry from the entertaining football expected. A big performance in the derby is needed to ignite Milan's season.

Inter's desperation to win the league for the first time in a decade is so strong that supporters are willing to overlook Conte's allegiance to rivals Juventus. He refused to bounce up and down when they chanted: "who doesn't jump is a Juventus fan" at an event last week. The Milan faithful will also give Giampaolo, a childhood Inter supporter, the benefit of the doubt if he takes the team back into the Champions League.

No Icardi, no problem

Milan are as glad to see Mauro Icardi leave Serie A as some elements of Inter's support. The Argentine gave them nightmares in recent editions of the Madonnina, scoring a hat trick two years ago and a stoppage-time winner last season. It's down to Lukaku to show he is up to replacing a player who, statistically, ranks as one of Inter's all-time greats. (Icardi is on loan with Paris Saint-Germain for the 2019-20 season.)

Conte resurrected Carlos Tevez's career at Juventus. He will try to repeat the trick with Sanchez at Inter, but the player Milan will worry most about is another new signing, Stefano Sensi. There hasn't been a midfielder to make this much of an instant impact at Inter since the Wesley Sneijder era began in 2009. Sensi, a diminutive and dynamic playmaker, has been Serie A's standout performer so far. He has scored in both Serie A games at San Siro this season and improbably headed in last weekend's winner against Udinese.

Milan goalkeeper Gigio Donnarumma will have to pay close attention every time he steps up for a free kick. The giant shot-stopper has also made an excellent start to the campaign, pulling off some great saves to deny Udinese's Kevin Lasagna and Brescia's Stefano Sabelli. Keeping him, and Suso, was arguably the best business Milan did in the summer.

Scrutiny continues to fall on Krzysztof Piatek. He was the revelation of last season -- the Pole scored 33 goals for club and country -- but question marks remain about his ability to back it up, particularly in a new system that does not appear suited to his game.

Essex threaten to get busy at the business end of the season

Published in Cricket
Friday, 20 September 2019 10:58

It is the business end of the season, and Essex are threatening to get busy. The next week or so holds out the promise of being a momentous one for the club. Modestly resourced but tightly run from their endearingly ramshackle Chelmsford HQ, the culmination of the summer brings opportunity on two fronts - a rare chance in the modern county game to enjoy simultaneous first-class and limited-overs success.

It is more than a decade since Sussex last managed to combine winning the Championship with taking home one-day silverware as well, beating Lancashire in the 2006 FP Trophy final. Currently top of Division One, Essex know they are in a scrap to hold off Somerset and claim a second title in three years; but before that denouement in Taunton, Vitality Blast Finals Day and the chance of a maiden T20 trophy.

Such an outcome looked more than a long shot back in August, when they had won just two of their first ten games. Essex were "dead and buried", says Ryan ten Doeschate, captain of the Championship side and a vastly experienced old lag in T20. Then came three wins and a tie from the last four and something in the universe aligned - not since the Blast had switched to a 14-game season, had a team sneaked through to Finals Day on such meagre rations.

Also read: 'Young players win you games, but experience wins you titles' - Gurney

Success had not been signposted by Essex's recent T20 form, either. Last season brought just two victories and a seventh-place finish in the South Group, while the most recent of four previous Finals Day appearances came in 2013.

Ten Doeschate has been involved in them all, though none was particularly memorable from an Essex perspective. "Is it four?" he asks, furrowing his brow. On each occasion - against Leicestershire in 2006, Kent in 2008, Hampshire in 2010 and Northants six years ago - Essex were beaten in the first semi-final. The joke going around this time is that, with their game against Derbyshire scheduled for 2.30pm on Saturday, this is already the furthest they have been in the competition.

Ten Doeschate handed over the white-ball reins for this season to Simon Harmer, the former South Africa Test offspinner who has played such a vital role in Essex's Championship push. Harmer has overseen the return to Finals Day contention, with a largely similar squad to previous seasons - aggressive opener Cameron Delport the one significant addition.

It took a while to find the right balance for the team, with Varun Chopra eventually omitted and Tom Westley moving up to open alongside Delport. There have also been new roles for ten Doeschate and his old mucker, fellow Finals Day veteran Ravi Bopara, further down the order. But they seem to have found a formula at the right time.

"What's most exciting is we've turned things around with pretty much the same personnel," ten Doeschate tells ESPNcricinfo. "The last few years has been a bit of a struggle, Harmy coming in has shaken things up. The fact we haven't had two overseas for a lot of the games - the way the young guys have stepped into their roles.

"He's created a belief. He's gone with the approach, 'This is what we've got, we've got to make it work'. I think he's instilled a lot of confidence, particularly in the young guys. He wants the batters all to be positive, the change we've made a) in the batting order and b) personnel, I think that's made a big difference."

Essex will have to cope without their overseas players at Edgbaston on Saturday, with Adam Zampa and Mohammad Amir both unavailable (Amir missed almost half of the group stage with visa issues anyway). Netherlands seamer Shane Snater and young left-arm spinner Aron Nijjar have been added to the squad, and aside from ten Doeschate, Bopara and Adam Wheater, who went to Finals Day on more than one occasion with Hampshire, most of those on the bus up to Birmingham will be experiencing the occasion for the first time.

"The fact that most of the guys haven't been to it is probably a good thing, we'll go there tomorrow and it won't play on too many peoples' minds," ten Doeschate said. "The experience some of us do have, particularly myself and Rav, we've played a lot of games and hopefully we can spread that through the squad and prepare the guys for tomorrow. The fact it's been a season for turning things around, and we've done it against the odds. The position we were in with four games to go, we were dead and buried, virtually no way we could make it. That's a nice way to go into a final."

It was ten Doeschate and Bopara who were in the middle together as Essex sealed a quarter-final win over North Group winners Lancashire a fortnight ago. With 344 and 329 T20 appearances respectively, as well as experience in the IPL and beyond, they will hope to provide the big-match savvy as Essex seek that first semi-final success.

"There are very few games at Essex I've played without Ravi in the team. So it's always special to go out to bat with him. We are getting on, so we keep saying 'One more time, one more time'. But the form he's been in, and his approach to the game in the last six weeks - we don't like to single people out, but he's played a massive part in getting us to this stage of the competition."

As to whether Essex are overdue a limited-overs title, having last won the FP Trophy in 2008, ten Doeschate points out how difficult it is to combine success across the formats. Essex, of course, won the Championship in 2017, having been promoted the year before, and have set their store by red ball in recent years. Of the three other teams at Finals Day, Nottinghamshire have already been relegated in the Championship, while Worcestershire and Derbyshire are in the bottom four of the second tier.

"There's not many teams who do well in both formats," he said. "This year's a prime example. There's a lot of merit in saying it's hard to win both. But it's great that we have an opportunity to go there and win a cup that's long overdue."

With a rare double in prospect, can Essex be the exception that proves the rule? Ten Doeschate smiles and shakes his head. He will be 40 next year and hopes to still be playing for the club he joined in 2003 - whatever happens over the next week won't change his view.

"To dwell on results isn't healthy. I think the club can be immensely proud of what the team's done this year. The change in fortunes in white ball is something to be very proud of - and again the way we've competed in red ball. I'm not too focused on where we end up. It's five days - I'm not going to let five days define whether I think it's been a good season or not a good season. I think it's been a great season, and the chance to win two cups is fantastic. Of course we want to give it a crack."

Edgbaston on the third Friday afternoon in September.

A few moments ago Dan Christian was chatting about Nottinghamshire's second appearance in three years at the Vitality Blast T20 Finals Day. Christian has played for Australia, Barbados Tridents, Brisbane Heat, Deccan Chargers, Delhi Daredevils, Hobart Hurricanes, Melbourne Renegades, Multan Sultans, Rising Pune Supergiant, Royal Challengers Bangalore and Trinbago Knight Riders.

In a few minutes' time Moeen Ali will be explaining what it might mean were Worcestershire to retain the trophy on Saturday. Moeen has played for Royal Challengers Bangalore and was in England's World Cup winning squad.

At the moment, though, Billy Godleman is talking about the same occasion. Godleman plays for Derbyshire.

Derbyshire have never been to Finals Day.

And yet you sense this is simply part of the motivation Godleman enjoys: a chance to tweak a few noses. His eyes are bright with enthusiasm as he talks about it all.

"I see it as an opportunity," he said. "We have no pressure or expectation on us. At the start of the competition no one expected us to get to the quarter-finals let alone a semi-final. So we are happy to go fly under the radar and turn up and play some good cricket on the day."

Godleman makes a good point. Derbyshire needed to win their last three matches in the North Group to qualify for the last eight. They did so. They travelled to Bristol for the quarter-final in which they were expected to lose to Gloucestershire. They won. And tomorrow they will take on Essex in the second semi-final at Edgbaston.

One gets the impression that Godleman cannot wait to get stuck in. But he is by no means the only member of Derbyshire's squad bristling at such a prospect. The Finals Day freshmen have been coached to excellent effect this year by Dominic Cork, another cricketer who relished taking the world's expectations and depositing them in the nearest incinerator.

"Corky played for the club for the majority of his career," said Godleman. "He knows what it is to be a Derbyshire player: the underdog who has the opportunity to ruffle a few feathers among the bigger counties. That is something we relish.

"He's brought lots of energy and for me as captain he has been incredibly insightful," he continued. "I've been very fortunate to know Corky for a number of years now and he's one of the finest cricket brains that you could wish to meet. For me to have access to his cricket nous on a one-to-one basis as coach-captain has been very beneficial. Corky is very much about us going out and playing our best cricket with freedom. His view is that cricketers play their best when they have that freedom and that's what we have tried to create in this campaign."

Plainly it has worked so far and it will be fascinating to see how Derbyshire's players react when presented with a full-house at Edgbaston and the pressures of the biggest occasion most of them have encountered.

"We like to think we have a method and we are just really excited to have the opportunity to play a semi-final and maybe a final as well," said Godleman. "There's a range of emotions and everyone's different. There is a lot of enthusiasm, a lot of excitement, a lot of nerves and a lot of apprehension but what I've sensed from the group is that the overriding emotion is the excitement of the opportunity to play in Finals Day."

And should Derbyshire younger players need even more experienced advice tomorrow afternoon, the squad also includes Ravi Rampaul, whom Godleman rates as one of the best bowlers in the tournament, and Darren Stevens, 43-year-old Kent loanee, who this week scored 237 and took seven wickets in that side's 433-run thrashing of Yorkshire.

"Stevo's on fire," said Godleman. "Every time he goes out there he gets either a five-fer or a double hundred. He's another really good cricket man. He hasn't played as much as we expected or he expected but that's not to disregard what he's brought off the field and the way he shares his experience with the guys. That's been a massive boost for us."

So we are all set up for another Finals Day. Everyone is wondering whether Worcestershire can win back-to-back trophies; or whether Nottinghamshire can rescue their season; or whether Essex can win the first of what may be two pots in a week. Of course Derbyshire can't do it. No chance.

"Please keep taking like that," Billy Godleman might reply.

Liam Plunkett has said that "disappointment is an understatement" after he was surprisingly overlooked in England's list of centrally contracted white-ball players for 2019-20.

Plunkett played a key role in England's maiden World Cup triumph this summer, including three wickets in their victory in the final against New Zealand at Lord's, and has claimed a total of 96 ODI wickets at 28.01 in the four years since the last World Cup in 2015, more than any other England white-ball seamer.

However, at the age of 34, Plunkett has been considered by the ECB management to be past his prime as they begin to gear their white-ball squads towards next year's T20 World Cup in Australia and ultimately the defence of their 50-over title in India in 2023, by which stage he will be 38.

Explaining the decision at Lord's on Friday, Ashley Giles, England's director of men's cricket, praised Plunkett's contribution as a "fantastic servant" to the white-ball team, but pointed out that his pace had dipped in recent seasons and that a team with an eye to the future had a duty to prioritise a new generation of bowlers - not least Tom Curran, who was a non-playing member of England's World Cup squad, and the Lancashire paceman, Saqib Mahmood, who is expected to be named in England's T20 squad next week, for their five-match tour of New Zealand.

"Plunkett has been … one of Eoin [Morgan]'s go-to men," Giles said. "But moving into a new cycle of four years, before the 50-over World Cup and two T20 World Cups, he probably didn't fit those future needs for the next 12-24 months, which is tough.

"He's one of the most physical men we have in our line-ups. He's incredibly fit and strong, but in terms of the numbers, I guess his paces have been down a little bit for some time.

"His best came in that role in the World Cup, and the World Cup final. He should be really proud of that achievement, and what they did as a team, but everything moves on for all of us."

Writing in his Independent column after the World Cup win, Plunkett conceded he had "definitely" played in his last 50-over World Cup, but had vowed to "stick around in the game for a little longer".

He took to Twitter on Friday afternoon to express his disappointment at the decision, although he later clarified: "I am really happy for all the boys who got contracted. I am not having a pop at anyone just disappointed I didn't get one."

Giles added: "We're not saying that the door's closed, but just in terms of the core of that team, which is where those contracts are offered, he probably just misses out. It's difficult to be the person who puts that pen through the name, but that's cricket."

Another player on whom the door is not closed is Alex Hales, despite being stripped of his white-ball contract in the wake of the positive tests for recreational drug use that led to his sacking from the World Cup squad.

Hales has a prominent opportunity to make his case for an England recall on T20 Finals Day at Edgbaston on Saturday, where Nottinghamshire take on the defending champions Worcestershire in the first semi-final.

Joe Clarke and Tom Kohler-Cadmore, who were stood down from England Lions duty following inappropriate off-field behaviour, were also given a clean slate as Giles cited the recent example of Ben Stokes to show that players who make career-threatening errors of judgement can earn themselves second chances.

"The door isn't closed on Alex, or certainly those other guys," he said. "They've served whatever time they had to serve. It will come down to performance, and there is always an element of culture and team cohesion."

In the short term at least, Hales might find his path back to the England squad blocked by the captain, Eoin Morgan, who was scathing in his assessment of Hales' character when explaining the reasoning behind his World Cup axing.

"Eoin talked about that element of trust, and has there been enough time to make up for that?" said Giles. "Maybe, maybe not … that'll come down to Eoin and the selectors, but the door is still open. He's a fantastic T20 player and, you know, a mistake shouldn't haunt you for life. As we've seen very good other example this year."

After a period of reflection in the wake of the World Cup win, Morgan recently confirmed that he was ready to carry on as England captain, a development that delighted Giles, especially given that the concurrent departure of the coach Trevor Bayliss would have left the white-ball squad rudderless in the interim.

"We met about a month after the World Cup final, and he wanted some time to consider his future, which is just the way Morgs operates," Giles said. "He's very sensible, very logical. And thankfully, he rang me a couple of weeks after that, and said, I'm absolutely fully committed to going forward. And I'm looking forward to it, refreshed.

"That first month was probably a bit of a haze for him anyway," he added. "But he's probably dried out a bit and come around, and I'm delighted. He is a fantastic leader of men in that dressing room. And with us losing Trev, it's important we maintain some consistency and that leadership going forward."

Morgan's role in moulding the England team post-2015 has been well documented. But Giles believes that, even if he is unable to take the side all the way to the 2023 World Cup (by which stage he will be 36), the groundwork already laid is such that Jos Buttler (or AN Other candidate) would be well placed to take over at shorter notice.

"To give Jos that responsibility now, I think, is a lot for him, given he's playing across all three formats. But is he a future leader? Quite possibly. And given where the white-ball team is, perhaps we can manage that transition better.

"But just because we're world champions, we can't just keep doing the same stuff. When the new coach comes in, his relationship with the captains is going to be important. And we will need different things in both environments, because the white-ball environment is probably more mature in how they play their cricket than the Test environment. But both are really exciting opportunities."

Panthers rule out Newton (foot) against Cardinals

Published in Breaking News
Friday, 20 September 2019 12:51

CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- The Carolina Panthers on Friday officially ruled quarterback Cam Newton out and named Kyle Allen the starter for Sunday's game in Arizona against the Cardinals.

Newton aggravated a sprained left foot in his last outing, a Thursday night loss to Tampa Bay that dropped the Panthers to 0-2. He did not practice all week, working inside with the trainer and going to meetings while wearing a walking boot.

"He's actually coming along well," coach Ron Rivera said Friday on a conference call. "The unfortunate part was last week he was playing on a short week and the foot didn't have time to come back, as far as I understand it. It was pretty sore. It was just one of those things where we have to wait it out and see where it is [next week].

"The one thing we don't want to do is have another setback."

This will be Newton's seventh missed start since he made his NFL debut in 2011 at Arizona. There was no indication on whether Newton would be available for next week's game at Houston.

For Allen, a native of Scottsdale, Arizona, his second career start will be a homecoming. In last year's finale, the then-undrafted rookie out of the University of Houston led Carolina to a 33-14 victory over the New Orleans Saints while Newton was sidelined with a shoulder injury.

This also will be a reunion of sorts for Allen and Cardinals rookie quarterback Kyler Murray. Both were at Texas A&M in 2015 and both transferred to other colleges within a few months of each other, Allen to Houston and Murray to Oklahoma.

Murray went on to become the Heisman Trophy winner and first pick of the 2019 draft. Allen went undrafted after being replaced as Houston's starter in 2017 and forgoing his senior season for the draft.

"It's totally two different paths," Allen said. "It's cool to be back on the field with him. I have a lot of respect for him as a player."

Each quarterback is being counted on to help his team out of an 0-2 hole. While Murray comes in with better credentials and two starts this season, the Panthers are confident Allen can get the job done.

"The best thing I can tell you to do is look at our last game last year," Panthers offensive coordinator Norv Turner said of Allen. "That's the way I would expect him to play. He played at a high level."

Allen completed 16 of 27 pass attempts for 228 yards and two touchdowns with no interceptions to help the Panthers end a seven-game losing streak after a 6-2 start.

Confidence isn't a problem for the 23-year-old. He talked earlier this week about how Roger Staubach, a friend of Allen's father, sent him an autographed picture and how he sent the Hall of Fame quarterback an autographed picture of himself.

When he was 10.

Allen said he's not nervous about the prospects of starting at Arizona's State Farm Stadium, where he never played a down but attended games growing up. "For me, it's weird, but I just look at it as work," Allen said.

Brown out: Pats cut WR amid off-field allegations

Published in Breaking News
Friday, 20 September 2019 14:27

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- The New England Patriots released embattled wide receiver Antonio Brown on Friday, less than two weeks after signing him.

"We appreciate the hard work of many people over the past 11 days, but we feel that it is best to move in a different direction at this time," the team said in a statement.

Brown, who had practiced with the team earlier Friday, tweeted his thanks to the organization shortly before the move was announced.

Brown has been accused of sexually assaulting his former trainer, Britney Taylor, according to a civil lawsuit she filed Sept. 10. A source previously told ESPN's Jeff Darlington that Brown declined to sign a $2 million-plus agreement with Taylor in a proposed settlement.

Taylor met with the NFL on Sept. 16. A source had previously told ESPN that there are "more interviews and information-gathering being conducted now beyond Taylor."

It remains unclear when or if Brown will interview with the league.

In addition to the lawsuit, Brown faces another allegation of sexual misconduct by a female artist who was working at his Western Pennsylvania home in 2017. That allegation was part of a Sports Illustrated report published Monday that detailed domestic incidents involving Brown, a charity auction theft and multiple unpaid debts.

On Thursday, the lawyer for the artist reached out to the NFL after Brown apparently sent what were described as threatening text messages to her client. The sides spoke Friday morning, with the woman's attorneys saying in a statement that the league "pledged to conduct a thorough investigation under its Personal Conduct Policy." According to that statement, the league also contacted the Patriots, who then directed Brown to have no further contact with the woman.

play
0:56

Brown scores TD in only game with Patriots

In his only game as a Patriot, Antonio Brown finishes with four catches for 56 yards and a touchdown as New England routs Miami.

Brown, 31, made his debut with the Patriots last Sunday against the Miami Dolphins, totaling four catches for 56 yards and one touchdown.

On Thursday, Brown answered four questions from reporters, which marked the first time he had addressed the media since joining the Patriots. He was not directly asked about the civil lawsuit, or the allegations of sexual misconduct.

"I'm just here to focus on ball," Brown said in an interview that lasted just one minute, when asked if he had heard from the NFL about his availability.

The Patriots had agreed to pay Brown a $9 million signing bonus, which was divided into two parts -- $5 million that was due to be paid Sept. 23 (Monday) and $4 million that wasn't due to be paid until Jan. 15.

"It's unfortunate things didn't work out with the Patriots," the receiver's agent, Drew Rosenhaus, said. "But Antonio is healthy and is looking forward to his next opportunity in the NFL. He wants to play the game he loves and he hopes to play for another team soon."

Without Brown, the Patriots have Julian Edelman, Josh Gordon, Phillip Dorsett and undrafted Jakobi Meyers and Gunner Olszewski on the wide receiver depth chart, with special-teams captain Matthew Slater a niche/emergency option.

New England is 2-0 this season, winning both games by a combined 76-3. The defending Super Bowl champs host the New York Jets on Sunday. According to Caesars Sportsbook, New England's odds to win that game went from -22.5 to -21.5 after Brown was released. The over-under went from 44 to 43.5, per Caesars.

NBA board passes stricter tampering measures

Published in Basketball
Friday, 20 September 2019 13:48

NEW YORK -- The NBA's Board of Governors on Friday unanimously approved a series of measures to more strictly enforce compliance with tampering and salary-cap circumvention.

In addition to being subject to fines up to $10 million, teams can also lose draft picks, executives can be suspended and contracts can be voided when rules are not followed. In addition, teams must save communications with agents for one year and random auditing of a team's communication with agents and other teams can take place.

"We had, I think, a very healthy discussion on those issues," NBA commissioner Adam Silver said of the changes in a news conference after the league's meetings had concluded. "Certainly the provisions passed unanimously, and there was a strong view I think of every single person in the room that we need to ensure that we're creating a culture of compliance in this league and that our teams want to know that they're competing on a level playing field, and frankly don't want to feel disadvantaged if they are adhering to our existing rules.

"The ultimate goal here is to ensure compliance and to ensure that there's that appropriate tension that exists at the team. So there is sort of a significant threat that if a team doesn't comply, that there will be consequences."

Both tampering and the potential for salary-cap circumvention gained steam this summer, after a series of deals appeared to be agreed upon before free agency officially began at 6:01 p.m. ET on June 30 -- and after Kawhi Leonard's high-profile free agency resulted in both he and Paul George winding up with the LA Clippers.

As a result, Silver and the league entered this week's meetings with a series of things the NBA wanted to implement to create stricter consequences going forward.

Among them:

* The annual, random auditing of five teams' communications with rival front offices and player agents, along with the league having the mandate that it can "undertake more in-depth investigations ... where cause exists";

* Increasing the maximum fine amount to $10 million;

* Top team officials are required to save communications with agents for one year

Those items are now officially league rules after the Board of Governors' unanimous approval Friday afternoon -- easily clearing the 75% majority vote (23 out of the 30 NBA teams) needed to enact them.

One of the biggest areas of concern for team officials centers around privacy concerns stemming from the league's ability to seize communications devices.

While that is something that the league could already do -- such as when it investigated the Brooklyn Nets (and ultimately cleared them of wrongdoing) over the signing Andrei Kirilenko in the summer of 2013 -- Silver acknowledged those fears in his opening statement announcing the changes.

"I'm sure you've heard some of the chatter around these rules," Silver said. "As I said, I understand it, that none of us want people looking into our private affairs. I think part of the discussion, of course, went to what the scope of any investigation should be. I am not interested in looking in any aspects of people's life outside of what is relevant to the operation of their teams, unless of course there is an issue that requires that we look into something outside the scope of what we're addressing here."

Still, when Silver was asked directly about how he and the rest of the league office addressed those concerns, he notably left the door open to pursue them.

"Well, I'm not sure I allayed everyone's concerns, but I will say it's my job to create an appropriate amount of tension in that area," Silver said. "Obviously, if people felt that they were absolutely free and clear to communicate in certain ways, you wouldn't be addressing the consequences notion of improper activity.

"Again, I understand it. As I was saying from the other standpoint, none of us want people looking into their personal communications. But I think people who operate in a public company environment, who operate in a financial world, who are used to compliance procedures, understand that you have to find the right balance of disclosure and privacy so that you can ensure that people of goodwill will understand that there will be consequences to inappropriate behavior."

Meanwhile, as far as how the mechanics of the random auditing of the five teams will take place, Silver said more work still needs to be done to iron out the details.

"There's not much more I can share with you at this point, and not because I'm withholding information from you," Silver said. "We listened to our teams. We heard their concerns. We said we would go back and, in essence, come up with a framework in which we would discuss with our teams before we implemented it and recognize the balance, again, of their privacy concerns with our need to ensure compliance.

"At some point there will be more information available, but the league has additional work to do in that area before we, in essence, promulgate the specific rules around compliance."

The measures were part of several changes approved by the board:

TRAVELING: The league also issued a statement announcing it had clarified the language governing how it makes traveling calls.

The new language provides a formal definition of a player "gathering" his dribble -- something that has been part of how referees determine traveling calls for some time, but has never been actually spelled out in the rules. Now, it is.

"One of the most misunderstood rules in our game is how traveling is interpreted and appropriately called," NBA President of League Operations Byron Spruell said in the statement. "Revising the language of certain areas of the rule is part of our three-pronged approach to address the uncertainty around traveling."

ANNOUNCING LINEUPS EARLIER: Teams must now make official their starting lineups 30 minutes before tipoff, as opposed to 10. The move was made "to increase transparency for teams, media and fans," according to the statement.

It also stands to reason that, as sports gambling grows more and more prevalent, the additional clarity would be a benefit to gamblers, as well.

Teams will still have the ability to change their starting lineup after the 30-minute deadline if "circumstances change" -- typically if a player was to sustain or exacerbate an injury during pregame warmups.

Intense day, medallists decided, colour unknown

Published in Table Tennis
Friday, 20 September 2019 08:00

One interloper in the penultimate round of the men’s singles event, in the women’s singles, China is totally dominant. Chen Meng meets Liu Shiwen, Ding Ning opposes Sun Yingsha.

Meanwhile at the same stage of the men’s doubles, Fan Zhendong and Xu Xin play Japan’s Maharu Yoshimura and Shunsuke Togami, Liang Jingkun and Lin Gaoyuan oppose Hong Kong’s Lam Siu Hang and Ng Pak Nam; for the women’s doubles, it is Chen Meng and Wang Manyu versus Japan’s Miu Hirano and Kasumi Ishikawa; Ding Ning and Zhu Yuling in opposition to Saki Shibata and Hitomi Sato, also from Japan.

Focused

Totally focused on the task ahead, Xu Xin, the top seed, accounted for Japan’s Maharu Yoshimura, the no.12 seed (7-11, 11-8, 11-2, 11-5), before ending the hopes of Korea Republic’s Lee Sangsu, the no.8 seed in clinical style (11-7, 11-6, 11-8).

Similarly, Fan Zhendong underlined the fact that he was in no mood to surrender the title won in 2017 in Wuxi; the no.2 seed, he overcame Chinese Taipei’s Liao Cheng-Ting, the no.35 seed (11-4, 11-5, 11-4) and then followed with success against colleague Wang Chuqin, the no.9 seed (11-8, 12-10, 11-6).

Comprehensive wins, Tomokazu Harimoto, the no.4 seed, was in the same vein; he recorded a straight games win against Chinese Taipei’s Chen Chien-An, the no.14 seed (11-5, 11-9, 12-10) and then dealt out the same medicine when facing Korea Republic’s Jeoung Youngsik, the no.10 seed (11-8, 11-7, 11-5), the somewhat surprise fourth round winner in opposition to China’s Liang Jingkun, the no.5 seed (11-8, 11-7, 11-5).

Impressive performances, Lin Gaoyuan, the no.3 seed, was in the same mode, after overcoming Korea Republic’s An Jaehyun, the no.16 seed (11-9, 11-8, 11-9), he ended the hopes of the crowd favourite, India’s Sathiyan Gnasakeran, the no.11 seed (11-7, 11-5, 8-11, 11-8).

No repeat

In the women’s singles there was to be no repeat of 2017 when Ding Ning had lost in the quarter-final round to Miu Hirano; the no.2 seed, after ousting India’s Ayhika Mukherjee, the no.30 seed (11-5, 11-13, 11-4, 11-9), Ding Ning prevailed against her teenage opponent, the no.7 seed in straight games (11-8, 13-11, 11-4).

Likewise, Chen Meng, the top seed, showed no charity. She recorded a straight games success against Japan’s Miyu Kato, the no.16 seed (11-8, 11-7, 11-8), before repeating the feat in opposition to Singapore’s Feng Tianwei, the no.10 seed (11-6, 11-7, 11-8).

Imposing performances; similarly, Liu Shiwen, the no.4 seed, accounted for DPR Korea’s Kim Song I, the no.12 seed (11-9, 11-13, 11-4, 11-7) and then followed with success in opposition to Japan’s Kasumi Ishikawa, the no.6 seed (11-7, 11-8, 11-8). Commanding efforts, Sun Yingsha, the no.5 seed, was not to be left out; she reserved her semi-final place courtesy of success against colleague Wang Manyu, the no.3 seed, having one round earlier beaten Japan’s Hitomi Sato, the no.13 seed (11-5, 11-5, 11-3).

Hitomi Sato and Saki Shibata upset seeding

Earlier in the day, at the quarter-final stage of the women’s doubles event it had been success for China and Japan, the pair to attract the attention being that of Hitomi Sato and Saki Shibata. They emerged the one partnership to upset the order of merit; the no.5 seeds, they accounted for Hong Kong’s Doo Hoi Kem and Lee Ho Ching, the no.4 seeds (11-8, 11-9, 6-11, 12-10).

Success for Japan against Hong Kong, it was the same in the opposite half of the draw, the only difference being that the outcome was as predicted. Miu Hirano and Kasumi Ishikawa, the no.3 seeds, accounted for Minnie Soo Wai Yam and Zhu Chengzhu, the no.9 seeds (11-2, 14-12, 13-11).

Semi-final places for Japan, the same for China; Chen Meng and Wang Manyu, the top seeds, beat Korea Republic’s Jeon Jihee and Yang Haeun, the no.7 seeds (11-3, 11-4, 11-9); Ding Ning and Zhu Yuling, the no.2 seeds, overcame Chinese Taipei’s Chen Szu-Yu and Cheng Hsien Tzu, the no.6 seeds (11-4, 11-8, 8-11, 11-7).

Lam Siu Hang and Ng Pak Nam respond

Disappointment for Hong Kong, at the same stage of the men’s doubles event there was success but arguably not as anticipated. Wong Chun Ting and Ho Kwan Kit, the no.4 seeds, lost to Maharu Yoshimura and Shunsuke Togami, the no.10 seeds (13-15, 11-9, 12-10, 11-7).

However, Lam Siu Hang and Ng Pak Nam responded. The no.12 seeds, they beat DPR Korea’s Ri Jong Sik and Ham Yu Song, the no.21 seeds (6-11, 11-6, 11-8, 11-5), very much a pair in form. In the opening round they had beaten Korea Republic’s Jeoung Youngsik and Lee Sangsu, the no.3 seeds (12-10, 10-12, 11-6, 11-9).

Mixed fortunes for Hong Kong, for China it was winning fortunes but not without some anxious moments. Fan Zhendong and Xu Xin, the top seeds, beat Korea Republic’s Jang Woojin and Cho Daeseong, the no.5 seeds in style (11-4, 11-7, 11-8); somewhat differently, Liang Jingkun and Lin Gaoyuan needed the full five games to end the hopes of India’s Sharath Kamal Achanta and Sathiyan Gnanasekaran, the no.6 seeds (11-6, 10-12, 11-7, 8-11, 11-9).

Schedule

The men’s doubles will be played to a conclusion on Saturday 21st September, as will the women’s singles and the mixed doubles; the women’s doubles semi-finals and final in addition to the men’s singles semi-finals and final will be held on Sunday 22nd September.

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