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Worcestershire 187 for 2 (Moeen 121*) beat Sussex 184 for 6 (Salt 72) by eight wickets

There is no more relaxed sight amid the frenzy of the Blast than Moeen Ali in full flow. An unbeaten hundred that stunned a capacity Hove crowd into silent admiration ensured that Worcestershire, the defending champions, returned to Finals Day as they subdued Sussex, the county they beat in last year's final, by eight wickets with 14 balls to spare.

No England player embodies his county more than Moeen. Others will show their allegiance on their rare returns; Moeen somehow becomes Worcestershire, seeking responsibility where on occasions with England he has failed entirely to grasp it. The tranquil hitting that attracts so much criticism when it goes wrong looks so wonderful when it delivers.

Lacking overseas players Hamish Rutherford and Callum Ferguson and with Wayne Parnell, a key player with the ball this season, succumbing to illness, Worcestershire were vulnerable. But Moeen took another stroll down Easy Street, as if oblivious to the pressure.

The outcome was an unbeaten 121 off 60 balls, with 11 sixes and eight fours, an innings of gentle destruction which was the highest score of his T20 career and which made light of Sussex's more than respectable 184 for 6. The dew helped the ball skip on a little in the second innings, but it was helpful not decisive.

The winners of the North and South Groups, Lancashire and Sussex, have now both been eliminated with Worcestershire joining Essex and Notts at Edgbaston on September 21 and Gloucestershire and Derbyshire left to contest the last place at Bristol on Saturday.

Alex Hales and Chris Nash logged the Blast's highest partnership of the season on Thursday; 24 hours later, Moeen and Riki Wessels capped it with a stand of 177 in 17 overs. Moeen moved trance-like from 50 to 100 in 20 balls, caressing through the line as repeatedly cleared Hove's small boundaries with 15 metres to spare; Wessels ferreted around for 47 from 46 balls, an exercise based upon the urge to give Moeen the strike, before he pulled to deep square with six needed.

It could have been so different for Sussex. Reece Topley, who has been on painkillers to get through recent T20 matches, a sign that after five stress fractures the left-armer is still not free from injury fears, delivered the best two balls of the night in his opening over. Both swung away late, the first hitting Joe Leach's off stump to end fond imaginings that his rustic pinch hitting might give Worcestershire a flyer, the second missing Moeen's off stump by a whisker.

The blemish that mattered, however, belonged to Alex Carey, Sussex's Australian keeper-batsman, who let a simple head-high catch through his hands after Moeen, on five, top-edged a pull against OIlie Robinson. Luke Wright, Sussex's captain, said simply: "Carey has got us to the quarter-finals. No blame attached."

Other opportunities were spurned, too, although by then the match was won. David Wiese, who had a bad night, allowed a catch through his hands when Moeen was 78, a pull to deep square against the legspinner Will Beer when Wiese never found a stable footing. Topley also spilled a skier off Danny Briggs at deep midwicket when Moeen was 108. In the next over, he rocked back to pull Robinson for six to claim the match.

"I'm a massive Mo fan," said Wright. "We had the best of him and we had no answer." What could Sussex have done differently? Perhaps bring back Robinson early because he, at that stage of the innings, had the potential to bowl an unplayable ball, rather than meet him with seven overs of spin in mid-innings. Or squeeze Wessels with tighter fields in the hope of a rush of wickets at the other end that might break Moeen's equilibrium. But they would have been faint hopes.

Sussex felt they had done enough with the bat. Reach the sudden-death phase of the Blast and there is nothing better than seeing your most dangerous batsmen spin the roulette wheel and see it come up in his favour. There is no more dangerous and yet vulnerable new-ball batsman in the Blast than Sussex's Phil Salt. In the circumstances, his fourth T20 half-century of the summer - 72 from 40 balls - felt like a shift in Sussex's favour.

Salt and Wright go together better than salt and pepper, the condiments to add flavour to Sussex's opening forays. Wright makes room to thrash the ball through the off side; Salt gets inside the ball and punts it to the leg side. Salt, on 19, was dropped at mid-on by Charlie Morris, playing his first T20 in three years. By the time Daryl Mitchell's mix-and-match dismissed both in successive overs, Sussex had 108 on the board after 10.3 overs.

Mitchell's intervention for the ninth over was a gamble: a runs-for-wickets intervention. Salt sent him for four leg-side sixes in no time, but by the end of his second over he had both openers on his card, Wright to a mishit to midwicket, Salt very well held by Wessels, running to his left at long-on.

That was the start of a regular loss of Sussex wickets with Ed Barnard, one of the most serviceable T20 cricketers in the Blast, also to the fore as he removed Carey and Wiese in the space of three balls, Carey lobbing up a slower ball as he tried to work it to backward square, Wiese clinically yorked.

Laurie Evans observed the casualties around him and remained a figure of total calm. That has not always been the case, but these days he is becoming a fixture on the T20 international circuit and is about to head to St Kitts and Nevis Patriots in the Caribbean Premier League. His unbeaten 41 from 31 balls was an innings played in the shadows. On many nights it would have been enough. But he couldn't account for Moeen.

Vikes' Diggs (hamstring) questionable for Week 1

Published in Breaking News
Friday, 06 September 2019 13:32

EAGAN, Minn. -- Stefon Diggs is questionable for the Minnesota Vikings' season opener against the Atlanta Falcons after a hamstring injury forced the wide receiver to miss Wednesday's practice and limited him in Thursday's and Friday's sessions.

Tight end Tyler Conklin is also listed as questionable on the final injury report. The Vikings will be without cornerback Mike Hughes, who returned to practice in limited capacity for the first time since tearing his ACL in October 2018. Coach Mike Zimmer said this week that Hughes is "getting real close" but did not give a specific date for his return.

Asked whether he's optimistic about Diggs being able to play, Zimmer said, "We'll see. I don't know."

Diggs only missed one game in 2018, his first 1,000-yard receiving season as a pro. The wide receiver was held out of the Vikings' win over Detroit in Week 9 after he injured his ribs the week before.

One notable Vikings player without limitations or restrictions for Sunday's season opener is running back Dalvin Cook, who enters his third season fully healed from the ACL and hamstring injuries that limited him to just 15 games in his first two years.

Cook played five snaps of preseason football, culminating with an 85-yard touchdown run in the first quarter against the Cardinals. The running back has made it clear that his health is where it needs to be in order to shoulder a heavy workload.

"I'm ready," Cook said. "I practice every day. I push myself, I lift weights. You know your body more than anybody, so I know I'm ready to go mentally and physically."

Walking the line between getting Cook a lot of touches and making sure his workload doesn't teeter into overuse, Zimmer noted the role the Vikings' depth will play in keeping Cook fresh.

"It's a catch-22 a little bit because you want him out there all the time," Zimmer said. "But I like [Alexander] Mattison, [Ameer] Abdullah and [Mike] Boone, those guys. We've got a good group of running backs here that can give him some spells in there. We'll try to be smart about it. But chances are, if it's the end of the game, he's going to be out there."

Zimmer said Cook's previous injury history doesn't play into the Vikings managing the running back's workload more than others.

"I don't worry about it," Zimmer said. "Anybody can get a knee and a hamstring. I don't worry about all of that. ...We understand the problems about if somebody gets hurt, they get hurt. That's just life. That's why we try to stay with some depth."

Patriots' Gordon: 'Judge me on what I do now'

Published in Breaking News
Friday, 06 September 2019 13:09

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- New England Patriots wide receiver Josh Gordon said in a statement Friday that he didn't focus on a solution to his substance abuse addiction until this year, and asked to be judged on "what I do now and in the future."

Gordon, who was reinstated from an indefinite suspension by NFL commissioner Roger Goodell on Aug. 16, has yet to address reporters since his return to the Patriots. His statement, posted on social media, comes two days before the team hosts the Pittsburgh Steelers in the season opener, with Gordon expected to answer questions from media members for the first time after the game.

Since Gordon's return, many in the Patriots organization have discussed how they wanted to support him as a football player and person.

On Friday morning, when asked how excited he was for Gordon, coach Bill Belichick said, "Josh has worked hard. He's created an opportunity for himself."

"Having Josh back is unbelievable," fellow receiver Julian Edelman added.

Gordon has been suspended several times by the NFL for violations of its drug policies since being drafted by the Cleveland Browns in 2012. He missed the entire 2015 and 2016 seasons.

After being reinstated in 2017, Gordon revealed in an interview with GQ magazine that he drank or used marijuana before games. "Probably every game of my career," he said.

Gordon also said in a 2017 mini-documentary on Uninterrupted.com that he took Xanax, cocaine, marijuana and other narcotics.

Ayton, Hield helm relief efforts for Bahamas

Published in Basketball
Friday, 06 September 2019 14:19

NBA stars Deandre Ayton and Buddy Hield are helping raise money to aid their native Bahamas, which was devastated by Hurricane Dorian.

Ayton, the Phoenix Suns center, announced Friday that he and his family are pledging $100,000 toward relief efforts in the archipelago nation of 400,000.

He also asked Suns fans to donate toiletries, diapers, cleaning supplies and canned goods, as well as money, at an event Tuesday.

"My heart goes out to my fellow Bahamians," Ayton said in a statement on social media.

Hield, the Sacramento Kings guard, has set up a GoFundMe page and has donated $100,000. The Sacramento Kings Foundation, Buddy Hield Foundation, Ranadive Foundation and the Jacobs Family are contributing a collective donation of $105,000 to UNICEF USA. Hield said his goal is to raise $1 million. As of Friday afternoon, he had raised $113,773.

Hield joined Scott Van Pelt on SportsCenter on Thursday night to talk about the effort.

"Seeing footage for what Hurricane Dorian has done to the islands, it left me heartbroken," Hield said. "The Bahamas is in a really bad place right now. People have gotten sick really bad, and hospitals are being damaged."

Dorian blasted the Bahamas with 185 mph winds that obliterated homes. According to officials, 30 people have been confirmed dead, and the toll is expected to rise, as thousands are missing. There is still severe flooding on the island, and the search for survivors and victims continues.

Team USA game plans for Giannis and Greece

Published in Basketball
Friday, 06 September 2019 13:29

SHENZHEN, China -- When playing in an international tournament, much of the challenge for Team USA is dealing with all the foreign aspects. From location to opposition to the rules, it's as big of an opponent as anything at the World Cup in China.

But now it's the familiar that is the concern.

Oh, does Team USA know their next opponent well. Two of his Milwaukee Bucks teammates are on the roster. Three Boston Celtics now wearing the flag were vanquished by him during the playoffs just a couple months ago. The rest of the American players have had to hear for weeks that they don't have the star power of other teams like his.

Saturday's World Cup second-round game against Giannis Antetokounmpo and Greece (ESPN+, 8:30 a.m. ET) presents one of the most unique challenges Team USA has faced in modern times. There is just no one in the world like him, and their awareness of it only makes it more daunting.

"This is a special situation," said Team USA center Brook Lopez, who won 60 games alongside Antetokounmpo last season. "This is different from Team USA's past."

Team Brazil coach Aleksandar Petrovic said he plotted for six months how he was going to defend Antetokounmpo. It was a surprise game plan as he used Alex Garcia, who is 39 years old and about 8 inches shorter, as primary defender with the task to be physical and knock Antetokounmpo out of his game. Antetokounmpo scored just 13 points, fouled out and Greece lost in overtime. Petrovic, the brother of late Serbian legend Drazen Petrovic, gloated about it afterward.

Team USA coach Gregg Popovich doesn't gloat. But he's likely been plotting his own Antetokounmpo strategy for weeks. Though it wasn't assured until Thursday night, when looking at the brackets there seemed to be a strong likelihood that the U.S. would face Greece in this round.

Antetokounmpo hasn't loved this experience so far and his team's overall play has underwhelmed a bit. Officials in FIBA games often allow more contact than in the NBA and will never be accused of protecting star players, which Brazil smartly leveraged.

In fact, often it is the opposite: They allow the big names to be beat up more than they'd allow others. This has been a source of frustration for American big men for years; it was a contributing factor in Tim Duncan quitting the national team last decade.

On Tuesday, when he scored 24 points with 10 rebounds in a win over New Zealand to clinch a chance to face the U.S., Antetokounmpo played with anger. His jutting jaw and relentless basket attacks that made him the MVP were back, perhaps as a reaction to Brazil's treatment of him and the importance of the game. Had the Greeks lost, they would have been out of the World Cup and in a precarious position in trying to qualify for next summer's Olympics.

Greece has been playing Antetokounmpo at center a lot, which doesn't happen in the NBA, mostly because this way he can easily attack the zone defenses that are common in the World Cup. Team USA doesn't play zone, which may actually make Antetokounmpo more comfortable as he can go back to perimeter playmaking like he does for the Bucks.

"In the NBA you know each night the Os and Xs and what people are going to run and that sort of thing," Popovich said. "But here every team has a different take on the way they want to play. It's actually enjoyable and challenging as each team is a different artwork to be figured out."

Jeff Van Gundy, who has done a lot of praising of Antetokounmpo as lead analyst for ABC and ESPN, has changed roles and is acting as head scout for Team USA currently. He's been deeply studying Greece and deciphering what they might have saved for the Americans. And it does sound like the Greeks, who beat Team USA with a precision offensive game plan back in the 2006 World Cup, have been saving something up.

"The situation with Giannis, it's a little bit complicated ... you have to protect Giannis and his health. So you have to take care of the times he plays," Greece coach Thanasis Skourtopoulos said. "Against the USA it's good for him. He knows the mentality of the way they play. It's not like the European teams with the FIBA regulation. So now is the time for him to increase playing time and increase everything during the game."

Antetokounmpo has averaged only 25 minutes per game in three games thus far. But with the Greeks facing elimination if they lose, plus the value of a chance at a vulnerable American team, the expectation is that Antetokounmpo will leave it all on the floor Saturday. With the U.S. missing Jayson Tatum (ankle) and with Marcus Smart (quad) questionable, their defensive options have been limited.

"We go as far as Giannis goes. He's a big impact for us," said Greece guard Nick Calathes. "We'll be ready to go, we're not afraid of anybody. We'll be prepared."

One good sign for the Americans was the strong play of Jaylen Brown in Tuesday's win over Japan. While Harrison Barnes and Giannis' Bucks teammate Khris Middleton figure to be getting duty trying to deal with Antetokounmpo, Brown likely will be relied upon because he's perhaps Team USA's best option. Brown was part of the Celtics group that Antetokounmpo vanquished in the second round of last season's playoffs, averaging 28 points and 11 rebounds.

Will that experience help or hurt Brown now that he's got this chance at a measure of redemption?

"I guess we'll see pretty soon," Brown said. "I'm looking forward to it."

Red Sox prospect K's minors-record 12 straight

Published in Baseball
Friday, 06 September 2019 14:57

Yusniel Padron-Artiles was a 22nd-round pick of the Boston Red Sox and isn't ranked anywhere on the ballclub's top-prospects list.

But Thursday, the 21-year-old right-hander put together the type of performance that certainly will garner some attention.

Padron-Artiles came on in relief for the Class A Lowell Spinners and struck out 14 batters -- including a record 12 straight -- in six innings of a 2-1 win over Batavia in a New York-Penn League semifinal playoff series in Massachusetts.

The Spinners say the 12 straight strikeouts set a minor league record. The most consecutive strikeouts in the majors came from Tom Seaver in 1970, according to ESPN Stats & Information. Seaver fanned 10 in a row.

Padron-Artiles attended Miami Dade Community College South and was picked in the 22nd round of the 2018 draft. He split the 2019 season between Class A Greenville and Lowell, going 7-1 with a 2.67 ERA for the latter.

On Thursday, he relieved touted Red Sox prospect Jay Groome in the fourth inning and proceeded to strike out 12 straight Muckdogs before allowing a leadoff single to start the eighth inning.

"It was a very important game, and I knew I had to give all I had and leave it all on the field," Padron-Artilles, a native of Cuba, said through an interpreter, according to the Lowell Sun. "Going into the game, my mindset was to get every pitch to work. Get the curveball over and finish them off with the fastball."

With the win, the Spinners forced a decisive Game 3 of the series Friday.

"[Padron-Artilles] got us that win," Spinners first baseman Joe Davis told the Sun. "If it wasn't for him, that's a different game. We all could feed off his energy. You could see it on the mound. You could see it on the bench. You just had to feed off him, and that's what we did."

All but one of the division races are looking settled, but that doesn't mean there aren't storylines that capture the imagination around baseball. Here's what has our attention this weekend:

The two National League teams with the best chance of knocking off the Dodgers right now seem to be the Braves and Nationals, who opened a four-game series Thursday. Who would be a tougher playoff foe for L.A. -- Atlanta or Washington?

Eddie Matz: Sure, the Nationals' offense has been busting out the whooping stick. And yes, their top three of Max Scherzer, Stephen Strasburg and Patrick Corbin are stronger than Atlanta's (even if Scherzer isn't back to his old self by the playoffs). But the Braves are good. Like, really good. So good that Washington, which has the best record in baseball since May 24, can't seem to make up any ground in the NL East. The only reason to pick Washington here would be the rotation. But October is about bullpens, and Atlanta's is way better. So I'd say the Braves would be the tougher out for L.A.

Sam Miller: The unsatisfying answer is that it's the Nationals because it's easier to beat a far superior opponent in a smaller sample than a larger one. If the Nationals get past the wild-card game, they'll face the Dodgers in a best-of-five series. If the Braves get past the division series, they'll meet the Dodgers in a best-of-seven. But take that technicality out of it, and Eddie's probably right. Washington has the edge at the top of the rotation, but if we look at each team just in games that their top three have started, the Nationals haven't actually shown that advantage: They're 47-32 when Scherzer, Strasburg or Corbin starts, while the Braves are 46-22 when Max Fried, Dallas Keuchel or Mike Soroka does. The Nationals' bullpen is just toxic.

David Schoenfield: It's pretty remarkable, really: Even with that toxic bullpen, the Nationals do have that best record in the majors over an extended period of time. That suggests that they're so good everywhere else that they can overcome the bullpen, although I have a difficult time imagining Fernando Rodney getting through Cody Bellinger, Justin Turner and Max Muncy in a crucial situation. So maybe it gets to some of the other matchups, and since the Dodgers are better against right-handed pitching with all their lefty mashers (their OPS is 45 points higher against righties), maybe the Braves with lefty starters Fried and Keuchel have an edge there, as the Nationals have just one lefty in Corbin. Then again, Soroka's OPS against lefties is 200 points higher than vs. righties, so that's a tough matchup for him. I guess I'm back to Fernando Rodney. The Braves are the tougher foe.

With a nod toward Sunday night's Yankees-Red Sox game (ESPN, 8 p.m. ET) and to Buster Olney (we're stealing his Twitter poll question), what do you think will happen to Mookie Betts -- he gets traded this winter, he gets traded next summer, he leaves Boston as a free agent after 2020, or he signs a long-term deal to stay with the Sox?

Matz: As disappointing as this season has been for Boston, there's no reason to think that the defending champs can't rebound and make another run next year, which is why general manager Dave Dombrowski won't trade Betts this winter. If the World Series hangover lingers into 2020 and the Sox find themselves hovering around .500 next July, I could see Dealer Dave going the Manny Machado route and shipping Mookie elsewhere to restock a farm system that has fallen on hard times. But I don't think that happens. As for an extension, I don't think that happens either because Betts is too in touch with the whole marketing and business side of things. Despite the recent free-agent depression, he knows he could make a killing. Which is exactly what will happen.

Miller: OK, I could maybe imagine a big-market team that's projected to win, say, 90-92 wins next year, in a tough division, deciding that Mookie Betts would be the difference between making and missing the 2020 postseason. And maybe it thinks continuity would give it a better chance of signing him when he hits free agency, so there would be some extra benefit to having him on the team before his walk year. Put those together and maybe that club would be willing to offer something absolutely overwhelming to employ him for the 2020 season. The team that best describes is ... the Red Sox. They'll keep him until his free agency, and then they'll be the favorite to re-sign him.

Schoenfield: My prediction: Mookie stays ... and then Mookie leaves as a free agent. (He signs with the Angels to give Mike Trout some help, plus Mookie will relish being out of the media spotlight in Boston and letting Trout be the guy. Or maybe he signs with the Rangers, who will need a star attraction in the second year of their new park. Wait, the Astros! George Springer and Michael Brantley are also free agents after 2020. How about the Braves? Mookie is from Tennessee and that's close to home. Or maybe ...)

There are a few other series with potential playoff teams squaring off: Indians-Twins, Cubs-Brewers and Phillies-Mets. Which of those series do you find most intriguing?

Miller: The Cubs and Brewers, just because of the animus. None of these teams are really competing with each other for a playoff spot right now: The Twins have a firm grip on the American League Central, the Phillies and Mets are playing more for respectability and relevance than realistic hopes, and the Brewers are almost certainly gassed out. But the Brewers and Cubs can at least play for the privilege of severely harshing a rival's mood. The Cubs can essentially end the Brewers' season; the Brewers could move the panic index in Chicago to orange.

Schoenfield: I've probably watched the Mets more than any other team this season (I live in Connecticut, so the Mets, Yankees and Red Sox are my local teams), so why quit now? Plus, there's the chance that Bryce Harper does something wonderful in what has been a decidedly blah season for him, or that Jacob deGrom pitches a no-hitter, or that the Mets blow a six-run lead in the ninth. Wait, that last one is silly. That could never happen.

Matz: I'm not terribly intrigued by any of them, really. At least not from a playoff perspective. Because you'd have to squint pretty hard to convince yourself that any of these three matchups have serious playoff implications at this point. Having said that, Minny and Cleveland are the two best baseball teams among the six in question here. And all things being equal, I'd rather watch good baseball than bad baseball. So I'll go with the Twindians series.


PICK 'EM TIME

Circling back to Braves-Nats, which trio of teammates will have more total bases this weekend: Atlanta's Freddie Freeman, Ronald Acuna Jr. and Josh Donaldson or Washington's Anthony Rendon, Juan Soto and Trea Turner?

Schoenfield: Oh, this is a good one. Rendon is locked in right now, but so is Donaldson. Freeman has been Mr. Consistent Superstar all season long. I'll give the edge to the Braves' trio -- they'll get to face the Nationals' bullpen at some point.

Miller: Atlanta has home field, Washington has the hotness. Rendon and Soto are both in the top 10 in total bases in the second half, and even Turner is within single digits of the Atlanta three. I don't usually put much faith in hotness. Atlanta wins this one.

Matz: When it comes to total bases, round-trippers reign supreme. While Atlanta's troika consists of three legit long-ball threats, that's not the case with Washington, where the speedy Turner (13 homers) sticks out like a sore thumb among the sextet involved here. I'll take the Braves bashers.

Cardinals righty Jack Flaherty is on quite a roll (0.59 ERA over his past seven starts). Baserunners allowed by Flaherty vs. the Pirates on Sunday: over or under 5.5?

Schoenfield: Flaherty not only has a 0.59 ERA over seven starts, but he has a 0.90 ERA and .141 average allowed over his past 11 starts. I watched his last start against the Giants (one hit in eight innings) and it was complete domination: He threw just 29 balls to 26 batters faced and his 100th pitch was 97 mph, his hardest of the game. Buster Olney compared him to a young Justin Verlander: He's got the size, he's got the stuff and he's starting to show he has the ability to pitch deep into games. Is he the best pitcher in baseball? The track record isn't long enough to declare that, but he's certainly the hottest. Under 5.5.

Matz: As hot as Flaherty has been, the Pirates' offense has been just as hot. Over the past two weeks, Pittsburgh has a .381 on-base percentage and is averaging 7.2 runs per game, both best in the majors. Over, please.

Miller: I figured this would be an easy over, but the under would have won in six of Flaherty's past eight starts -- and he allowed only six runners in the other two. Still, the Pirates have the biggest platoon split in baseball, roping right-handers for a .275/.338/.446 line. I think the over is right; can I convince you to count hit batsmen?


TWO TRUE OUTCOMES

Each week, we ask our panelists to choose one hitter they think will hit the most home runs and one pitcher they think will record the most strikeouts in the coming weekend. Panelists can pick a player only once for the season. We'll keep a running tally -- and invite you to play along at home.

Home run hitters

Matz: Jorge Soler

Miller: Pete Alonso

Schoenfield: Alex Bregman

Strikeout pitchers

Matz: Robbie Ray

Miller: Mike Clevinger

Schoenfield: Patrick Corbin

Dina Asher-Smith enjoys big win in Brussels

Published in Athletics
Friday, 06 September 2019 13:08

British sprinter takes 100m victory at Diamond League final while Malaika Mihambo, Christian Taylor and Noah Lyles also impress

The IAAF World Championships in Doha kicks off in three weeks’ time and Dina Asher-Smith showed in Brussels on Friday (Sept 6) that she will be a force to be reckoned with in the Qatari capital as she sped to 100m victory in 10.88.

It was a season’s best for Asher-Smith and just three hundredths outside her British record despite cool conditions and a slight headwind of -0.3m/sec.

Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce of Jamaica was left seven hundredths of a second behind (pictured above) with Marie Josée Ta Lou third and Dafne Schippers fourth.

Noah Lyles enjoyed another good win as the American clocked 19.74 (0.8) to win the 200m ahead of world champion Ramil Guliyev’s 19.86 and Andre De Grasse’s 19.87. Last week Lyles won the 100m trophy at the first Diamond League final in Zurich.

Christian Taylor won the big triple jump clash against in-form fellow American Will Claye. Taylor’s winning leap was a slightly wind-assisted 17.85m (2.1m) as Claye jumped 17.22 (1.1) but his second-best effort of 17.66m (0.1) beat Jonathan Edwards’ long-standing meeting record.

Katerina Stefanidi beat a strong field to win the women’s pole vault with a first-time clearance at 4.83m as Britain’s Holly Bradshaw finished fifth with 4.70m.

Malaika Mihambo of Germany has been in great form all year and sealed the Diamond League title long jump title here with 7.03m (-0.9). Brittney Reece of the United States moved into second with a final round effort of 6.85m, just ahead of heptathlete Katarina Johnson-Thompson, who leapt 6.73m (-0.2) in the first round, while fellow Brit Lorraine Ugen jumped a season’s best 6.70m (1.0) in fifth.

Sifan Hassan impressed in the 5000m as she ran a sub-60 last lap to win in 14:26.26 ahead of Letesenbet Gidey, Konstanze Klosterhalfen and world cross-country champion Hellen Obiri.

After some uneven pacing in the men’s 1500m, Timothy Cheruiyot of Kenya took the win in 3:30.22 as he held off Norwegian brothers Jakob (3:31.62) and Filip Ingebrigtsen (3:33.33).

Danielle Williams clocked 12.46 for an emphatic 100m hurdles win ahead of Keni Harrison (12.73) and Nia Ali (12.74), while in the men’s sprint hurdles Orlando Ortego ran 13.22 (0.0) for victory as Andy Pozzi, on the comeback from injury, ran 13.50 in sixth.

Mike Norman powered down the home straight to win the 400m in 44.26 from Fred Kerley (44.46) and Akeem Bloomfield (44.67).

In the women’s discus, Yaime Perez of Cuba won with 68.27m from Sandra Perkovic’s 66.00m, while Daniel Stahl of Sweden took the men’s discus title with 68.68m.

Mariya Lasitskene’s winning streak continued as she posted another high jump victory with 1.99m to beat Yuliya Levchenko by two centimetres as local star Nafi Thiam, the Olympic and world heptathlon champion, was third with 1.95m.

As the meeting and Diamond League season for 2019 drew to a close, Ajee Wilson ran 2:00.24 to win the women’s 800m from fellow American Raevyn Rogers as Britain’s Lynsey Sharp was sixth in 2:01.47.

Supported by local companies and organisations, a gala dinner was staged at the Shangri-La Island Ballroom; the guest of honour was Mr Tan Chuan-Jin, Speaker of the Parliament and President of Singapore National Olympic Council.

Notably also present was Ellen Lee JP, PBM the President of the Singapore Table Tennis Association, alongside Lee Khang Teng, PBM, Life Honorary Chair and Vice-President of the Singapore Teochew Lee Clan Association.

Likewise Alex Yam MP and Singapore Table Tennis Association Deputy President attended in addition to Ms Violet Lee, Singapore Table Tennis Association Honorary President and Organising Chair. Furthermore, amongst the distinguished guests, Er Dr Lee Bee Wah, MP and Singapore Table Tennis Association adviser, was present.

“We would like to thank our donors for their support towards Singapore table tennis; with the support that we have received, Singapore table tennis will go on to even greater heights. We are committed and we will continue to push on and score greater sporting glory for Singapore. Once again, I would like to express my deepest appreciation to everyone who has made their kind donations.’’ Ellen Lee JP, PBM

Overall the plan is to secure funds that will assist players graduate from the youngest age group categories and at the other end of the scale to afford support in their senior careers.

The funds raised will go towards the following Singapore Table Tennis Association initiatives:

  • Pathway Development for Team Singapore players.
  • High Performance Sports System to develop Team Singapore players and enhance the training and competition environment for them locally and overseas.

At the top and here to stay: Chen Meng

Published in Table Tennis
Friday, 06 September 2019 02:57

As we approach the 2019 ITTF-ATTU Asian Table Tennis Championships, talking to Chen Meng gave us a real opportunity to get into the mind of a champion. Having started the year at no.4, she has had a splendid run of form, which truly peaked when she won the women’s singles title on home soil at the 2019 ITTF World Tour Platinum China Open in Shenzhen, claiming top spot on the women’s world rankings.

These last few months have seen the world’s elite female athletes jostling for position and Chen Meng’s undisputed claim to the #1 spot has been a journey to behold. After missing out on the gold in Budapest, she has won both ITTF World Tour China and Korea Opens, facing the toughest of competition along the way. When asked about what changed after the 2019 World Championships, she admitted:

“I feel like it is not a sudden change, but more of a process. I built up my confidence through series of events before the World Championships. I won some titles on the World Tour then I had the belief to play in the World Championships. Without those titles, I wouldn’t think about playing in Budapest. I did know many things before but it was difficult for me to actually execute those things. Maybe because my belief was not as strong as it is today.” Chen Meng

Building her belief one match at a time, Chen truly needed to do so against the very best. One of those confidence building matches was against her senior compatriot and reigning Olympic champion Ding Ning at the Korea Open final in Busan.

The “Queen of Hearts” put in a string of amazing performances to reach two consecutive finals on the World Tour this summer (Korea and Australia), yet she was unable to claim the top prize at either event. The first of her two final defeats did not so much highlight her shortcomings, but rather demonstrated just what a phenomenal, natural-born winner Chen Meng is. She overpowered Ding from the outset, charging to a 4-1 victory (11-5, 11-6, 11-5, 7-11, 11-9).

When it comes to mental strength, the 25-year-old surely matches up with the greats. Her record in women’s singles finals on the ITTF World Tour is 12 wins from 15 appearances. So, how does she deal with the pressure that comes along with such an outstanding feat?

“I feel I am generally ready on many aspects during the World Tour matches, including physical energy and techniques. The only aspect that I get concerned about is the mental control. It was naturally different at the World Championships, considering I had never made it to the main events’ finals and I didn’t know how I would perform in that situation. At other events I can control myself pretty well.” Chen Meng

This truly reflects on the mindset of an athlete aware of the stakes – different sizes for different events – and it begs the question as to how the pressure of a World Championships could impact on a player – even of Chen’s mental toughness – from the moment she arrived in Budapest?

“The first day when I stepped into the venue I was very excited. Then the second day turned out to be super tiring. I was so sleepy which had never happened before. I thought I would be quite excited after arriving, but it was weird in Budapest. Even my alarm clock couldn’t wake me up. I was thinking, “Is this because I’m nervous?” (laughs) Because I never felt this way before, it was weird for me. I couldn’t sleep well, then I came to Ma Lin, my supervisor coach, who knows I always have good sleep, and he couldn’t tell the exact reasons but encouraged me in my way. Afterwards I realized I was just too nervous.” Chen Meng

For any young athletes, reading a quote like that from the top players in the world, must be heartening. It displays the humanity of our top stars in table tennis, and assures that at the end of the day being nervous is probably a sign of good things to come.

Facing off against Liu Shiwen in the World Championships final, Chen knew this would be an experience that would change her competitive perspective. The red-hot intensity of battle was palpable for players and spectators alike, heightened by their pre-founded rivalry within the Chinese national setup. Before and during the match, just what was going through Chen’s mind?

“I never lose my appetite before matches, but that night before the final, I couldn’t even sleep. During the match, I felt that she was much more determined than me, 100% devoted to the contest. She controlled the rhythm. It was similar to when I was in control in the semi-final against Wang Manyu. All the preparations before the match were totally different. I actually prepared a lot, as much as I could. I was afraid to encounter some situations which I didn’t think about before the match. But at last I found that all my preparations did not completely cover me for this final against Liu Shiwen.” Chen Meng

What turned out to be the key difference was the vast experience that 28-year-old Liu brought with her into that final. Having played consistent semi-finals and finals in World Championships, she knew how to ride the storm against Chen in Budapest. On the contrary, this was Chen’s first ever World Championships final. Her opponent was in charge on the court, and she knew it.

Once the dust had settled on that defeat, despite the disappointment, Chen looks stronger for the experience. The world no. 1 now knows what she needs to do and fully intends to learn from her loss to Liu in the best possible way:

“Liu Shiwen was much stronger than my semi-final rival Wang Manyu, not only in terms of technique, but also her ability to adjust and read the game. I still need to learn from her, to find that explosive power to fight for the championships when I stepping into a final.” Chen Meng

Finally, Chen has been very vocal about her main goal and it is – no prizes for guessing – to play at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games. But what exactly does she think she needs to work on to reach that final pedestal?

“This year I feel like I’m much more keen to chase my dream. I think I am ready physically and technically, but I still need to improve my ability to seize matches, take my chances and maintain my mental control, which are totally different from sitting on the bench watching others play. I think this is related to major event experience. This year I reached the World Championships final, whilst before that I could only just imagine what that might feel like. Now that I have played a World Championships final, I finally know the real feeling – something I did not believe would be that hard, and be totally different from the semi-final.” Chen Meng

With Olympic Games qualification available to winners of the Asian Championships next week in Indonesia, perhaps Chen will have her eyes set on using her eye-opening experience in Budapest to secure her tickets to Tokyo.

Catch her journey right here on ITTF and itTV!

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