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PHOTOS: Macon Welcomes Back POWRi Midgets

Published in Racing
Monday, 16 September 2019 12:00

This week in golf (Sept. 16-22): TV schedule, tee times, info

Published in Golf
Monday, 16 September 2019 07:17

Here's a look at what's happening in professional golf this week, and how you can watch it:

PGA Tour

Sanderson Farms Championship

Thursday-Sunday, The Country Club of Jackson, Jackson, MS

Course specs: Par 72, 7,440 yards

Purse: $6.6 million

Defending champion: Cameron Champ

Notables in the field: Cameron Champ, Joaquin Niemann, Zach Johnson, Jason Dufner

Tee times: TBD

TV schedule: Thursday-Friday, 2-6 p.m. ET (Golf Channel); Saturday-Sunday, 3-6 p.m. ET (Golf Channel)

PGA Tour Live: Thursday-Friday, 8 a.m.-6 p.m. ET (PGA Tour Live)

European Tour

BMW PGA Championship

Thursday-Sunday, Wentworth Club, Surrey, England

Course specs: Par 72, 7,284 yards

Purse: €6,215,965

Defending champion: Francesco Molinari

Notables in the field: Francesco Molinari, Rory McIlroy, Justin Rose, Paul Casey, Tommy Fleetwood, Jon Rahm, Shane Lowry

Tee times: TBD

TV schedule: Thursday-Friday, 5:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. ET (Golf Channel); Saturday-Sunday, 7:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. ET (Golf Channel)

PGA Tour Champions

Sanford International

Friday-Sunday, Minnehaha Country Club, Sioux Falls, SD

Course specs: Par 70, 6,729 yards

Purse: $1.8 million

Defending champion: Steve Stricker

Notables in the field: Woody Austin, Paul Broadhurst, John Daly, Bob Estes, Tom Gillis, Bernhard Langer

Tee times: TBD

TV schedule: Friday-Sunday, 6-8 p.m. ET (Golf Channel)

Somerset 30 for 2 trail Hampshire 196 (Dawson 103, Gregory 3-63) by 173 runs

Only twice this decade has a bowler ended a season with more than 50 Championship wickets at an average below 15, but after running through Hampshire's top order at the Ageas Bowl, Lewis Gregory has a fighting chance to put his name alongside Graham Onions and Morne Morkel in doing so.

Gregory's opening burst accounted for Felix Organ, Sam Northeast and James Vince within the first 40 minutes of play, and with new-ball partner Josh Davey and the returning Craig Overton picking up a wicket apiece, Hampshire were reeling at 24 for 5.

They soon fought back, primarily thanks to Liam Dawson's first Championship hundred in three years, but after bad light interrupted the final session, Somerset reached the close two down with the expectation of bright sunshine tomorrow.

A few years ago, it seemed that Gregory might never quite manage to fulfil his obvious promise. A former England under-19 captain, he had been a semi-regular wicket-taker in the Championship and an occasional contributor with the bat in white-ball cricket, but he had not quite kicked on in the way his club had once hoped, and back injuries were a constant source of irritation.

Fast forward to the present day, and he is perhaps the best English player on the circuit yet to win an international cap. In T20, he is a brilliant finisher, and attracted interest from Rajasthan Royals before last year's IPL auction, while in the Championship he is a precision engineer in his control of line and length.

Here, he was nagging and accurate, nipping the ball both ways off the seam. He struck with the third ball of the day, as Organ fended to slip, before removing Northeast - brilliantly caught in the gully by Roelof van der Merwe - and clean bowling Vince with a sharp inswinger.

"I've had a lot of issues physically which have held me back a little bit," Gregory said. "Someone asked me earlier in the year what the difference has been [this season], and I think it's purely been that.

"The skill has always been there, it's just being able to back that up, spell after spell. After a couple of operations it seems like I'm able to do that, so fingers crossed that continues."

Every man, woman and child in Somerset has underlined, circled and highlighted next week's apparent title decider against Essex in their respective diaries, but a win here and a Surrey victory at Chelmsford could feasibly be enough to seal the pennant with a game to go.

And at the stage of the season when every bonus point counts, Somerset had one within half an hour of the first morning of their penultimate game. On a pitch with a healthy covering of grass - Nigel Gray's final home surface as Hampshire's groundsman - both sides surprisingly wanted to bat, though Vince must have instantly regretted his decision.

In the game between these sides here last summer, 34 wickets fell in five sessions as the final nail was hammered into the coffin that contained Somerset's title hopes by teatime on the second day; after the early flurry of wickets, it seemed a repeat was on the cards.

But during a vital stand of 92 between Dawson and Keith Barker, who made a doughty 40, batting suddenly began to look easy.

"I think the ball got a little softer," suggested Gregory. "It was hard to keep the ball in good condition. There was a little bit in the surface with a hard seam, and it seemed to nip around a little bit, so fingers crossed we can play well first thing in the morning, and with the sunshine out we can make hay."

Dawson has had an unusual summer, with a two-month stint carrying the drinks as part of England's World Cup squad punctuating an otherwise unremarkable campaign, and he had off-field distractions to contend with in the form of lucrative contract offers from both Surrey and Warwickshire.

Instead, he signed a new three-year deal at Hampshire, and was the only man to look comfortable against Somerset's persistent attack. He seized on width well, playing the ball late under his eyes, and brought up his hundred with an elegant straight drive through mid-on.

It would have been a source of immense frustration that he was dismissed in such tame fashion, flashing at a back-of-a-length ball from Tom Abell with minimal foot movement, but if this wicket proves to be low-scoring, his 103 runs may prove to be worth plenty more.

"It is one of the quickest pitches I've played on here in the last couple of years," said Dawson. "There is more bounce and zip than usual. When it is doing something, it is doing it quicker."

***

Rilee Rossouw has played his final game of red-ball cricket for Hampshire. The South African batsman hinted at the start of the season that he was unlikely to extend his deal beyond this season, and will only play T20 for the club next year. It is as yet unclear as to whether he will attempt to resume his international career.

Meanwhile, Tim Groenewald is set to leave Somerset after five-and-a-half years at the club. His contract expires at the end of the season, and it is expected that Kent will announce him as a new signing in the coming weeks.

David Lloyd, Samit Patel fifties give Glamorgan solid base

Published in Cricket
Monday, 16 September 2019 11:32

Glamorgan 300 for 4 (Lloyd 66, Patel 66) v Leicestershire

Glamorgan, who may need to win this and their final game of the season against Durham to be in contention for promotion, were on course for a respectable first-innings total against Leicestershire at the end of the first day at Sophia Gardens. They will resume on 300 for 4, after two batsmen scored 66, there were four partnerships of 50 or more and three batting points gained with 19.4 overs left to achieve the maximum.

Glamorgan were hoping to bat first on a pitch that played better than it looked and is likely to take spin as the game progresses, but the decision was made for them when Leicestershire opted for an uncontested toss.

The visitors also decided to omit Callum Parkinson, their recognised spinner, a decision they may regret, especially as Glamorgan recalled offspinner Andrew Salter for only his second Championship game, in addition to the left-arm spin of Samit Patel.

Nick Selman and Kraigg Brathwaite made a quiet start to the innings, before Selman accelerated to strike Ben Mike for four boundaries in the seamer's fourth over. Mike got his revenge in the following over when Selman was well caught one handed by Will Davis at cover for 36.

Brathwaite, who averages 39 in first-class cricket and will be remembered for the 134 and 95 he scored against England for West Indies at Headingley two years ago, continued to play watchfully and was at the crease for 3 hours 40 minutes for his 44 before he was trapped leg before by Gavin Griffiths.

After Selman and Brathwaite had put on 62 for the first wicket, the second wicket pair of Brathwaite and David Lloyd continued the good work with their stand of 82. The third half-century partnership followed when Lloyd shared 52 for the third wicket with Patel. Lloyd scored 66 from 148 balls, with a six and eight fours, most of them driven with perfect timing through the off side, before he was bowled by Chris Wright.

Patel, playing the third of his four games on loan from Nottinghamshire, equalled Lloyd's score before spooning the first ball of the 81st over to square leg. Leicestershire, for reasons unknown, did not take the new ball until the 90th over, and a fifth half-century partnership was in sight with Billy Root and Chris Cooke sharing 45 for the fifth wicket. When play ended due to bad light with 5.4 overs remaining Glamorgan would have been satisfied with their day's work.

Rossington rampage rocks Durham after Rushworth strikes

Published in Cricket
Monday, 16 September 2019 10:23

Durham 37 for 4 (Sanderson 3-20) trail Northamptonshire 217 (Rossington 82, Rushworth 5-68) by 180 runs

Adam Rossington produced a murderous counterattack to revive Northamptonshire on the opening day of their crucial Specsavers County Championship promotion clash with Durham at Wantage Road.

Asked to bat in bowling conditions that couldn't have been better designed, Northants were listing at 150 for 8 after Chris Rushworth's fourth five-wicket haul of the season before captain Rossington struck 60 in just 22 balls to rescue a batting point. He was last out for 82 but pushed his side to 217. Ben Sanderson then put Northants on top with three wickets as Durham slipped to 37 for 4 when bad curtailed the day.

Rossington targeted the short leg-side boundary towards the Clark Road and shuffled across his stumps to slog sweep seven sixes - three of them in one over from Brydon Carse that went for 27 and four off Rushworth, including the biggest that brought up the batting point.

It was the perfect time for a captain's innings and gave Northants something to bowl at, which looked unlikely when Rushworth ran through them after lunch. Conditions were tailor-made for he and the Durham attack with a heavy grey cloud clinging over the ground and the floodlights the only reason play was possible. Ned Eckersley could have declined the toss from the changing room.

But the visitors did not initially do justice to conditions and allowed Northants to reach 99 for 1 just after lunch. But Durham located a more consistent length and Rushworth's first wicket began a severe slide of 7 for 51 in 21.1 overs.

He found the breakthrough with a delivery that jagged back sharply off the seam to pluck out Alex Wakely's off stump as he perfectly justifiably shouldered arms. Two balls later Rob Keogh edged an away-swinger to fall for a second-ball duck after a match-winning innings last week.

Rushworth also nipped one through Ben Curran's defences, who was rather caught on the crease in losing his off stump for a battling 36. After tea, Doug Bracewell was pinned by a nip-backer for 1 and the five-wicket haul was completed by one that bounced to take the shoulder of Brett Hutton's bat to point.

Ben Raine also went to 50 wickets in a season for the second time with his 3 for 57, having Rob Newton caught at slip for 26, Luke Procter caught behind first ball after tea for 8 and Gareth Berg bowled off his gloves as he tried to avoid another ball that bounced a little.

But after Rossington's brilliance gave his side a useful score, and momentum, the Northants bowlers made inroads much earlier then Durham managed.

Sanderson got one to straighten on Cameron Steel who edged low to Hutton at third slip for 7 and lured Alex Lees, on 15, into flicking across a full delivery to provide Alex Wakely with a catch at first slip. A nip-backer then trapped Angus Robson lbw for 9.

Gareth Berg also produced a big inswinger that won a leg before decision against Championship debutant BJ Watling. The New Zealander walked off for a third-ball duck as Northants ended the day much the stronger.

Gloucestershire 87 for 4 (Barnard 3-16) trail Worcestershire 221 (Wessels 72, Higgins 4-55) by 134 runs

Only Leicestershire have endured a longer exile from county cricket's first division than two of the contenders for promotion this year. Gloucestershire and Glamorgan were both relegated in 2005, the last season of three up and three down before it was decided that the clubs in the upper tier should feel a little more secure.

The converse of that has been an increased degree of difficulty for the teams trying to make the transition in the opposite direction. Clearly, the change has disadvantaged this trio in particular, in which case Gloucestershire, in third place going into the final two rounds, will feel they ought not to miss the opportunity.

They meet second-placed Northamptonshire at Bristol next week, which might yet have one promotion place riding on it depending on how the table looks in a few days. Win this one first, however, with Northamptonshire and another contender, Durham, locking horns at Wantage Road, and the prize could be within touching distance.

Momentum is said to count for a good deal at this stage of the season and although they were beaten by Sussex last week, Gloucestershire had won three matches in a row before that one. They defeated Worcestershire by 13 runs in a thrilling finish at Cheltenham in July, a result which ended any lingering hope that Worcestershire themselves might still sneak into the race.

Yet after an opening day largely dominated by seamers under a cloudy sky, Gloucestershire had control for a while only to have it taken from them in a difficult final session in which Ed Barnard undermined them three times by taking wickets with the last ball of an over. Any optimistic notions entertained in the visitors' dressing room that the home side might have been distracted in their anticipation of defending their Vitality Blast crown at Edgbaston on Saturday, a date that Gloucestershire had pencilled into their diary before Derbyshire surprised them in the quarter-final at Bristol, proved without foundation.

Gloucestershire's bowlers had given them the upper hand in the first session, delayed by one hour after a damp morning, to the extent that when Ben Cox was out four overs after lunch, falling to the second of two fine catches by Tom Smith at third slip, Worcestershire were 71 for 5. Ryan Higgins, the allrounder whose runs and wickets are a large element of why his side are in contention, had taken three, going round the wicket to pin the left-handed Hamish Rutherford leg before and two balls later bringing one back sharply to bowl Alex Milton, who shouldered arms.

Without Moeen Ali, taking time out to nurse some minor "niggles" ahead of Saturday, Worcestershire's often fragile batting appeared in danger of caving in rather rapidly.

That they did not was down to Riki Wessels, whose approach to batting is consistently to attack. It comes off less frequently in the red-ball game than it did in white-ball cricket in his pomp but on this occasion it did, bringing him a 58-ball half-century and 72 off 89 deliveries before, attempting the reprise the slog-sweep that had brought him six off Higgins earlier, he found Ben Charlesworth on the square-leg boundary.

After a brief experiment opening, Wessels is back in the middle order and looks more comfortable there. His sixth-wicket partnership with Barnard (30) gave the innings some substance. With the game evolving quickly, Gloucestershire had their three bowling points - their first objective - in the 48th over, but Joe Leach and Adam Finch built on the impetus provided by Wessels enough to ensure it was the basis of a genuine recovery. Higgins, with 4 for 55, had been Worcestershire's most dangerous opponent with the ball. Shannon Gabriel, the West Indian Test fast bowler brought in for the final push, proved as ineffective as he had against Sussex.

The downside for Gloucestershire of bowling the home side out by tea was two hours of batting in light that did not really brighten until the last throes. James Bracey and Chris Dent weathered the new-ball threat but when Barnard came into the attack as first change, he immediately broke through as Bracey was caught behind and Dent edged to third slip.

Mitchell took his first Championship wicket of the season by having Smith leg before and Barnard combined again with Cox to leave Gloucestershire four down for 56, before Gareth Roderick and Charlesworth survived until the close.

Umpire Nick Cook, who was suffering from a sore knee, was replaced by Mike Burns mid-way through the afternoon session.

If any confirmation were needed that Jack Leach has become an England cult hero, it came on the third evening at The Oval. Leach had walked out to bat alongside Jofra Archer, with England eight down and sitting on a 374-run lead when people began to rise in their seats and join in with a booming chorus that echoed around the ground: "Stand up if you love Jack Leach!"

Only those of a green-and-gold persuasion declined to join the choir. Leach's fan club has grown steadily since the middle of summer, but largely because of his batting exploits rather than his spin bowling. First came the 92 as nightwatchman opener against Ireland at Lord's, for which he was named Man of the Match; then the valiant 1 off 17 balls to accompany Ben Stokes into the history books at Headingley. In the first innings at The Oval, he held up his end while helping Jos Buttler to add 68 and lift England from trouble again.

Then there is the endearing routine of cleaning his glasses between deliveries. In part it is Leach's everyman appearance that chimes with the watching public - though the sight of fans at Old Trafford mimicking his bald pate and glasses prompted Kevin Pietersen to wonder in a column for a betting site whether Leach was becoming a "laughing stock".

On the final day of the series at The Oval, Leach made sure the talk would be about his bowling at last. He made key incisions to remove Marnus Labuschagne and Tim Paine before taking the last two wickets to fall for figures of 4 for 49 - his best in home Tests - in the process sharing all ten with Stuart Broad and his captain, Joe Root.

"Today I just wanted to be patient and felt if I did my job well then the wickets would come," he said. "I needed to put the ball in the right area and be patient. I got my rewards at the end, with some good catching from Rooty. Broady set the tone amazingly well earlier on, it was a real team effort. The Aussies fought hard but we did enough.

"It was nice to get some wickets on the last day. The support for me has been something I didn't think I'd ever experience. Maybe it's because of my batting, but I think it's mainly because I'm bald and have got glasses. The way the public have warmed to me is something very special and I don't take for granted. I can't thank them enough."

England were well on their way to drawing the series on Saturday evening, when Leach was warmly serenaded by the Oval crowd. Looking back, he was happy enough to acknowledge the moment of fortune at Headingley that saw Nathan Lyon drop the ball with a decisive run-out opportunity begging.

"Yesterday, when I was batting at the end, over there they were singing 'Stand up if you love Jack Leach', and then they started over there as well. I just thought 'What is going on?' Nathan Lyon came over and said to me 'How many beers do you owe me [for the run out]?' I think I owe him a lot. Sport is fickle and I guess you have to enjoy the good moments and not get too down about the bad moments. I have had some luck as well. Hopefully you earn that luck through hard work, I will continue working hard."

Leach has been a hit on social media, as well as in the stands, with a video of his re-enactment of the single he scored at Headingley receiving more than 5000 likes on Twitter. After Australia had retained the urn by winning the next Test, at Old Trafford, there were suggestions that Steven Smith had donned a pair of glasses in mock tribute - though it was later clarified to be a joke at the expense of bespectacled former Australia opener Chris Rogers.

"Smith came to me to let me know that it wasn't about me," Leach said. "I didn't know whether it was or wasn't. I was kind of hoping it was, and thought it was a good laugh. I was very embarrassed after Headingley when the video came out of me doing my one. I think I deserved that to be honest! That's why we got a picture together after the game with him wearing my glasses!"

Having made a low-key debut in Christchurch in March 2018, then missing out on the following Test summer through injury, it feels as though Leach has taken 18 months to become an overnight success. However, he does not intend to bask in his new status, and could well find himself involved in a momentous achievement of a different kind over the coming days, with Somerset closing in on the first-ever Championship title in their history.

"Somerset-Essex next week, I don't know if I'll play yet. I've been part of that Somerset season as well so I don't know. During this series it's been pretty mentally and physically tiring. But I probably haven't bowled too many overs, not a silly amount. It will be good to go back and try to win the Championship with Somerset because we've never won that."

Cowboys DE Charlton wants team to release him

Published in Breaking News
Monday, 16 September 2019 12:51

FRISCO, Texas -- Inactive for the first two games, Dallas Cowboys defensive end Taco Charlton took to social media Monday with a plea to the team: Free me.

After tweeting that message, the post was deleted, but he did follow up with this:

The Cowboys have had trade discussions for Charlton, a first-round pick in 2017, but nothing that has gotten close to fruition, according to a source. Charlton is guaranteed his $1.376 million base salary this season and $458,000 of his base salary next season.

"We are not getting into that at all in any way," owner and general manager Jerry Jones said after Sunday's win against the Washington Redskins. "I know there is some discussion. We don't get into that."

The Cowboys welcomed back defensive end Robert Quinn from a two-game suspension for violating the NFL's performance-enhancing drug policy on Monday. They will have an exemption for Quinn through Wednesday but then would have to make a spot for him on the 53-man roster.

Charlton could be among the candidates to be moved; however, the Cowboys are not sure of the availability of defensive end Tyrone Crawford, who aggravated a hip injury against Washington, or defensive tackle Antwaun Woods.

The 28th overall pick in 2017, Charlton has four sacks in 22 games (seven starts) but has not found a consistent role in the rotation used by defensive coordinator Rod Marinelli. He missed three games last year because of a shoulder injury that required offseason surgery, and he also had ankle surgery.

After a slow start to camp, he had two sacks in the preseason.

Going back to the 2017 regular season, he has been a healthy scratch in four of the last six games.

Shurmur not committing to Eli as Week 3 starter

Published in Breaking News
Monday, 16 September 2019 12:40

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. -- New York Giants coach Pat Shurmur was noncommittal Monday about Eli Manning being his starting quarterback this week on the road against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The other option would be turning to No. 6 overall pick Daniel Jones.

A final decision is expected by Wednesday.

Manning has started both Giants losses this season. He's thrown two touchdown passes and has three turnovers while failing to help produce more than 20 points in either contest.

"He's been our starter to this point, and I don't want to talk about anything else moving forward from that standpoint," Shurmur said of his starting quarterback decision this week. "I'm not ready to discuss that."

When told that by unequivocally failing to name Manning the starter for this week, it would leave the topic of Manning vs. Jones open for debate, Shurmur said, "I understand that. I do."

The health of the Giants' wide receivers is expected to factor into the decision. Golden Tate has two games remaining on his suspension while Sterling Shepard and Cody Latimer remain in the concussion protocol. Those were the Giants' top three receivers entering this season.

There is optimism that Shepard returns this week. Latimer is more in doubt. The Giants are likely to be reluctant to throw Jones into action with a severely limited group of receivers at his disposal.

The clock has been ticking ever since the Giants made Jones their top pick out of Duke earlier this year. At that point, he became their quarterback of the future while Manning, 38, turned into a lame duck on the final year of his contract.

The Giants told the two-time Super Bowl winning quarterback right before making the pick that it would be his job as long as he was winning games. That hasn't happened so far. The Giants are 0-2 for the sixth time in seven seasons and haven't been competitive the first two weeks, in part because of a defense that has struggled mightily.

"Hey, we're 0-2 and looking for answers," Manning said. "I get it when you draft a guy early and not winning games, things are going to come up. So I just need to keep working and do whatever my job is."

Manning said the status of his starting job has not been a discussion with the team as of Monday afternoon. When asked how important it was to receive clarity, he claimed it wasn't important. Eventually, midway through a press conference in front of Manning's locker on Monday he requested to "stay away from the 'ifs.'"

Manning has been the Giants' starter for the better part of 16 seasons. He holds just about every franchise passing record and is considered by most the best quarterback in franchise history. That makes this potential move tricky, especially consider it didn't go smoothly during the 2017 season when ex-coach Ben McAdoo ended his consecutive games streak at 210 in favor of Geno Smith.

But Jones' strong spring and summer only closed the gap between the two. He completed 85.3 percent of his passes this preseason while throwing for 416 yards with a pair of touchdowns and no interceptions. He came into the regular season opener late against the Cowboys. His only drive ended in a lost fumble.

The rookie quarterback has only receiving normal backup quarterback snaps (in the 10 percent range) during practice since the start of the regular season.

Jones wasn't available for comment on Monday but told ESPN late last week that he was looking at older game film of that week's opponent to assist Manning in his preparation. He was also splitting scout team reps with Alex Tanney.

The Giants have been trying to balance winning now with turning to the future ever since Jones came on board. It's a topic they discuss on a regular basis behind the scenes.

"We're always trying to do what we can to win this next game. And then we're always behind the scenes having those long-term discussions," Shurmur said. "I think that is the challenge each week is doing what you can to win each game. That's really my focus as the coach and certainly that is what the players' focus is."

The Giants are getting set to face a Buccaneers (1-1) team that has played well defensively early this season under new coordinator Todd Bowles. It could end up being with Jones as the starter.

South African officials have stopped the early release of convicted rapist and former tennis star Bob Hewitt following a public outcry.

The 79-year-old was jailed for six years in 2015 for raping two girls and sexually assaulting a third while he was a coach in the 1980s and 1990s.

He was set to be released on parole later this month but, on Monday, that decision was suspended.

Hewitt's case will now be referred to the country's parole board for review.

Proper procedures regarding the decision to grant him parole were not followed and his victims were not consulted, the Department of Justice and Correctional Services said.

"The [justice] minister noted with grave concern the lack of participation by the victims of crimes in the parole consideration process," it added.

One of Hewitt's victims told local radio station SAfm she had been devastated and angry when she heard the news of his imminent release.

"It came as a huge shock," Olivia Jasriel said. "It's disgusting the way we've been treated. It's just a constant re-traumatisation. I haven't had an opportunity to heal."

Hewitt had reportedly been due to be released on 23 September. It is not known when the parole board will review his case.

The former tennis player was a multiple Grand Slam doubles champion in the 1960s and 1970s. He initially played for Australia, but later moved to South Africa and took citizenship there.

He was suspended from the International Tennis Hall of Fame in 2012 after abuse allegations.

During his trial for rape, the prosecutor said Hewitt deserved a harsh sentence because he had failed to show remorse and had breached the trust of children.

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