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MLS Power Rankings: LAFC reasserts title credentials

Published in Soccer
Monday, 08 July 2019 07:07

A schedule filled with midweek games stretched the resources of teams across Major League Soccer this round, leading to silly mistakes that really shouldn't happen.

We here at MLS Power Rankings wouldn't know anything about that. Thanks to a very nap-heavy daily calendar, we're always in tiptop shape. The Power Rankings don't make mistakes. The Power Rankings are prefect.

With all the majesty of a Zlatan IRBahimovic wonder-strike from midfield, let's get ranking.

Previous rankings: Week 17 | Week 16 | Week 15 | Week 14 | Week 13 | Week 12 | Week 11 | Week 10 | Week 9 | Week 8 | Week 7 | Week 6 | Week 5 | Week 4 | Week 3 | Week 2 | Week 1

1. LAFC (13 wins, 4 draws, 2 losses)

Previous ranking: 1

Next MLS match: July 12 at Houston (9 p.m. ET)

LAFC were back on their ... good stuff. After a strange loss in Colorado, Bob Bradley's team only put in 11 goals in two games this week against Western Conference opponents. The words "historically dominant" are starting to resolve into view, and there's no reason yet to doubt LAFC will march to a title.

2. New York City FC (7-8-2)

Previous ranking: 2

Next MLS match: July 14 at New York Red Bulls (6:30 p.m. ET)

No one beats NYCFC at home. Well, almost no one. The Sounders didn't do it on Wednesday, but Portland somehow managed to hand Dome Torrent's club just its second loss of the season overall and its first loss in the Bronx in a scrappy game at Yankee Stadium on Sunday.

3. Philadelphia Union (10-6-5)

Previous ranking: 3

Next MLS match: July 13 at Real Salt Lake (10 p.m. ET on ESPN+)

Knock knock. (You say "Who's there?"). Orange. (Now you say "Orange who?").

....orange you glad the Union aren't playing Orlando City anymore? Back-to-back games separated by four days between the same teams just feels weird. Let's not do that anymore.

4. LA Galaxy (11-1-7)

Previous ranking: 5

Next MLS match: July 12 vs. San Jose (11 p.m. ET)

Not only did Zlatan Ibrahimovic score twice and lead the Galaxy to a needed win against a weakened Toronto team but he did it wearing a shirt with his name spelled wrong. Maybe LA should consider leaving "Irbahimovic" on the Swede's jersey just in case it's good luck?

5. FC Dallas (8-5-7)

Previous ranking: 6

Next MLS match: July 13 at Minnesota (8 p.m. ET on ESPN+)

FC Dallas continue to hang around just behind the top tier of teams in the Western Conference, thanks to the young talent in the roster and the contributions of veterans such as Santiago Mosquera. Mosquera's early tally was the game winner in an Independence Day win over D.C.

6. Atlanta United (9-3-7)

Previous ranking: 4

Next MLS match: July 14 at Seattle (3:55 p.m. ET on ESPN, ESPN Deportes)

Five Stripes, one point from a double-game week. Wednesday's humbling in Chicago certainly leaked into Sunday's tilt against the Red Bulls -- not just because of fatigue but because Atlanta was missing Leandro Gonzalez Pirez via suspension. United thought they had a win against New York, only to have it snatched away by poor defending.

7. San Jose Earthquakes (8-4-7)

Previous ranking: 7

Next MLS match: July 12 at LA Galaxy (11 p.m. ET)

The Quakes watched a six-game unbeaten run -- four of them wins -- end in a midweek trip to Minnesota. It took an added-time goal from Danny Hoesen to get back to winning ways at home against RSL on Saturday. Does San Jose have the staying power to go on another strong run of form?

8. New York Red Bulls (8-4-7)

Previous ranking: 8

Next MLS match: July 14 vs. NYCFC (6:30 p.m. ET)

The Red Bulls get the Shrug of the Week Award after they took a 4-0 thumping in Houston on Wednesday, then executed a late comeback to earn a draw after they were forced to play the same day they arrived in Atlanta on Sunday thanks to travel issues. And next week is the Hudson River Derby!

9. D.C. United (8-7-5)

Previous ranking: 9

Next MLS match: July 12 vs. New England (7 p.m. ET on ESPN, ESPN Deportes)

It was a Texas-sized nightmare for the Black and Red in Frisco on Thursday. There's some relief that Wayne Rooney's red card was downgraded to a yellow, but the chances seem good that Luciano Acosta might miss more than a game after his stamp on Paxton Pomykal in the loss.

10. Colorado Rapids (5-4-10)

Previous ranking: 10

Next MLS match: July 13 at Portland (11 p.m. ET on ESPN+)

The end of the Casey bump means the Rapids remain in last place in the West and fall below .500 at home. The danger is that a disappointing home loss damages the confidence of a team just starting to believe in itself. This is when Casey's real work -- and his audition for the full-time job -- really begins.

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1:17

Bunbury scores 50th MLS goal in Revs win over Rapids

Three separate rain delays still couldn't stop the New England Revolution as they prevailed 2-1 past Colorado Rapids.

11. New England Revolution (6-5-8)

Previous ranking: 14

Next MLS match: July 12 at D.C. United (7 p.m. ET on ESPN, ESPN Deportes)

The Bruce-clamation project (these are definitely getting better) continued in Colorado on the Fourth of July. Commerce City is never an easy place to win, even when the Rapids are bad -- and the Revs now have a chance to jump into a playoff spot next week with a win against a scuffling D.C. United team.

12. Minnesota United (9-3-7)

Previous ranking: 16

Next MLS match: July 13 vs. FC Dallas (8 p.m. ET on ESPN+)

The Loons took six points from two games this week and have a three-game winning run going. The U.S. Open Cup tilt in midweek makes things a little more complicated for Adrian Heath, but the Loons have climbed all the way to fourth in the West and are starting to look like ... if you can believe it ... the real deal.

13. Montreal Impact (9-3-9)

Previous ranking: 11

Next MLS match: July 13 vs. Toronto (7:30 p.m. ET on ESPN+)

It couldn't have started any better for the Impact versus Minnesota United thanks to Anthony Jackson-Hamel's goal 27 seconds in. That start didn't lead to a win, though, and the Impact will be kicking themselves for losing to a Loons team minus several starters. Next up, a rivalry clash with a TFC team that will have its big names back.

14. Portland Timbers (7-2-8)

Previous ranking: 15

Next MLS match: July 13 vs. Colorado (11 p.m. ET on ESPN+)

The Portland creep up the table continued this weekend after a road win in the Bronx over NYCFC. It was a momentous win for several reasons: One, NYCFC hadn't lost at home in 2019. Two, NYCFC has only two losses on the year in total. Three, the last time NYCFC lost a game it was the first week of spring.

15. Seattle Sounders (9-5-5)

Previous ranking: 12

Next MLS match: July 14 vs. Atlanta (3:55 p.m. ET on ESPN, ESPN Deportes)

A swing east for two games this week delivered a loss in New York City and a win in Columbus for the Sounders. The biggest difference between the two games was Nicolas Lodeiro, who returned from Copa America duty and a penalty and late winner at the death to secure the win in Ohio.

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1:45

Lodeiro stuns Crew with stoppage time winner

Columbus Crew are winless in their last five matches in all competitions following Nico Lodeiro's brace for Seattle Sounders.

16. Houston Dynamo (8-3-7)

Previous ranking: 13

Next MLS match: July 12 vs. LAFC (9 p.m. ET)

In a span of six days, the Dynamo will have played against the league's worst team, FC Cincinnati, and the league's best team, LAFC. Houston suffered the shame of being the first team to lose to FCC since May 11. That doesn't bode well for next Friday's tilt against the Black and Gold.

17. Orlando City (6-4-9)

Previous ranking: 17

Next MLS match: July 13 vs. Columbus (7:30 p.m. ET on ESPN+)

The Lions just finished a weird week in which they faced the Union in back-to-back games separated by four days and got a single point for the effort. Dom Dwyer scored in the weekend draw, which is a good sign that the forward can reclaim his form after paternity leave.

18. Real Salt Lake (8-2-9)

Previous ranking: 18

Next MLS match: July 13 vs. Philadelphia (10 p.m. ET on ESPN+)

RSL nearly played their way to a busy, unbeaten week, but a late concession in San Jose ruined a chance to extend a three-game unbeaten run. There's some extra sting on the loss because it vaulted the Quakes back over Real Salt Lake and into the playoff places. Will this one matter by the end of the year?

19. Vancouver Whitecaps (4-8-8)

Previous ranking: 19

Next MLS match: July 13 vs. Sporting Kansas City (10 p.m. ET on ESPN+)

The most notable thing about the Whitecaps this week is that they were LAFC's latest victim. Conceding six goals is not good, but neither is anyone surprised.

20. Sporting Kansas City (5-7-7)

Previous ranking: 21

Next MLS match: July 13 at Vancouver (10 p.m. ET on ESPN+)

If Sporting is going to get back to its accustomed level, getting out of last place is the first step. A win from two matches this week was enough to do just that, though the progress from the win over Chicago will need to ramp up significantly. Strange stat: Daniel Salloi, the man who led Sporting in goals last year, has yet to score in 2019.

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0:51

Paunovic & Chicago Fire under pressure after another defeat

Chicago Fire have yet to win away from home this season as pressure continues to pile on Veljko Paunovic following a 1-0 defeat to Sporting KC.

21. Toronto FC (6-5-8)

Previous ranking: 20

Next MLS match: July 13 at Montreal (7:30 p.m. ET on ESPN+)

The Reds interregnum is finally over with the Gold Cup done. How quickly Greg Vanney can reintroduce Michael Bradley and Jozy Altidore is critical to getting the season back on track. Despite last year's struggle, seventh place is not good enough for a team that aims to win championships every year.

22. Chicago Fire (5-7-8)

Previous ranking: 22

Next MLS match: July 13 vs. FC Cincinnati (8 p.m. ET on ESPN+)

The Fire are our "Whiplash Team of the Week" after beating the defending champs 5-1 on Wednesday(!) and falling to Sporting Kansas City 1-0 on Saturday. The short rest and the trip to Kansas City make it tough to be tough on Chicago, but that's a big difference.

23. Columbus Crew (5-2-13)

Previous ranking: 23

Next MLS match: July 13 at Orlando (7:30 p.m. ET on ESPN+)

The Gold Cup is over. Wil Trapp and Gyasi Zardes will be back with the team, presumably for the trip to Orlando next week. That's the best possible news for the Crew, who are tied with [checks notes] an expansion team for the most losses in Major League Soccer this season.

24. FC Cincinnati (4-2-13)

Previous ranking: 24

Next MLS match: July 13 at Chicago (8 p.m. ET on ESPN+)

FC Cincinnati got themselves a big win over Houston on Saturday, the kind of win that lets everyone breathe again. Not a season-saving win, but a "hey, we can actually win, what a feeling" kind of win. The kind of win that maybe could turn into a winning streak kind of w... OK, maybe that's a step too far.

Kings' Walton says sex assault suit lacks facts

Published in Basketball
Monday, 08 July 2019 13:46

LOS ANGELES -- Sacramento Kings coach Luke Walton says sexual assault allegations against him are not backed up by facts and are designed to attract media attention.

Walton made his comments in a court brief filed Wednesday in response to a lawsuit by sportscaster Kelli Tennant. The lawsuit is filed in Los Angeles Superior Court, and the Kings and the NBA are jointly investigating the accusations.

Walton's court filing claims Tennant filed a lawsuit nearly five years after the alleged assault, which the brief calls a "pleasant encounter,'' after she quit two jobs and needed money.

Tennant has said Walton attacked her in 2014 when he was an assistant coach for the Golden State Warriors, but she was too afraid to file charges, though she did confide in others at the time.

"I was scared,'' she said. "I felt coming forward would jeopardize every aspect of my life.''

Tennant calls Walton a former longtime friend and mentor who wrote the foreword to a book she had written. When the coach was on a Warriors road trip to Los Angeles, she met him in the lobby of his Santa Monica hotel and he invited her to his room, she said. They discussed the book, and Walton allegedly grabbed her.

"Out of nowhere, he got on top of me and pinned me down to the bed and held my arms down with all of his weight while he kissed my neck and my face and my chest,'' Tennant said at an April news conference, adding that when she asked him to get off, "he laughed at me.''

Tennant's attorney, Garo Mardirossian, has said it's unlikely police would be able to put together a criminal case. Walton's lawyer, Mark Baute, has called Tennant "an opportunist, not a victim.''

The court filing last week says encounter was "very short, entirely pleasant and consensual," and did not include raised voices or groping. In the filing, Walton said he did not write a forward for Tennant's book and does not consider himself a mentor to her. They briefly worked at Spectrum Sports at the same time.

The court filing characterizes the meeting as "platonic in nature'' where Tennant was "entirely pleasant during the encounter.'' The filing also states Tennant waited beyond the statute of limitations to come forward and has no basis to seek economic relief from Walton because she quit her job at Spectrum Sports for reasons unrelated to him.

Walton is seeking for the lawsuit to be dismissed and Tennant to pay his costs and attorneys' fees.

Attorneys for Tennant and Walton could not immediately be reached for comment Monday.

Verlander: MLB juicing balls for more offense

Published in Baseball
Monday, 08 July 2019 13:50

CLEVELAND -- American League All-Star Game starter Justin Verlander told ESPN on Monday that the balls used in Major League Baseball games this season are "a f---ing joke" and that he believes "100%" the league has implemented them to increase offense.

The 36-year-old Verlander, an eight-time All-Star who is starting his second All-Star Game on Tuesday, has allowed a major league-high 26 home runs this season. Players hit 3,691 home runs in the season's first half and are on pace to hit 6,668 home runs, which would obliterate the record 6,105 hit in 2017.

Conversations about a juiced ball have percolated since after the All-Star break in 2015, after which home runs spiked. They are up nearly 60 percent from the 2014 season, and MLB commissioner Rob Manfred commissioned a study to investigate whether the balls were contributing to the home run spike. It concluded the balls were performing differently but didn't attribute a reason. In June 2018, one month after the study was released, MLB bought Rawlings, the supplier of the official major league ball.

"It's a f---ing joke," Verlander said. "Major League Baseball's turning this game into a joke. They own Rawlings, and you've got Manfred up here saying it might be the way they center the pill. They own the f---ing company. If any other $40 billion company bought out a $400 million company and the product changed dramatically, it's not a guess as to what happened. We all know what happened. Manfred the first time he came in, what'd he say? He said we want more offense. All of a sudden he comes in, the balls are juiced? It's not coincidence. We're not idiots."

Asked if he believed the balls were intentionally juiced by the league, Verlander said: "Yes. 100%. They've been using juiced balls in the Home Run Derby forever. They know how to do it. It's not coincidence. I find it really hard to believe that Major League Baseball owns Rawlings and just coincidentally the balls become juiced."

Manfred, who became commissioner in 2015, acknowledged Monday on ESPN's Golic and Wingo the difference in the balls. He has denied any involvement from the league in changing the composition of the ball.

"We think what's been going on this year is attributable to the baseball," Manfred told Golic and Wingo. "Our scientists that have been now studying the baseball more regularly have told us that this year the baseball has a little less drag. It doesn't need to change very much in order to produce meaningful change in terms of the way the game is played on the field. We are trying to understand exactly why that happened and build out a manufacturing process that gives us a little more control over what's going on. But you have to remember that our baseball is a handmade product and there's gonna be variation year to year."

Pitchers in particular have been outspoken this season about changes in the ball, talking about the seams, the leather, the ball's size and how it feels harder. Chicago Cubs manager Joe Maddon said of the ball this weekend: "You could just have stamped Titleist on the sides of these things."

"I hate the way I feel out there," Verlander told ESPN. "No matter who's the batter, I feel like I'm constantly walking a tightrope, because any batter can go opposite field. Any batter can leave with any pitch that's anywhere in the zone. You can't miss barrels anymore. You have to miss bats. There's been multiple times this year where five years ago I'd probably just throw a fastball away. I can't do that. Because you're the 8-, 9-hole hitter and you still can hit an opposite-field homer."

Fellow AL All-Star J.D. Martinez believes a change in hitters' approaches is to credit for the home-run surge. As fastball velocity from pitchers grew, he said, their control over pitches waned, and the explosion in knowledge from hitters tilted the game in their favor.

"It's a power-arm league," Martinez said. "It's either a walk or a strikeout -- stuff over command. I think you see a lot more mistakes over the plate. The velocity, the guys trying to hit the ball in the air -- I think it's a recipe for home runs."

The juiced-ball debate within the games is often bifurcated between the pitchers lamenting the home-run rise and the hitters benefitting from it. Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Marcus Stroman did not want to say explicitly the ball is different but made it clear he echoed the sentiment of his pitching peers.

"I agree with some of JV's takes, CC Sabathia's," Stroman said. "I'll agree with those guys, retweet whatever they decide to put out.

"It's clear," Stroman continued. "I just come to terms with it. It is what it is. You can't control it. So why even think about it?"

For Verlander, it's a matter not only of how all-or-nothing baseball has affected him personally -- he showed off a blister on his thumb that he said only happened in 2017 and 2019, the two seasons in which the balls were in question -- but what it means for baseball writ large.

"I don't know if it's bad or good for the game," he said. "That's for them to decide. I don't think it's great -- that the true outcomes of strikeouts, homers and walks is best for the game. That's for somebody else to decide. I talk about time a lot -- how do you stack up in history? If you're going to change something so dramatically, I think you need to make people aware."

Williams dominates Suarez Navarro to reach last eight

Published in Tennis
Monday, 08 July 2019 08:56

Seven-time Wimbledon singles champion Serena Williams reached the quarter-finals at SW19 with a dominant display against Spain's Carla Suarez Navarro.

The American 11th seed, 37, raced to a 6-2 6-2 victory against the 30-year-old world number 31.

Williams will play compatriot Alison Riske in the last eight after she upset world number one Ashleigh Barty.

In another unexpected result, Karolina Muchova beat third seed Karolina Pliskova 4-6 7-5 13-11.

The all-Czech encounter was a game away from becoming the first Wimbledon match decided by the new rule which sees a tie-break played if it reaches 12-12 in the final set.

But world number 68 Muchova, who has never reached a Grand Slam quarter-final before, hit a forehand winner to break at 12-11 up and claim victory after three hours and 17 minutes.

The 22-year-old will face Ukrainian eighth seed Elina Svitolina next, who moved into the last eight with a 6-4 6-2 win against Petra Martic.

Williams is also in the second round of the mixed doubles with Britain's Andy Murray and said she was happy to have more playing time at the All England Club.

"I have more matches this week than in the past five months, but it is good," she explained.

"I know I can play and now that I feel better physically I almost feel a relief. I still want it or I wouldn't be here."

Williams took control from the outset, breaking Suarez Navarro's serve in the first game then breaking again to go 5-2 up.

But shortly before that Williams, who played in her first Grand Slam in 1998, had to be reminded of the rules by the umpire as she reached over the net to hit a volley.

The 23-time major winner told the umpire "I thought it was allowed" after the point was overruled, but was ultimately undisturbed as she claimed the first set in 31 minutes.

Williams made an equally commanding start to the second set as she broke Suarez Navarro in her first two service games, but the four-time Olympic champion then dipped momentarily as she lost her serve to love.

Suarez Navarro has never won more than three games in a set against the American though, and Williams ensured that record continued as she broke for a third time then held serve to close out the match in one hour and four minutes.

Elsewhere, Belgian 24th seed Elise Mertens served for the match against the Czech Republic's Barbora Strycova but was eventually beaten 4-6 7-5 6-2.

The world number 54 will play Britain's Johanna Konta or Petra Kvitova next.

China's Zhang Shuai held off Ukrainian 19-year-old Dayana Yastremska 6-4 1-6 6-2 and will now play Simona Halep, who ended 15-year-old Coco Gauff's run with a 6-3 6-3 victory.

Analysis

American former world number six Chanda Rubin on BBC TV

This was just a classic Serena Williams performance. Everything was firing and on point.

Carla Suarez Navarro is an opponent she has never really had trouble with. Williams broke her in the first game and she never looked back.

She did not have enough against Williams' power, serving and movement.

Australia's world number one Ashleigh Barty has been knocked out of Wimbledon, losing her fourth-round match against American Alison Riske.

World number 55 Riske fought back from a set down to win 3-6 6-2 6-3 in one hour 36 minutes on court two to reach a first Grand Slam quarter-final.

French Open champion Barty, 23, had not dropped a set at the tournament.

Riske will face seven-time champion Serena Williams after she beat Spain's Carla Suarez Navarro.

"I couldn't begin to say what it means to me. To have overcome the matches the way I have is what I'm most excited about," said Riske, 29.

"Getting to the quarter-finals is amazing but what's most exciting for me is the way I've been fighting.

"The grass definitely brings out the best in me. Hopefully it will rub off and happen in other places too. I think my game is just well suited to it."

"I love being at Wimbledon. Today I told my fiance, 'I don't want Wimbledon to end'."

Barty is at least guaranteed to hold onto top spot in the rankings after Karolina Pliskova also lost in the fourth round.

The Australian set the early tone as she took the opening game with four successive aces, before a delightful sliced backhand set up break points as the Australian raced into a 4-1 lead.

Unshaken, Riske - who won the pair's only previous meeting in 2016 - brought the set back on serve, only for the world number one to take the final two games and pocket the opener in 32 minutes.

The American rallied in the second set, breaking Barty's faltering serve twice more as the momentum was swiftly stolen away from the Australian.

And, despite losing just 12 games in her opening three matches, Barty was unable to prevent a resurgent Riske continuing her best Wimbledon run as the American made a crucial break at 4-3 in the deciding set.

All four of Riske's matches have gone the distance, with other notable victories coming against 13th seed Belinda Bencic and 22nd seed Donna Vekic during her impressive run.

Barty said: "I think I started well. I was sticking to how I wanted to play. Then in the second set, I think my serve let me down. I let Alison get back into the match too many times, having looks at second serves.

"Overall I didn't play a poor match. When I needed to, when the big moments were there, Alison played better today. It's a tough one to swallow but I lost to a better player."

Coco Gauff's remarkable fairytale run at Wimbledon came to an end with a straight-set defeat by former world number one Simona Halep.

Seventh seed Halep, 27, beat the 15-year-old American qualifier 6-3 6-3 to advance to the quarter-finals, where she will play China's Zhang Shuai.

Gauff had beaten Venus Williams, Magdalena Rybarikova and Polona Hercog on her way to the last 16.

But she appeared out of sorts on court, calling on a doctor in the second set.

Gauff had been bidding to become the youngest Wimbledon quarter-finalist since fellow 15-year-old American Jennifer Capriati in 1991.

"I wasn't feeling very well but I still played my best. I'm not sure what it was but I still had fun even though I was losing," she said.

"I learned a lot about how to play in front of a big crowd and how to play under pressure. I am really grateful for the experience."

Gauff's meeting with 2014 Wimbledon semi-finalist Halep was the match everyone wanted to watch on Manic Monday, with Vogue editor Anna Wintour forced to watch from a staircase because of the bumper crowd.

But the magnitude of the occasion appeared to get to Gauff, who showed signs of early nerves by having her serve broken in the very first game.

She broke back immediately, and later in the first set almost went another break up when Halep double-faulted twice in succession, but scuppered two break points as Halep held serve.

Yet unlike her cool and calm approach in previous matches, Gauff looked despondent after every game she lost, throwing her racquet to the ground and clapping her hands together in frustration as Halep broke her serve to go 3-2 up.

Gauff was broken once more as Halep took the set before the second set started in exactly the same fashion, Halep breaking her young opponent's serve at the first chance.

Yet again Gauff immediately broke back, but she lost on serve again to gift her opponent a 4-2 lead, and Halep went on to hold match point on a break but Gauff rallied back.

Gauff showed not a flicker of emotion as Halep eventually served out the set, not even stopping to greet the autograph hunters as she walked to the changing rooms.

'She has all the ingredients' - analysis

Two-time US Open champion Tracy Austin on BBC TV

The fairytale has ended but it's only just beginning for Coco Gauff. She has all the ingredients she needs to be a future Grand Slam champion.

It's been a lot of fun watching her at Wimbledon this year.

Roger Federer reached a record-extending 17th Wimbledon quarter-final as young Italian Matteo Berrettini was overwhelmed on Centre Court.

The Swiss great, bidding for a ninth title, needed just an hour and 14 minutes to seal a 6-1 6-2 6-2 win.

Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal also continued to breeze through the draw with equally-comfortable last-16 wins.

Defending champion Djokovic knocked out inexperienced Frenchman Ugo Humbert, while Nadal beat Portugal's Joao Sousa.

Serbian top seed Djokovic showed the gulf in class as he won 6-3 6-2 6-3 against world number 66 Humbert, while Nadal - only tested so far by second-round opponent Nick Kyrgios - eased to a 6-2 6-2 6-2 win over Sousa.

Experience shows as Federer and Djokovic glide through

Djokovic's greater pedigree shone through as he outclassed Humbert on the 21-year-old's maiden appearance in the second week of a Grand Slam.

The 15-time Grand Slam champion broke early in the opening two sets to take control, needing a touch longer to earn the break in the third, before swatting away his young opponent in one hour and 42 minutes.

Djokovic, the top seed, only dropped 14 points on serve and took five of nine break points to set up a meeting with Belgium's 21st seed David Goffin in the last eight.

Only Poland's Hubert Hurkacz has managed to take a set off the Serb, who has wrapped up three of his opening four matches in around two hours or less.

"I don't think about trying to conserve energy to be honest, I try to focus on what needs to be done to win the match," said Djokovic, who reached his 11th quarter-final at Wimbledon.

"I was very pleased to execute the job in three sets."

With 32-year-old Djokovic and 33-year-old Nadal safely through, Federer matched them to become the fifth man aged in his thirties to reach the quarter-finals at the All England Club.

Nine over-30s reached the last 16 - the highest tally at a Grand Slam in the Open era - with unseeded American Sam Querrey, 31, and Spain's 23rd seed Roberto Bautista Agut, 31, also advancing to the last eight on Monday.

Querrey, a semi-finalist in 2017, edged out another unseeded American, Tennys Sandgren, in a 6-4 6-7 7-6 7-6 win to set up a meeting against Nadal.

Bautista Agut reached the SW19 quarter-finals for the first time with a 6-3 7-5 6-2 win over France's 28th seed Benoit Paire, while Goffin, 29, beat unseeded Spaniard Fernando Verdasco in a 7-6 (11-9) 2-6 6-3 6-4 win.

Impressive Nadal sends 'loud and clear message'

Nadal has struggled to go far at Wimbledon in recent years, with fitness issues and the demands of his favoured clay-court season taking their toll on the two-time champion.

A run to the semi-finals last year, where he lost to Djokovic, was the first time he had progressed past the last 16 since reaching the 2011 final.

The Majorcan, whose movement was sharp against Sousa, underlined his credentials as one of the favourites with a clinical victory wrapped up in one hour and 45 minutes.

The quality of Nadal's performance sent a "loud and clear message to the locker room", according to three-time Wimbledon champion Boris Becker.

No outcome other than a comfortable Nadal win looked likely after he showed his intent by making a lightning start.

He broke twice to race into a 3-0 lead with only 10 minutes on the clock and little over a quarter of an hour later he was serving for the set.

Sousa, who had impressively beaten Croatia's 2017 finalist Marin Cilic and Britain's Dan Evans on his way to reaching the second week, lost half an opportunity when he pushed a forehand wide at 30-30 and was punished by a whipping backhand winner on set point.

More punishment came his way in the second set, Nadal breaking at the first attempt and again for a 5-2 lead, leaving even Sousa applauding.

Nadal broke twice more in the third set, first for a 2-1 lead after scrambling to hit a wonderful cross-court winner which left the Spaniard jumping in delight - and brought many on Centre Court to their feet - then again to leave him serving for the match.

By that point Sousa had little left to offer, Nadal holding to love and clinching victory with an ace out wide.

"It was a good solid match, the second serve didn't work as well as two days ago, but the rest was very positive," Nadal told BBC Sport.

"I am happy to be where I am, the body is holding well and I'm playing some good tennis."

British number one Johanna Konta reached the Wimbledon quarter-finals with an accomplished display against two-time champion Petra Kvitova.

The 28-year-old came from a set down to beat the Czech sixth seed 3-6 6-2 6-4.

Konta is one win away from emulating her 2017 feat of reaching the last four and two away from becoming the first British women's singles finalist since Virginia Wade won the title in 1977.

She will take on Czech world number 54 Barbora Strycova on Tuesday.

With defeats on Monday for world number one Ashleigh Barty, third seed Karolina Pliskova, and now Kvitova, it leaves seventh seed Simona Halep, eighth seed Elina Svitolina and 11th seed Serena Williams as the highest ranked players left in the women's draw.

"It was small margins in the end," said Konta, who is enjoying deep runs at back-to-back Grand Slams for the first time following last month's French Open semi-final.

"I'm tremendously grateful to be here and I'm just happy to still be in this event and to be competing against the best players in the world."

Konta finds another gear after going behind

Konta had come into the match having dropped serve just once in 33 games at the championships and it was unfortunate for her that she picked just the wrong moment for a rare break.

Having matched Kvitova's power game by game in the opening set, she sent a forehand long to give the Czech set point and then went wide to allow her to convert it.

The lapse seemed to fire up Konta, who wasted no time in breaking to love in the opening game of the second and then backed it up with a hard-fought hold in a 12-minute game where she was taken to deuce seven times and fended off two break points.

That was the turning point from which Konta found a new gear, establishing a double break and putting the Czech's serve under consistent pressure - all the more impressive given that this was against a player who had yet to drop a set in the tournament.

Konta had some treatment on her foot, having it sprayed and strapped, before serving for the set and claiming it with an ace.

She continued to dominate the 2011 and 2014 champion in the third with Kvitova - who had been sidelined with an arm injury in the run-up to Wimbledon - unable to serve her way out of trouble.

Konta went a double break up in the third before wobbling with the finishing line in sight when she was serving for the match at 5-2, when she was broken having squandered two match points with first a wide forehand and then a long one.

But when she got her second chance two games later, she made no mistake and wrapped up victory when Kvitova's forehand whizzed way past the baseline.

Another Grand Slam, another quarter-final - Konta back on track

Konta was a semi-finalist here two years ago during a run of form that catapulted her to number four in the world rankings.

She is enjoying a similar upturn this season, having risen from 47th in the world in April to 18th now after her Roland Garros success and two WTA finals on clay in May.

She has carried the momentum through on to grass, where once again her serve is her key weapon. She has now been broken just three times in 47 games at these championships.

Her form this year has been in marked contrast to last year where she went out in the second round of Wimbledon after a first-round exit at the French Open.

The upturn has coincided with the hiring of a new coach towards the end of last year - Dimitri Zavialoff, who used to work with three-time Grand Slam singles champion Stan Wawrinka.

Under the softly spoken Frenchman, Konta's own mood has become calmer and against Kvitova there never seemed to be any doubt in her mind that she could win this match.

She has also made something of a habit of turning three-set matches into victories, including two in the Fed Cup play-off victory over Kazakhstan in April that seemed to set the tone for her season.

Like in the previous around against Sloane Stephens, where she trailed after the first set, she again showed great mental strength to deliver in front of a delighted Centre Court.

Australia Open welcomes world’s elite stars

Published in Table Tennis
Monday, 08 July 2019 04:42

Furthermore, they are not the only former champions on duty.

In the men’s singles Korea Republic’s Jeoung Youngsik, a semi-finalist in Busan and the winner in 2015 in Tweed Heads, is on duty as is Japan’s Jun Mizutani, successful one year later when the tournament was staged in Melbourne. Similarly, the winner in 2017 on the Gold Coast, Vladimir Samsonov of Belarus competes.

It is no different in the women’s singles event, in addition to Liu Shiwen, Singapore’s Feng Tianwei, Japan’s Hina Hayata and Chen Meng are all listed; Feng Tianwei won in 2014 in Sydney, two years later it was success for Hina Hayata, in 2017 it was victory for Chen Meng.

Notable names, significantly Jeoung Youngsik, Vladimir Samsonov and Hina Hayata must compete in the qualification tournament!

A tough task and history for a repeat success is not in their favour; since 1996 in the very first year of the ITTF World Tour, when in Brisbane Austria’s Werner Schlager and at the time representing China, Wang Chen, won the respective men’s singles and women’s singles titles, no player has ever prevailed on more than one occasion.

On what is now the tenth edition in 2019, is that scenario set to change? China’s Ma Long and Ding Ning, the reigning Olympic champions, have never won the title; conversely, Xu Xin and Chen Meng, having succeeded in Busan, are in good shape.

The entry speaks for itself, only Germany’s Timo Boll is missing from the top 20 names in the men’s singles, in the counterpart women’s event all are present. It is the equivalent of the Liebherr 2019 World Championships earlier this year when it was a similar scenario, Korea Republic’s Lim Jonghoon, at the time listed at no.17 on the men’s world rankings, did not compete in Budapest.

It is the most outstanding entry for any ITTF World Tour tournament held outside Asia, only the recent Platinum tournaments held in Qatar, China and Japan can match; to date no ITTF World Tour tournament in Europe can compare!

In fact, in any sport, what other sporting event staged in Australia can equate? In terms of quality it stands alongside the Australian Open, the first Grand Slam tennis tournament of the year and the Australian motor racing Grand Prix.

History is written in Geelong, table tennis stands tall down under: Advance Australia Fair.

Camille Serme headlines French Open draw

Published in Squash
Monday, 08 July 2019 04:28

Camille Serme is top seed in the Open de France in Nantes

Rösner and Coll are top men’s seeds in Nantes 
By SEAN REUTHE

French No.1 Camille Serme will headline the Open de France – Nantes 2019 Presented by Tailor Capital when the PSA World Tour Silver tournament takes place between September 9-14 at the picturesque Chateau des ducs de Bretagne.

The Open de France – formally known as the Open International de Squash de Nantes – has this year upgraded to a PSA World Tour event after featuring on the PSA Challenger Tour in 2018 and will use a best-of-three games format up to and including the quarter-finals, before reverting to the traditional best of five format for the semi-finals and beyond.

The increase in prize money and prestige means Nantes will play host to a top-class draw featuring five of the world’s top 10 players across the men’s and women’s events.

Serme, the highest ranked female French player of all time, will be the star attraction as she competes for the lion’s share of the $73,500 prize purse, and the 30-year-old from Créteil will feature alongside high-profile players such as World No.7 Sarah-Jane Perry, World No.8 Amanda Sobhy and World No.11 Alison Waters.

Defending champion Nele Gilis and last year’s runner-up Emily Whitlock also return, while French trio Coline Aumard, Melissa Alves and Enora Villard join Serme in the draw.

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The men’s draw is headed up by Germany’s World No.5 Simon Rösner, New Zealand’s World No.6 Paul Coll and Welsh World No.13 Joel Makin.

Gregoire Marche – the Aix en Provence-based World No.16 who has won this tournament in three of the past four years – is the highest ranked French player in the men’s draw, while former World No.6 Mathieu Castagnet, Baptiste Masotti and Benjamin Aubert will also carry home hopes on their shoulders.

The 2018 men’s champion Declan James is seeded seventh for the tournament, ahead of fellow Englishman and former World No.1 James Willstrop, who he beat at the Théâtre Graslin last September to lift his biggest PSA title to date.

The Open de France features an equal prize fund of $147,000 split equally between the men’s and women’s events. Round one matches will be played at La Maison du Squash, while round two matches will be split between that venue and the Chateau des ducs de Bretagne. The Chateau des ducs de Bretagne will host all matches from the quarter-finals onwards.

All of the action from the Chateau des ducs de Bretagne will be shown live on SQUASHTV (rest of world), Eurosport Player (Europe only) and the official Facebook page of the PSA World Tour.

Tickets are available for purchase via the tournament’s official website. For more information, follow the tournament on Twitter,Facebook and Instagram.

Squash fans can also support the event by participating in the tournament’s crowdfunding campaign. Contributors can get involved in one of the most unique tournaments on the PSA World Tour and will earn rewards and other benefits. 

Open de France – Nantes 2019 Presented by Tailor Capital.

Men’s Entry List:
1) Simon Rösner (GER)
2) Paul Coll (NZL)
3) Joel Makin (WAL)
4) Zahed Salem (EGY)
5) Fares Dessouky (EGY)
6) Gregoire Marche (FRA)
7) Declan James (ENG)
8) James Willstrop (ENG)
9) Daryl Selby (ENG)
10) Raphael Kandra (GER)
11) Mathieu Castagnet (FRA)
12) Borja Golan (ESP)
13) George Parker (ENG)
14) Chris Simpson (ENG)
15) Iker Pajares Bernabeu (ESP)
16) Alan Clyne (SCO)
17) Ramit Tandon (IND)
18) Richie Fallows (ENG)
19) Ben Coleman (ENG)
20) Mahesh Mangaonkar (IND)
21) Baptiste Masotti (FRA)
22) Youssef Ibrahim (EGY)
23) Nathan Lake (ENG)
Wildcard) Benjamin Aubert (FRA)

Women’s Entry List:
1) Camille Serme (FRA)
2) Sarah-Jane Perry (ENG)
3) Amanda Sobhy (USA)
4) Alison Waters (ENG)
5) Hania El Hammamy (EGY)
6) Nele Gilis (BEL)
7) Olivia Blatchford Clyne (USA)
8) Millie Tomlinson (ENG)
9) Emily Whitlock (ENG)
10) Nadine Shahin (EGY)
11) Mayar Hany (EGY)
12) Tinne Gilis (BEL)
13) Milou van der Heijden (NED)
14) Julianne Courtice (ENG)
15) Coline Aumard (FRA)
16) Lisa Aitken (SCO)
17) Olivia Fiechter (USA)
18) Alexandra Fuller (RSA)
19) Haley Mendez (USA)
20) Melissa Alves (FRA)
21) Lucy Turmel (ENG)
22) Farida Mohamed (EGY)
23) Menna Nasser (EGY)
Wildcard) Enora Villard (FRA)  

Preview by SEAN REUTHE (PSA). Edited by ALAN THATCHER.

Pictures courtesy of PSA, Andrew Dawson and Artyom Liss

Posted on July 8, 2019

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