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Organisers of the Cricket World Cup are "reviewing circumstances" after a spectator sustained a broken arm at the end of the game between England and Afghanistan in Manchester on Tuesday.

The spectator ran on to the playing field at the end of the match and, as he approached players, was apprehended by stewards. He fell heavily and was subsequently taken to hospital where the broken arm was diagnosed.

But it is the events leading up to the incident that may concern organisers just as much. Earlier in the game another spectator - who had been sitting close to the group who came on at the end of the match - ran on to the pitch and removed the bails at both ends. He was not apprehended until he crossed the advertising hoardings on the opposite side of the ground.

Other spectators in the same stand claim passive stewarding did nothing to prevent the incident. They also claim the spectator - who they say was young and inebriated - was not removed from the ground but kept in a holding area by a public bar for several hours. As a result, they suggest there was little disincentive to deter other pitch invaders.

Pitch invasion is considered a criminal act in the UK. An announcement is made before each match warning spectators that anyone encroaching on the playing area will be prosecuted for aggravated trespass and could face heavy fines. A spokesperson for the Cricket World Cup was unable to clarify whether any further action had been taken against any of the pitch invaders.

"A spectator, who was involved in a pitch invasion at the England vs Afghanistan match, slipped awkwardly and suffered a suspected fracture of his arm," the spokesperson told ESPNcricinfo. "The individual discharged himself from medical care at Old Trafford before transportation to a local hospital was arranged.

ALSO READ: World Cup Central: Hashmatullah bounces back for sake of mum

"CWC19 and the venues take the security of everyone involved in the ICC Men's Cricket World Cup very seriously and we work closely together to ensure the highest safety standards are adhered to regarding spectators. CWC19 is thoroughly reviewing the circumstances of this accident with the venue."

Armed police and a large numbers of stewards are no longer an unusual sight at sports events in the UK. The global heightened security threat, combined with a fear of further attacks on sportspeople - incidents such as the stabbing of Monica Seles and the assault on Aston Villa's Jack Grealish during the derby match with Birmingham City spring to mind - have created a zero tolerance attitude towards spectators encroaching on to the playing area.

Andrew Symonds and Terry Alderman are among the players to have taken matters into their own hands when approached by pitch invaders. Symonds memorably stopped one such spectator especially abruptly with a shoulder barge in March 2008 while Alderman sustained a dislocated shoulder in November 1982 when tackling a spectator who had run on to the pitch and punched him.

Zion on comparisons: 'I just look to be myself'

Published in Breaking News
Wednesday, 19 June 2019 12:26

NEW YORK -- As Zion Williamson prepares to be taken with the No. 1 overall pick in the NBA draft by the New Orleans Pelicans Thursday night, he declared that he isn't worried about any comparisons to players who came before him.

"Honestly, with the comparison stuff, it's nice, it's cool, but I don't look into it," Williamson said Wednesday morning at the league's pre-draft media availability in midtown Manhattan.

"I just look to be myself. I'm not trying to be nobody.

"I'm just trying to be the first Zion."

That will certainly be more than good enough for New Orleans, which is expected to make Williamson the top pick.

After averaging 22.6 points, 8.9 rebounds, 1.8 steals and 2.1 blocks at Duke, showing an unprecedented combination of size, strength and speed, the only question was who would get the chance to draft Williamson first overall. That was answered last month, when the Pelicans leaped to the top of the draft and won the right to select the generational prospect.

That -- along with the Los Angeles Lakers jumping up to the No. 4 spot -- helped pave the way for Pelicans star Anthony Davis to be sent to the Lakers in a trade over the weekend, allowing Williamson to walk in as the unequivocal face of the franchise.

Just don't try telling that to Williamson, who was the only person refusing to say he was guaranteed to be taken with the top pick.

"I just want to be in the NBA," he said. "I didn't have a favorite team growing up. Just to be in the NBA is all I ask for.

"Whatever team I end with, I know I'm going to give my all."

When asked his thoughts on the Davis trade, and where he was over the weekend when it went down, he said he was at a driving range in Durham, North Carolina.

"I looked at my phone and I was getting mentioned on Twitter a lot," Williamson said, "and they were just like, 'Anthony Davis has been traded for those three players.'

"He's a grown man. He can do what he wants. But right now, I'm just focused on which team I'm going to go to and try to fit in as best as I can."

Williamson recently visited New Orleans for the first time, and said he enjoyed the trip. But he also made sure to debunk a story going around about chicken tenders.

"The city was just very welcoming," he said. "Everywhere I went, I'm walking down the street and people are high-fiving me, saying they hope I come here. I've been seeing some people saying I got chicken tenders. No, that was my 5-year-old brother that did that.

"I got fried shrimp with some mashed potatoes."

Williamson has connections with several other players in this year's draft. Projected No. 2 overall pick Ja Morant is a fellow South Carolina native who once played on the same AAU team as him, while projected No. 3 pick RJ Barrett and likely top-10 selection Cam Reddish both played with Williamson at Duke this past season.

Naturally, a good chunk of his time Wednesday was spent answering questions about them -- specifically Morant and Barrett, who is likely to be a Knick.

"The way he threw lobs at Murray State, he was doing it back then," Williamson said of Morant. "I'd make backdoor cuts, and I didn't think he would see me. But he'd put it in the perfect spot.

"Can I sit here and say I knew Ja would be this good? I can't say that. I knew he'd be good but not to this level. For him to be here and to be like a top-three pick, it means a lot to me, it means a lot to the state of South Carolina."

Meanwhile, Williamson is confident Barrett will be everything that Knicks fans hope they'll get.

"I think if RJ gets drafted by New York, he'll handle it," Williamson said. "Not just good, but great. Better than people expect.

"RJ is cold-blooded. He's built for people doubting him or telling him he's not ready. RJ is built for that. I got to see it first-hand at Duke. I don't doubt RJ in the slightest. If he gets drafted out here, he's going to come out here and handle his business.

"I think they'll get a great player."

Williamson, who was relaxed and smiling throughout his half-hour chat with a large throng of reporters, looked completely at ease with the world he's about to be walking into. And, he said, he doesn't understand why anyone should think he'd be feeling any differently.

"I don't really see the pressure," Williamson said. "I'm doing what I love to do, and that's play basketball. I don't try to live up to nobody's expectations. They can set them there, I don't try to live up to them.

"I just try to be me. Be the best version of myself that I can be."

He did, however, acknowledge he isn't sure how he'll handle actually being drafted.

"Honestly, I don't know," he said. "I don't know how I'm going to react. I don't know if I'm going to cry or have this giant smile on my face.

"We'll see tomorrow night. But I know I'm very excited about it."

Police looking for man in brawl at youth game

Published in Breaking News
Wednesday, 19 June 2019 11:25

Police in Lakewood, Colorado, have asked the public for help in identifying a man who was involved in a brawl on the field at a youth baseball game Saturday.

Police spokesman John Romero told media that a game between 7-year-olds from Lakewood and Bear Creek got out of control after parents and coaches got into a dispute over a call by a 13-year-old umpire.

Adults quickly amassed on the field side of the backstop and punches were thrown. Police said several people have already received citations for disorderly conduct and fighting in public, but they are still trying to identify one man in particular.

"There were several reports of injuries and one serious injury," Romero said, according to The Denver Post. "We're looking for any information on this melee, but in particular the identity of the suspect in the white shirt and teal shorts who threw a sucker punch."

Romero said that the man they are looking for likely faces assault charges.

PHOENIX -- Gary Woodland could hear the words of his friend Amy Bockerstette as he stood over the chip shot on the 17th hole that helped propel him to winning the U.S. Open.

"You've got this."

That's her mantra on the course, and it became his on that shot Sunday at Pebble Beach.

By now, more than 9.6 million people have watched what happened when Bockerstette, who has Down syndrome, played -- and parred -- a hole with Woodland in a practice round during the Waste Management Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale in late January.

"She's obviously dealt with so much in her life, and like everybody has, but her attitude is unbelievable," Woodland told ESPN. "That's what I've learned from her. And, hopefully, the world gets more of that in it because we all need more of Amy in it.

"There's nobody that I've seen be in the moment as much as she is. Everybody always says in sports, 'You got to be in the moment, you got to be the moment.' Amy lives in the moment and that's what's special."

Bockerstette has had a couple of viral moments with Woodland. But there is much more to the 20-year-old, who reached back-to-back state high school golf tournaments before receiving a scholarship to play at Paradise Valley Community College in Phoenix.

In truth, Bockerstette isn't much different than those on her team.

Sure, there's the obvious. She has an extra chromosome. That leads to extra care and requires attention to her routines.

But, in many ways, she's just like most other girls her age. She has a massive crush on Niall Horan, who's in her favorite band, One Direction. She loves music, especially Daughtry, and the movies, including "Goosebumps 2." She's boy-crazy, always talking about her teammates' boyfriends. She always wants to know what her next meal is going to be. She loves going to concerts with her older sister, Lindsey. And she's always singing, whether it's at practice or in the back of the van.

Amy is turning 21 in October, and her sister is already plotting her first drink -- most likely something sweet, like a Long Island iced tea.

"She's just kind of like everyone else," Lindsey said. "It just takes her a few extra minutes to get something done."

On and off the course.

That's her journey, though. And it hasn't always been easy, starting before Amy was born.

'I felt like there were signs'

Amy's mom, Jenny, says she knew. Almost 21 years later, she can't explain how. She just had a feeling her baby would be born with Down syndrome. Jenny was 39, so there were inherent risks associated with her pregnancy. Women over the age of 35 are more likely than younger women to have a baby with a birth defect, including Down syndrome, according to the March of Dimes.

"I felt like there were signs," she said.

Being a "left-brain guy," an engineer with his MBA, Amy's dad, Joe, approaches life from the analytical side of, well, everything. He knew the odds of a 40-year-old woman having a child with Down syndrome were one in 100.

"It's like, 'No, we're not going to have this, right? This is not going to happen to us,'" Joe said.

Immediately following Amy's birth, both Joe and Jenny entered a period of grieving, perhaps for the child they imagined. Joe was burdened with a feeling of losing Amy's potential.

"For me, it was quite a shock," Joe said.

The family didn't talk about it, or much at all, Lindsey said. Jenny's grief lasted about two months, although she says now she "never looked at it as a bad thing." It was harder for Joe.

"One of the things I remember thinking is, 'I'll never coach her softball team,'" Joe said. "One of my early thoughts was, 'I've lost that opportunity to bond with my child growing up, to participate in her sports and to teach her how to swing a bat, how to throw a ball,' and those sorts of things that you sort of expect.

"You don't change your child's life so much as you learn to accept your child and you learn to appreciate the gifts your child does have. It seems silly now that I was somehow grieving that I wasn't going to be her active parent in her sports endeavors."

From the start, Amy's parents dove into learning about Down syndrome, developing a local support group in Fort Wayne, Indiana, where they lived at the time, and joining the National Down Syndrome Society. Joe became board chair.

In time, Joe gained an appreciation for every milestone Amy reached -- like when it took her a year to learn the color red.

"You have to repeat, repeat, repeat, repeat, and you have to stay focused," Joe said. "She will take longer, but she will get there."

Gaining her identity

When Amy was 5, Jenny decided it was time to tell her she had Down syndrome. From that moment on, it became part of Amy's identity.

"It was just the two of us and she just gave me this really big, tight hug," Jenny said. "It was like she could sense that I was struggling and she just wanted to let me know it was OK."

Joe and Jenny taught Amy how to ride a bike, which Joe said was "unusual" for children with Down syndrome. Jenny also enrolled Amy in piano lessons around age 8.

"It became obvious early that she was healthy and she was fairly coordinated, good hand-eye coordination," Joe said. "We knew early on that she was pretty athletic."

Amy bowled, swam and played basketball, baseball and soccer. When she was going into seventh grade, Joe and Jenny began exploring participation in school sports. They had a conversation with her middle school athletic director, Ryan Backstrom, and Amy became the manager for the girls' volleyball team. With that came her own "posse" of friends, Jenny said, giving Amy a social circle.

Late in the season, with her team comfortably ahead, the coach put Amy in for a point. Her parents watched anxiously in the stands. Amy was set to serve, which she was capable of doing, but she wasn't strong enough to serve from the back line so she moved up, automatically forfeiting the point.

The loss of point didn't matter. Amy had her moment. Joe and Jenny had their video. The entire gym went "crazy," Jenny said.

While Amy didn't have the skills to be in the regular rotation for volleyball, the idea that she was playing school-sponsored sports at all overwhelmed her parents.

"Our belief has always been the more people that know her and understand her and accept her, the better the world is," Jenny said.

Natural swing

During a golf outing to raise money for Amy's elementary school, she rode in the cart with Joe as his group's fourth. Joe told Amy, who spent the day listening to her iPod while playing with a doll and eating snacks, if they weren't up against the clock, she could hit a shot or two with a 7-iron he brought for her.

When Joe got home that night, he told Jenny: "You should have seen her swing. It was like she had this natural swing." He kept repeating it, not believing his own words. Joe was just beginning to play himself and taking lessons with an instructor named Matt Acuff.

The head of instruction at Palmbrook Country Club in Sun City, Arizona, Acuff agreed to teach Amy as well, adopting an approach to coaching her he holds six years later: He treats her like any other golfer.

Acuff told Joe and Jenny early on that Amy was "more capable than you think." Joe's goal at first was for Amy to learn so she could play golf with the family on Sundays.

"We had no expectations, zero expectations of her playing competitively, or being part of a team or anything like that," Joe said. "That was just not on our radar."

Then Dustin Riley, a physical education teacher at Amy's school, organized a golf club when sports ended for the year in eighth grade. Armed with lessons, Amy joined. During one round, she hit the pin on a drive. Riley went nuts.

"I honestly probably haven't cheered so hard for one of my players in my life," he said.

After nine holes one practice, Riley told Jenny he thought Amy could play high school golf. He reached out to Greg Rice, the freshman coach at Sandra Day O'Connor High School, where Amy was headed the next year.

Tryouts were on the second day of school. Rice said he was skeptical at first.

"How are we going to do this?" he thought.

Then he saw Amy swing.

"My mouth just dropped," Rice said. "She hit that ball and I was like, 'Wow.' I could not believe that she could swing a golf club like that."

Amy made the team her freshman season but didn't play in a tournament. She would play practice holes behind the varsity, getting in about five holes every round.

She played in two tournaments the following season.

Joe and Acuff knew a regular spot on varsity was waiting. But some of the effects of Down syndrome are having low muscle tone and strength, which made playing nine or 18 holes, particularly in the heat, difficult for Amy. Acuff started taking Amy out for full-round practices. She would get lightheaded, dehydrated and nauseous. She'd vomit.

Keeping Amy's stamina up during her college tournaments is essentially a full-time responsibility for her parents. They have a food and hydration plan for each tournament, giving her drinks, energy gels, sandwiches and fruit throughout the day. They continually talk to Amy to keep her focused. They also keep a watchful eye for attention or physical drops.

And to help with Amy's stamina, her push cart comes with a seat that drops down so she can rest after every shot.

She played with Girls Golf of Phoenix the summer going into her junior year, preparing for the rigors of high school golf -- longer courses and 18 holes. Joe started caddying for her and taught her the rules. Either he or Acuff has caddied for Amy ever since.

On the putting green, Joe often uses the flagstick to line up her shot. He gives her pointers like "accelerate through" or "straight back, straight through" or "stay tall." He makes sure Amy's feet are lined up or she's standing the right distance from the ball. He reminds her to hit the grass on a practice swing.

She calls him Dude. He responds by calling her Dudette.

"Some of the most fun days of my life are caddying for her," Joe said.

Amy made the varsity rotation as a high school junior and played in nine tournaments by fending off those trying to unseat her.

But when the season ended, Joe and Jenny weren't sure if she was going to play as a senior. They started to prepare for the next phase of Amy's life. But golf wasn't done with her yet.

There was a scoring mix-up. A team that had qualified for the Arizona high school state golf tournament was bumped and Sandra Day O'Connor, Amy's school, was named as its replacement.

Amy was going to state.

A story about Amy came out in The Arizona Republic on the morning of the second round.

It sparked a buzz and a gallery started to form to watch Amy. Parents started approaching Joe and Jenny to tell them how they admired them.

"She loved it," Jenny said. "She had fun. She gets excited by the attention, and people were coming up to meet her and to say hello to us.

"Suddenly you're being looked at, and we're used to being looked at because people with Down syndrome look differently. And we're used to getting looks, but it was different. It was just a different level."

As a senior, Amy again qualified for the state tournament, but this time as an individual after a season in which she was scoring career bests. Her nine-hole low was 45 -- down from the 60s she was shooting as a freshman.

The state tournament that year was played in Tucson, about two hours south of Phoenix. Because the team had to stay overnight, the girls hung out in the hotel and Baker, their coach, made them breakfast, which, he remembered Amy loving.

"She wants to be with the girls," Lindsey said. "She wants everybody to laugh and I think she's probably learned that if somebody is laughing, it's because they're having a good time and so it's all about having a good time."

College golf

But when states were over, so was Amy's high school golf career. The Bockerstette house went into a funk.

Everyone stopped golfing. Amy cut off her lessons with Acuff. The family didn't play together for about two months. The ride had ended. Amy and her parents talked often about what was next. Amy regularly asked Jenny where she was going to college, but Jenny had to explain that not everyone went to college.

Joe and Jenny were looking at all options. They discussed a job-training program, but it would've required Amy to move out. That wasn't feasible.

"We were really struggling," Jenny said.

Then Joe and Jenny found the guidance they needed during Amy's final individualized education plan meeting of high school.

Amy's teacher and counselor, Paul Roads, told them Amy was "one of the most unique students" he's ever had. But then he added three words that started to change their minds: "She's not finished."

Roads suggested they look into enrolling Amy at Paradise Valley Community College, which, he explained, had a department for students with disabilities.

Amy was quickly accepted.

Joe and Jenny also remembered that PVCC had a women's golf team. Joe wrote the coach, Matt Keel, an email in April 2018, explaining Amy's situation, sharing videos, her stats and résumé, and asking if she could join the team and participate in any way possible.

Keel wrote back with a scholarship offer.

"I didn't believe it until the morning of the letter signing," Jenny said. The NCAA and the National Junior College Athletic Association said they don't keep records of whether somebody with Down syndrome has received a college athletic scholarship, but it's widely believed Amy's the first.

A teaching pro, Keel knew a good swing when he saw one. His first instinct was to sign Amy and then figure everything out. And there was plenty. Amy had to get certified with a disability, which led to the NJCAA allowing her to take six credits a semester to stay eligible. Caddies aren't allowed in junior college golf, but Keel got around that by hiring both Joe and Acuff as unpaid assistant coaches. They can't push Amy's cart or swing a club, but they can do everything else.

"I wasn't trying to hoodwink anybody," Keel said. "I wanted us to make a commitment.

"I didn't want her to be a token player. ... I wanted her to be a contributing member to the team."

Amy still lives at home but has adapted academically. She took one academic class in the first semester, which was a challenge, but has since taken classes such as modern dance, jazz and Zumba.

Despite articles and a video of Amy signing her scholarship, Keel wanted to keep her out of the media. He didn't want it to feel like he was exploiting Amy for the benefit of his own program, so he didn't tell the rest of the team until a few days before their first practice and didn't tell opposing coaches until the first tournament.

"It kind of caught me off guard," PVCC freshman Lacie Skelton said. "It was a surprise. I guess I just thought like she'd just be another teammate, but I thought we would have to help her out more.

"She's more independent than you expected."

Amy broke 100 for the first time this past spring, and her season average for 18 holes was 108.5.

Playing golf seemed to be the easiest part of Amy's transition to college. She also instantly hit it off with her teammates.

"She's always like a support system to the whole team," said former teammate Nidia Valenzuela, who graduated this spring. "We can laugh all day in the van on our way to tournaments or on our way back to school. She was always cracking jokes."

Skelton thinks twice before doing things, wondering what Amy would say.

"Whenever any of us girls are upset or mad, she's like, 'Don't be mad, don't be upset, I love you. It's OK. Life's going to be OK, because I love you.'" Skelton said. "She always says, 'I love you.' I think it's just so uplifting.

"It changes your day. It puts a smile on your face."

Yes, Amy's swing and overall golf game have improved immensely since they first started working together, but to Acuff, that's not the measure of what golf has brought to his pupil.

"The thing that she's been able to improve so much is she's been able to build these relationships, these experiences," Acuff said. "She's met the girls from the other teams that she's been playing with in college.

"She's been able to go from the person that was probably not able to qualify to the person that did qualify, the person that has excelled, the person that has earned the right to be there and now is looked up to instead of being an outcast or pushed to the side."

Lesson learned

Woodland can't go anywhere these days without being reminded of Amy.

Whether it's on the course during a tournament, when he's out to dinner or when he checks his social media messages, Woodland hears or reads "I got this" from fans on a regular basis.

And he's good with that.

"That kind of gives me that positive reminder," Woodland said. "It is contagious. Golf's a game where you can be not positive and get negative really quickly. And she doesn't have that in her, and that's a treat. It shows why she's successful. She has all the positive energy in the world."

Woodland, 35, said he hopes one day to teach his children the lessons he's learned from Amy: Be positive, work hard, earn everything. Woodland never expected a relationship with Amy to grow from that Tuesday afternoon in Phoenix five months ago. But Amy has become more than a friend to the U.S. Open champion. She's become a part of Woodland's story.

"I was excited to meet her and play the 16th hole with her," he said, "but I never imagined the impact she would have on my life."

Rays pull Snell after 1 out, 6 runs against Yanks

Published in Baseball
Wednesday, 19 June 2019 13:45

NEW YORK -- Rays left-hander Blake Snell was pulled after getting one out in Wednesday's start against the New York Yankees in one of the worst outings ever by a reigning Cy Young Award winner.

Snell walked four, gave up two hits and was charged with six runs in the shortest start of his career. Gary Sanchez drove in three with his 21st homer, and reliever Colin Poche allowed three inherited runners to score after Snell exited.

The left-hander is the first reigning Cy Young winner to allow at least six runs and get no more than one out in a start, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. His previous shortest outing was one-plus innings against the Yankees on Sept. 26, 2017.

New York is attempting to sweep its three-game home series against the Rays and stretch its AL East lead to 3½ games over Tampa Bay.

Yankees starter CC Sabathia -- a 2007 Cy Young winner -- was trying for his 250th career victory.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

CHICAGO -- He won't be confused with the top on-base men in the business right now, but Chicago Cubs left fielder Kyle Schwarber is carving out a name for himself in the unlikeliest of places: leading off. It's where he failed miserably two seasons ago but now has found his stroke, simply because he isn't acting like a normal top-of-the-order guy. Seeing pitches? That was so 2017.

"He has a better understanding of how he's going to get pitched," teammate Anthony Rizzo said Tuesday afternoon. "And you see, the at-bats are a lot better. He's a presence. You can't mess around or it'll be 1-0 real quick."

Rizzo said that before Schwarber hit the first pitch he saw from Chicago White Sox starter Ivan Nova into the left-center-field bleachers. In less than a week's time, Schwarber has gone deep twice on the first pitch of the game, the first one coming off Los Angeles Dodgers star Clayton Kershaw. The latest one, off Nova, reinforced a message to the rest of the league: You can't slowly get into your rhythm on the mound facing the first batter of the game. This first batter might just take you out of the park.

"I'm just going out there and playing," the understated Schwarber said. "Just trying to put together quality at-bats."

It's about the most you'll get out of Schwarber, as the 26-year-old probably doesn't want to jinx himself. His 2017 season went so poorly, batting at the top of the order, he was sent to the minors before eventually returning in a lesser role. His .190 batting average and .312 on-base percentage screamed anything but "leadoff man." When Maddon put him back there earlier this season, eyebrows were raised. But Schwarber's 11 home runs in 30 games at the top have silenced the critics.

"We don't know whether the leadoff spot screwed him up two years ago or he was just slumping at the time," Cubs general manager Jed Hoyer said.

Pressed for the difference between then and now, Schwarber said: "Little bit more experience there. Taking away the leadoff hitter label."

And that's why swinging at the first pitch of the game is no big deal for him. He's not trying to be the guinea pig for the rest of the order anymore. If he likes it, he's going to hit it, pitches per plate appearances be damned.

"It looks like he's really progressing there," Maddon said. "Moving forward I won't shy away from him hitting leadoff against lefties."

Hitting lefties is just one thing Schwarber is doing better at this season. In fact, he's slugging better against lefties (.500) than righties (.474) this year. That would have been unthinkable two years ago. There's more:

• Schwarber already has four home runs to lead off a game this season. For comparison, Dexter Fowler hit seven in the Cubs' World Series-winning season.

• Of the 10 players with at least 10 home runs from the leadoff position this season, Schwarber's 30 games in that spot are the fewest.

• The Cubs' record for home runs from the leadoff spot is 33, by Alfonso Soriano in 2007 (in 125 games there). He had four in his first 30 games leading off that season.

• In 2002, Mark Bellhorn hit 14 homers from the leadoff spot in just 53 games there, the most by a Cub with fewer than 60 games as leadoff hitter.

Schwarber might break all those marks, but it could come at a cost. His on-base percentage while leading off is just .314 this season. That's almost identical to his leadoff OBP in his miserable 2017 campaign. But does anyone care as long as he's slugging, like he did Tuesday night against the White Sox?

"It would be wonderful if he would fit into that role," Hoyer said. "We lack that true leadoff guy. If he can do it, it gives us a lot of punch to start the game. Starting out, Schwarber, [Kris] Bryant, Rizzo isn't a lot of fun for a starting pitcher. That was the original goal. We've gotten there now."

The adjustments Schwarber made to his approach in the offseason also fit his current style. He's less studious and more aggressively reactive, hence the first-pitch ambushes. He also has two more years of experience now.

"The more repetition you get, the better off you are in this game," Rizzo said.

What started out as a whim this year -- not long after Ben Zobrist left the team for personal reasons -- has now become a thing for the Cubs. In this era of baseball, leadoff hitters come in all shapes and sizes.

"I want to keep Schwarber there," Maddon said.

So what seemed unlikely not that long ago is now a reality for the Cubs again. And the guy in the middle of a nice run of slugging from the leadoff spot is taking it all in stride.

"I'm just trying to help the team win that day," Schwarber said. "Home runs are nice."

Third seed Juan Martin del Potro opened his Queen's campaign with a clinical 7-5 6-4 victory over Canada's world number 25 Denis Shapovalov.

The 30-year-old, whose season has been interrupted by a knee injury, rarely looked like surrendering his serve.

Shapovalov, 20, has lost in the first round of his past three events and struggled with his ball toss at times.

British number one Kyle Edmund and compatriot Dan Evans are in action later on Wednesday.

Edmund plays top-seeded Greek Stefanos Tsitsipas, while three-time Grand Slam champion Stan Wawrinka is Evans' opponent.

Andy Murray's return to competitive action after five months out and surgery on a career-threatening hip injury has been pushed back until Thursday after Tuesday's rain delays.

He will play alongside Spain's Feliciano Lopez in the doubles.

Britain's Heather Watson and Paul Jubb are among the first raft of players given Wimbledon singles wildcards.

Watson, an ever present in the main draw since 2010, is ranked 122nd in the world, but showed good grass-court form in making the last eight in Surbiton.

Teenager Jubb became the first Briton to win the prestigious NCAA college title in the United States in May.

Fellow Britons Jay Clarke, James Ward, Harriet Dart and Katie Swan have also been given a place in the 28 June draw.

Jubb will be unable to accept any prize money, which would have been a minimum of £45,000, because he is remaining an amateur and continuing his studies at the University of South Carolina.

"Beyond happy to play my first Wimbledon and be given this amazing opportunity," Jubb, 19, tweeted. "As a young lad growing up in Hull it was a big dream to get to SW19."

Gordon Reid, who won the title in 2016, has been awarded a wildcard for the wheelchair singles.

Four-time wheelchair doubles champion Jordanne Whiley, who missed last year's tournament after giving birth to her son, Jackson, in January 2018, is given a place the singles draw.

Andrew Lapthorne is rewarded for his good form in making the final in Amiens earlier this month with a place in the quad wheelchair draw.

World number 18 Johanna Konta is the only female British player assured of entry into the singles draw on the basis of her world ranking.

Kyle Edmund, Cameron Norrie and Daniel Evans will all have a place in the men's singles.

Andy Murray, the two-time champion, will return to Wimbledon after five months out with a career-threatening hip injury in the doubles tournament via either a wildcard or by using his protected singles ranking.

Another four wildcards will be announced for both the men's and women's singles before the tournament starts on 1 July.

Analysis

BBC tennis correspondent Russell Fuller

If you are American, winning the NCAA title earns you a place in the US Open - and the All England Club clearly feels this huge achievement merits a place in the main draw at Wimbledon, too.

Jubb may be 579th in the world rankings, but timing is everything, and on Tuesday the 19-year-old had the best win of his fledgling tour career as he beat the world number 104 Thiago Monteiro in the Challenger event in Ilkley.

One name that does not appear on the list is that of Katie Boulter, who has not played since April because of a back injury.

The British number three has returned to the practice courts, but is not playing in Eastbourne next week, and has not yet reached the fitness required to enable the All England Club to offer her a place in the draw.

Wimbledon wildcards

Men's singles

1. Marcos Baghdatis (Cyp)

2. Jay Clarke (GB)

3. Paul Jubb (GB)

4. James Ward (GB)

Women's singles

1. Harriet Dart (Gbr)

2. Katie Swan (GB)

3. Iga Swiatek (Pol)

4. Heather Watson (GB)

Men's doubles

1. Liam Broady (GB) & Scott Clayton (GB)

2. Jay Clarke (GB) & James Ward (GB)

3. Dan Evans (GB) & Lloyd Glasspool (GB)

4. Lleyton Hewitt (Aus) & Jordan Thompson (Aus)

5. Ken Skupski (GB) & John-Patrick Smith (Aus)

Women's doubles

1. Naiktha Bains (GB) & Naomi Broady (GB)

2. Freya Christie (GB) & Katie Swan (GB)

3. Harriet Dart (GB) & Katie Dunne (GB)

4. Sarah Beth Grey (GB) & Eden Silva (GB)

Men's wheelchair singles

1. Gordon Reid (GB)

Women's wheelchair singles

1. Jordanne Whiley (GB)

Quad wheelchair singles

1. Andy Lapthorne (GB)

Andy Murray to partner Marcelo Melo in Eastbourne doubles

Published in Tennis
Wednesday, 19 June 2019 05:26

Former British number one Andy Murray is set to take another step in his comeback from hip surgery by playing with Brazilian Marcelo Melo at Eastbourne next week.

Murray will make his competitive return alongside Spain's Feliciano Lopez in the doubles at Queen's this week.

Their match has been pushed back to Thursday after rain washed out play in London on Tuesday.

The 32-year-old Scot had a hip resurfacing operation in January.

The three-time Grand Slam singles champion has linked up with 37-year-old Lopez in a short-term arrangement at Queen's, playing again just five months after being seemingly resigned to retirement because of the "constant pain" in his hip.

Now he will play with 35-year-old Melo on the south coast, while it has not been confirmed who Murray is set to partner if he plays at Wimbledon next month.

Former world number one doubles player Melo is a two-time Grand Slam men's doubles champion, having won the 2015 French Open and 2017 Wimbledon titles, and is currently fourth in the doubles rankings.

Murray, whose last match was a five-set defeat by Roberto Bautista Agut in the opening round of the Australian Open in January, has said he still has "quite a lot of work to do" before he can play in singles again.

No player has ever resumed a singles career after a hip resurfacing operation, although American doubles player Bob Bryan returned five months after the surgery in 2018.

The Nature Valley International starts in Eastbourne on Monday, with live coverage across the BBC on television, radio and online.

Feliciano Lopez has denied any link to alleged match-fixing in 2017, the day before he is due to partner Britain's Andy Murray in the doubles at Queen's.

Lopez's defeat in the men's doubles alongside fellow Spaniard Marc Lopez at Wimbledon in 2017 is under scrutiny, according to Spanish media.

Feliciano Lopez, 37, will play alongside Murray in the Briton's comeback at Queen's on Thursday.

"I don't want this thing to overshadow the match," Lopez said.

"I absolutely deny any link with events described in relation to the allegations of match-fixing."

Feliciano Lopez said he was shocked to hear the allegations reported by digital newspaper El Confidencial, adding he only found out about them "on the internet".

In the match in question, 11th seeds Lopez and Lopez, who are unrelated and won the 2016 French Open title together, lost in four sets to unseeded Australian pair Matt Reid and John-Patrick Smith in the first round at the All England Club.

Earlier in the tournament, former world number 12 Feliciano Lopez had retired from his singles match against France's Adrian Mannarino with a foot injury.

After beating Hungary's Marton Fucsovics in the Queen's singles on Wednesday, world number 113 Feliciano Lopez read a prepared statement to the media from his phone.

"Unfortunately, all tennis players are public figures and are used to having our good name used beyond our control," he said.

"For that reason, I will do everything within my power to defend myself against any such false accusations."

He added: "I was playing against Mannarino and I injured my foot, and I had to retire from that match.

"Then we tried to play doubles. We tried to do our best and we ended up losing the match. That's all."

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