Who has the highest Test batting average? It's not Don Bradman (and it's not yet Steven Smith). You won't see it on many of the lists, but if you remove any qualification of matches played the honour currently stands with Kurtis Patterson.
He also holds a more dubious honour of having been dropped after scoring a Test century. Patterson scored 114 against Sri Lanka in Canberra in February but did not make the Ashes squad. And neither did his team-mate from that match, Joe Burns, who made 180.
A lot had changed by the time Australia's Ashes squad was named at a Southampton hotel in late July, most notably the returns of David Warner and Steven Smith, which meant what happened five months previously didn't count for much.
Patterson missed his chance to stake a claim during the Australia A tour and the inter-squad selection trial that was played at the Ageas Bowl. Across five red-ball innings on the tour he made 2, 32, 38, 2 and 0. The last two low scores came on a lively pitch (where Cameron Bancroft's unbeaten 93 cemented his Ashes spot) but Patterson felt it was the two unconverted 30s against England Lions which were his big missed opportunity. When he was called in to meet national selector Trevor Hohns, he knew what was coming.
"To be honest, I kind of knew at the end of the third game," he told ESPNcricinfo ahead of the new Sheffield Shield season. "I knew I wasn't going to be in the squad, of course you always hold out a little bit of hope, but the logical person inside me knew I wasn't going to get picked, which probably made it a little bit easier."
That does not mean there wasn't regret or disappointment having worked so hard to earn a debut against Sri Lanka in Brisbane and follow that with the cherished century.
"The selectors were after blokes who were in form and unfortunately I couldn't put that together," he said. "Of course that was frustrating, it always is when you feel like you are doing well - and I did feel like I was batting well but couldn't quite convert - but at the end of the day that was a three-week period which, in the grand scheme of things, will happen in my career. For me it's about trying to get better and improve on that for the next time."
It is that balanced outlook that helped Patterson reach the pinnacle in the first place as he shed a tag of a batsman unable to convert starts with a prolific run in 2018-19 season, which included a Sheffield Shield hundred at Perth Stadium in a game dominated by the bowlers and twin hundreds in the warm-up match against Sri Lankans that led to his hasty call-up and his Test century.
"I think over the last 12 months I've learned more about my game than at any time in my career," he said. "There were some great positives, sorting out that conversion issue I had and making my Test debut, but as the game generally does it has a great way of levelling you out and it was a bit of a disappointing end to that UK tour. But still, it provided me with some really important learnings and I know I'll be much better for it."
He is not someone to dwell on what might have been, but if there's one thing he may have done differently it was not pursuing a county deal before the Australia A tour, something that served Marnus Labuschagne so well. He is on the lookout for a contract next year.
"I just figured with there being so much cricket on that A tour leading into the Ashes that I'd get enough cricket. Obviously it didn't work out well, if I had my time again I potentially would have done that differently. This upcoming year I'm certainly looking to get over there because I do enjoy England and would love to get that county experience under my belt, so that's the goal going forward."
Before all that there is a summer to focus on with at least one batting spot up for grabs in Australia's middle order ahead of the Test series against Pakistan. It will make a fascinating first block of Sheffield Shield action, although Patterson's start may be delayed after he picked up a quad injury in the opening weekend of grade cricket. However, when he's on the park it's as much about success for New South Wales as they look to go one better than runner's up to Victoria last season.
"The Australian stuff for every playing state cricketer is always there in the background, but my most important focus is with New South Wales," he said. "I absolutely love playing for them, I still think it's a privilege, so I want to do my best and get us into winning positions. I'm quite comfortable these days with letting whatever happens happen, as it's kind of out of my control."
If he reprises the form of last season, the selectors may just come calling again.
Jasprit Bumrah is not just a difficult proposition for rival batsmen, he's also tough to face for team-mates in the nets. KL Rahul, who has been Bumrah's team-mate across formats, said the pacer was someone "you don't want to mess with" because he was as competitive away from competition as he is when in it.
"He's a phenomenal talent and I had the opportunity and privilege to play with him even before he had the chance to play for his country," Rahul said, speaking at the Red Bull Ring in Spielberg. "We played on the same junior level team and he's always someone that's very determined and dedicated and very passionate about cricket.
"He's someone you don't want to mess with because he bowls the ball at serious speeds and he's a competitor off the field even when we're playing against each other. There's no mercy, even for the guys who play for the same country - he's always very competitive. The things that he's doing for the country right now are absolutely fantastic and I know he's only going to grow and get better."
Among other bowlers Rahul has faced at the international level, he singled out Pat Cummins, Rashid Khan and Nathan Lyon as those who had troubled him the most. "Pat Cummins, who is the No. 1 Test bowler right now. I found him very hard to face. Rashid Khan has always got the edge over me - he has my number a little bit. Nathan Lyon from Australia. All these guys, and Bumrah of course."
"The manager kept checking for scores and we kept following ball-by-ball. What he did was unbelievable. It will always remain the best Test match that was ever played"
KL Rahul on Ben Stokes' heroics at Headingley
Bumrah has been ruled out of India's ongoing Test series against South Africa with a stress fracture, while Rahul has found himself out of favour after below-par returns at the top of the order in Test cricket. He is currently playing for Karnataka in the Vijay Hazare Trophy, India's domestic 50-overs competition, and has been in good form, with scores of 29, 131, 4 and 81 in the first four games. He still remains part of India's white-ball squads, and has had a particularly successful time in the Indian Premier League.
With Kings XI Punjab having traded R Ashwin to Delhi Capitals ahead of IPL 2020, Rahul is a likely candidate to captain his team next season, and if he has his way, Kings XI will try to acquire Ben Stokes, should the England and Rajasthan Royals allrounder come under hammer.
"He can bowl, he's a phenomenal fielder, he's played out there before and he's had a great impact on the teams he's played for," Rahul said. "I hope he can play for my team, it'd be great to have him on my side!"
Rahul revealed that the Indian team had kept track of Stokes' match-winning 135 in a thrilling one-wicket win in the third Ashes Test - even though they were themselves playing a Test in the West Indies at the same time.
"It's funny because we were playing a Test match, too, in Antigua," Rahul said. "But we were following the scores on the manager's phone, as we're not really allowed to use phones during the game. The manager kept checking for scores and we kept following ball-by-ball. What he did was unbelievable. It will always remain the best Test match that was ever played. To play an innings like that is incredible. He's a phenomenal player and phenomenal athlete - you can watch that match over and over again."
SEATTLE -- Four quarters of brilliant football from Russell Wilson and the best play of Tedric Thompson's career were about to be wasted -- as was a chance for the Seattle Seahawks to gain some early ground on the defending NFC West champs.
Thompson's interception of a Jared Goff pass that he picked off the turf looked as if it could have sealed a Seahawks victory until Goff put the Rams in position for a winning field goal attempt. But Greg Zuerlein missed the attempt from 44 yards out -- by no more than a foot or two -- to let the Seahawks escape with a 30-29 win.
Exhale, Seattle. The Seahawks are 4-1 with a game in hand over the Rams, who still look like their biggest threat in the division even with the San Francisco 49ers sitting at 3-0.
QB breakdown: Wilson continues to outdo himself. Already off to the best four-game start of his career, Wilson continued his MVP-level play with four touchdowns, zero interceptions and 268 yards on 17-of-23 passing. He added 32 yards in eight carries, coming up big with his legs in the fourth quarter as he tends to do. According to NFL Next Gen Stats research, Wilson threw for 130 yards on the run, his highest total in a game in the past four seasons. He has now thrown 12 touchdown passes with no picks through five games.
Pivotal play: Thompson's interception with 2 minutes, 12 seconds left in the fourth quarter was initially ruled an incomplete pass. Seahawks coach Pete Carroll challenged, which he could do since it was just outside of two minutes. It was a redemptive moment for Thompson, a third-year safety who badly misplayed a ball in Week 1 that resulted in a long touchdown.
Pivotal play, Part II: So many plays could be considered pivotal in a one-point game. Al Woods' stop at the goal line was an easy-to-forget one. It came after Todd Gurley's 1-yard touchdown in the third quarter that put the Rams up 26-21 and set up a two-point try that would have put them up by seven. Officials ruled on the field that Goff crossed the goal line, but a review showed that Woods brought down Goff just short. Another under-the-radar play: Defensive end Branden Jackson chasing down a short throw to Robert Woods to keep him to a 3-yard gain in the fourth quarter. That helped Seattle hold the Rams to a field goal.
Promising trend: The Seahawks remain exceedingly tough to beat in prime-time games, especially at home. They're now 27-5-1 in prime time since Carroll arrived in 2010, with this victory improving the NFL's best winning percentage in such games. That includes an 18-2 record at home and a 9-1 record on Thursday night. The Seahawks have four more prime-time games on their schedule: Week 10 at San Francisco, Week 13 at Philadelphia, Week 14 vs. Minnesota and Week 15 in their rematch with the Rams in Los Angeles.
Eye-popping NextGen Stat: Wilson's first touchdown throw in the back corner of the end zone to Tyler Lockett had a completion probability of only 6.3%, the lowest on any passing TD across the NFL in the past three seasons. It actually looked like a throwaway at first glance, but Lockett made a toe-tap grab while falling out of bounds. As great of a throw as it was from Wilson while moving hard to his left, it was just as brilliant of a catch by Lockett, who has made a nice transition to Seattle's No. 1 receiver following Doug Baldwin's departure.
"I feel like right now, we're trying a little too hard," leadoff man Trea Turner said following his team's 6-0 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 1 of the National League Division Series. "Just have a little bit more fun and continue what we were doing. I think we put together good at-bats. [We're] just trying to do a little too much."
Against Walker Buehler and a trio of relievers, the Nats managed just two hits, including a second-inning single by Juan Soto and a ninth-inning double by Turner. They loaded the bases against Buehler in the fourth on three walks but failed to score, and they proceeded to have just one baserunner over the final five frames. On the night, the Nationals chased 41 percent of pitches that were thrown outside the strike zone, their second-highest chase rate in any game this year and well above their season mark (27 percent, second-lowest in the NL).
"We got to get the ball in the strike zone," said manager Davey Martinez, whose club scored 5.4 runs per game during the regular season, second-best in the NL. "For me that's the key. When we swing at balls in the strike zone, we put the ball in play. That's what we have done all year."
The anemic offensive showing comes two days after Washington's 4-3 wild card win, a contest in which the Nationals tallied one run on three hits through the first seven innings and finished with five total hits
"I think we've kind of done that the last two games," said Turner, "is just tried way too hard from the start."
When it comes to the postseason, struggling at the start is nothing new for the Nats. In five series openers since 2012, they're hitting .164 as a team and averaging 1.6 runs. In 21 total playoff games, Washington is scoring 3.5 runs per contest, nearly half a run lower than the MLB postseason average over that time (3.9).
"So we just got to relax and come back tomorrow and just get the ball in the zone," said Martinez. "We told the guys, hey, just be yourself. Don't try to do too much."
On Friday in Game 2 of the NLDS, the Nationals will face three-time Cy Young winner Clayton Kershaw.
"It's the postseason. You're not going to get anybody easy," said Turner. "It's going to be another battle, just like tonight. Hopefully we can put some runs early and get into that bullpen."
LOS ANGELES -- "My name is Walker Buehler," he said, "and my average fastball last year was 97.1 mph."
That's how Buehler introduced himself to his Los Angeles Dodgers teammates in spring training a couple of years ago. It's how Ross Stripling remembers it, at least. Stripling relayed that story -- an anecdote also referenced by The Athletic in recent days -- to demonstrate the uncommon, unwavering confidence of the 25-year-old right-hander who dominated the Washington Nationals in Game 1 of the National League Division Series on Thursday night.
The decision to open the postseason with Buehler instead of Clayton Kershaw or Hyun-Jin Ryu surprised many, but not those within the Dodgers' clubhouse. The baseball postseason is particularly unpredictable, especially during first-round series that stretch no more than five games. But with Buehler on the mound, the Dodgers could rely on two certainties: that his stuff would be overpowering, and that the moment would embolden him.
Buehler wound up giving up only one hit through six innings, lifting L.A. to a 6-0, tone-setting victory -- and none of his teammates seemed to bat an eye.
"If you know Walker, it's not surprising," Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner said. "He's very, very, very, very, very confident in himself."
As a rookie last fall, Buehler pitched the Dodgers to a division title in Game 163, then dropped an F-bomb during an on-field interview. He later held the Milwaukee Brewers to one run in Game 7 of the National League Championship Series and twirled seven scoreless against the Boston Red Sox in Game 3 of the Fall Classic, on a night when his Dodgers had to win.
Buehler struck out eight batters Thursday and has now collected 37 K's through his first five postseason starts, two shy of the club record set by Sandy Koufax, the Hall of Fame left-hander who watched Game 1 from the first row. Before Buehler, no Dodgers pitcher had ever thrown at least six scoreless innings while giving up no more than one hit in the playoffs.
"There's guys that want those opportunities, those big moments, and want to be the guy," Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. "Walker, time and time again, just knows how to temper, control his emotions and transfer that into the delivery, the execution of pitches. And today, from that first throw, he was on point."
Buehler's sixth pitch hit 99 mph and blew past the bat of Trea Turner for his first strikeout. Two batters later, against the potential NL MVP in Anthony Rendon, he fell behind 3-0, then spotted three pitches for strikes -- a four-seam fastball up and away, a two-seamer low and a slider low and outside. While Rendon argued over the call, the Dodger Stadium crowd of 53,095 erupted. Buehler roared as he walked off the mound, salivating the energy. He had already seized the moment.
"He's an animal," Dodgers rookie second baseman Gavin Lux said. "He's the most confident human being on the planet."
Buehler spent the last few weeks of the regular season tweaking with his pitches, as he often does. He gave up eight runs and walked nine hitters over his final 16 innings, but he didn't care about the results. In his last start, he threw every pitch as hard as he could to free up his mechanics.
When the postseason came, however, Roberts noticed a more decisive Buehler. He found something that worked during the pregame bullpen and stuck with it, hardly ever straying. His delivery and his tempo remained consistent. He threw his fastball with command to all four quadrants of the strike zone. The slow breaking ball made an appearance. The cutter was there when he needed it.
"His stuff's electric," Dodgers utilityman Chris Taylor said. "And I think he'd even tell you he didn't have his best stuff tonight."
Buehler's command noticeably strayed in the top of the fourth. He threw 26 pitches to five batters, loading the bases with two outs and drawing a visit from pitching coach Rick Honeycutt. Buehler followed with a couple of low-80s knuckle-curveballs to Asdrubal Cabrera, fielded a slow tapper back to the mound, lobbed the ball over to first base and ended the only threat the Nationals could muster.
From there, Buehler rolled again.
He finished retiring seven consecutive hitters on only 26 pitches, preserving what was then only a two-run lead. It put his team in an optimal position. The Dodgers beat the Nationals' most rested pitcher, Patrick Corbin, in Game 1 and will head into Friday's matchup against Stephen Strasburg -- who threw 34 pitches out of the bullpen in Tuesday's wild-card game -- with a chance to put this series on the brink.
"He loves the spotlight," Turner said of Buehler, his postseason ERA now 3.03 through 29⅔ innings. "He loves pitching big games. He loves this atmosphere. He answers the bell every time. It was good to see him go out there and be Walker."
Buehler finished the 2019 regular season with 14 wins, a 3.26 ERA and a 5.8 strikeout-to-walk ratio, the latter a significant jump from the prior year. Buehler got deeper into scouting opponents this season. Over time, he also learned how to compose himself when the pressure escalates. He reminds himself to simplify, to stick with what has worked previously, and to control his heart rate.
"Sometimes it helps to kind of embrace the atmosphere," Buehler said. "Learning to do that, I think, has been the biggest thing for me, and luckily, it's played out all right."
Every member of the Dodgers' clubhouse seems to have their own story of Buehler's astounding arrogance. His candidness has disarmed many, but Buehler has learned to balance it with self-deprecation and has warranted his assertiveness with undeniable success. Will Smith, the Dodgers' rookie catcher, grew up in Kentucky and occasionally played against Buehler in high school. He was noticeably cocky then, too.
"No one really threw 90," Smith said, "and he was throwing 95."
By the end of his run at Vanderbilt University, his fastball apparently reached 97 mph -- 97.1, to be exact.
Stripling still laughs about that story -- both at Buehler's preciseness with the velocity and his willingness to share the information. Teammates have been teasing him about it for years. His cockiness stands out, even in the ecosystem of the Dodgers' clubhouse.
"But he backs it up, and that's what's great," Stripling said. "He's not arrogant in a bad way. He's arrogant in an awesome way."
play
1:16
Bellinger: Buehler loves the playoff stage
Cody Bellinger praises Walker Buehler's performance in Game 1 of the NLDS vs. the Nationals.
Andy Moles, who has been a key influence in the rise of Afghanistan, will now be their director of cricket. The 58-year old has also been appointed chief selector, taking over as the team navigates through a patchy 2019.
Moles has the experience of being part of the system, having coached Afghanistan from 2014 to 2015, a stint during which they made their maiden World Cup appearance. He has since been preparing the country's youngsters for the step up to international cricket, working at Under-19 and Under-23 levels. When Phil Simmons resigned from his post as head coach of the senior team soon after the 2019 World Cup, Moles filled in as interim coach and was in the dressing room as Afghanistan secured their dramatic victory over Bangladesh in Chattogram.
Last week, Afghanistan had appointed former South Africa allrounder Lance Klusener as the new national team coach for a tenure running upto 2020, with the possibility of an extension based on results.
Afghanistan, widely considered to be one of the most watchable teams on the planet, had gone into the World Cup earlier this year with much promise. However, a few weeks before the tournament was to begin, the ACB sacked captain Asghar Afghan and replaced him with Gulbadin Naib. The move came under fire from senior Afghanistan players such as Rashid Khan and Mohammad Nabi even before the tournament began, and contributed to their losing each of their nine games.
Midway through that World Cup, Mohammad Shahzad was sent home with a knee injury but the wicketkeeper batsman claimed he was fit and that he was unfairly left out. In August, he was suspended by the ACB for a year for a breach of contract.
There was, however, joy for Afghanistan after the World Cup as they beat Bangladesh in a riveting Test match last month. Rashid, who took over as Test captain, was the star of that game, scoring a fifty and picking up 11 crucial wickets even as rain and bad light threatened to end the five-day game in a draw.
ATLANTA -- It happened again. And this time it was in a postseason game.
Atlanta Braves center fielder Ronald Acuna Jr. failed to run out a ball he hit off the wall in right field, settling for just a single. The last time it happened, in August, he was benched. This time, he was called out by his teammates after the Braves lost 7-6 to the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 1 of their best-of-five National League Division Series on Thursday.
"Yeah, it's frustrating," Braves star first baseman Freddie Freeman said. "But I think you have that conversation once. It's kind of beating a dead horse after that if you keep having the same conversation over and over again. You have to know that was a mistake."
Acuna connected off Cardinals reliever John Brebbia in the seventh, and right-fielder Dexter Fowler played it off the wall. By the time he turned to throw the ball back in, Acuna was just getting to first base. He didn't have much of an explanation for not running.
"There's a lot of baseball players who give their best effort all the time," Acuna said through the team interpreter. "But [it] can kind of get away from them [sometimes]. We're human. We make errors."
The inning could have turned out differently if Acuna was at second base. An Ozzie Albies groundout would have gotten him to third instead of second. He was eventually doubled off the bag when Josh Donaldson lined out to shortstop. In a one-run loss, the mistake loomed large.
"He probably scores in that inning if he's on second base," Albies said. "It's a big deal. He knows he needs to do better there."
The lack of hustle overshadowed Acuna's fantastic night at the plate, which included a walk and three hits, including a ninth-inning home run. But even the home run irked some; Cardinals reliever Carlos Martinez, who surrendered it, was upset at Acuna's home run trot.
"I simply want him to respect the game and respect me as a veteran player," Martinez told reporters. "That's it. Just play the game."
But in the Braves clubhouse, the focus was on the seventh-inning play.
"He should have been on second," manager Brian Snitker said. "And we're kind of shorthanded to do anything about it right there. You hate to see that happen."
Snitker pulled Acuna from a game against the Los Angeles Dodgers on Aug. 18, trying to make the point to the young star that running out every ball is important, even more so in October.
"That can't happen in the playoffs," Freeman said. "Can't happen in the regular season. Unfortunately that happened tonight."
Teammates didn't say anything publicly that they didn't say to Acuna first.
"A couple guys told him, 'Yeah, just run out of the box,'" Albies relayed. "It's something you should do."
Acuna was asked if he had another chance, would he do things differently.
"Absolutely," he said. "I mean, I was trying to give my best effort and those are those things that just kind of get away from you. So, obviously, I would've loved to have a double, if I could take it back."
5th: Taylor reached on infield single to third, Bellinger to third.
7th: Taylor walked.
2-3
3
0
2
3
1
0
18
.667
.750
.667
1st: Muncy walked, Pollock scored, Taylor to second, Bellinger to third.
4th: Muncy singled to left.
5th: Bellinger scored on error by first baseman Kendrick, Muncy safe at first on error by first baseman Kendrick, Taylor to second, Taylor thrown out at home.
7th: Muncy singled to right, Pederson scored and Turner scored, Taylor to third.
1-4
4
0
1
0
0
0
13
.250
.250
.250
1st: Seager grounded out to first.
4th: Seager singled to right, Muncy to third.
6th: Seager grounded out to second.
7th: Seager grounded out to shortstop.
0-4
4
0
0
0
0
2
21
.000
.000
.000
2nd: Smith struck out looking.
4th: Smith struck out looking.
6th: Smith flied out to center.
8th: Smith flied out to right.
0-2
2
0
0
0
0
1
6
.000
.000
.000
2nd: Buehler safe at first on error by first baseman Kendrick.
Home Plate Umpire - Will Little, First Base Umpire - Jordan Baker, Second Base Umpire - Ted Barrett, Third Base Umpire - Doug Eddings, Left Field Umpire - Alfonso Marquez, Right Field Umpire - Tripp Gibson
Lux, Pederson hit homers in 8th
Lux, Pederson hit homers in 8th
Eaton dives to make catch on warning track
Eaton dives to make catch on warning track
Muncy adds to Dodgers' lead with 2-run single
Muncy adds to Dodgers' lead with 2-run single
Buehler lights out in Game 1
Buehler lights out in Game 1
Kendrick's error at 1st allows Bellinger to score
Kendrick's error at 1st allows Bellinger to score
Inning
WSH
LAD
1st
Muncy walked, Pollock scored, Taylor to second, Bellinger to third.
0
1
5th
Bellinger scored on error by first baseman Kendrick, Muncy safe at first on error by first baseman Kendrick, Taylor to second, Taylor thrown out at home.
0
2
7th
Muncy singled to right, Pederson scored and Turner scored, Taylor to third.
0
4
8th
Lux homered to right (388 feet).
0
5
8th
Pederson homered to (437 feet).
0
6
Data is currently unavailable.
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A 3-2 margin of victory was the end result in the junior boys’ team final for Kenzo Carmo, Shim Joon and Nicolas Degros against the combination of Slovakia’s Adam Klajber and Dalibor Diko who lined up alongside the Czech Republic’s Radim Moravek.
Backbone of victory
Man of the moment was Kenzo Carmo, in the opening match of the fixture, he beat Adam Klajber (11-5, 11-5, 6-11, 11-9), before in the concluding contest recovering from a two games to nil deficit to overcome Dalibor Diko by the very narrowest of margins (5-11, 9-11, 11-7, 11-7, 11-9). The one further success for the champions elect was recorded in the second match of the engagement when Nicolas Degros accounted for Dalibar Diko (11-9, 11-7, 11-9).
“I feel very good now after the final, I played great. We were level at two-all; in the last match I pulled through which brought us first place. Tomorrow I start in the singles competition, it is my first time here in Europe. I would love to bring home two medals, we will have to wait to see until the end of the tournament.” Kenzo Carmo
Earlier at the semi-final stage, Kenzo Carmo, Shim Joon and Nicolas Degros had recorded a 3-1 win in opposition to the Czech Republic’s Adam Stalzer, Ondrej Kveton and Filip Vybiral; by the same margin Adam Klajber, Dalibor Diko and Radim Moravek, had accounted for Croatia’s Leon Santek, Ivor Ban and Lovro Zovko.
Determined performances
Success as a result of determined efforts, it was the same for Giulia Takahashi and Laura Watanabe. They recorded a 3-1 penultimate round win in opposition to Korea Republic’s Choi Yeseo and Kim Taemin, before in a similar manner securing the title at the expense of Chinese Taipei’s Liu Zi-Fei and Yeh Yi-Tian.
At the semi-final stage, Liu Zi-Fei and Yeh Yi-Tian had recorded a 3-0 win in opposition to the partnership formed by Bosnia-Herzegovina’s Dara Cosic and Serbia’s Katarina Gvozdenovic.
Host nation success
Gold for Brazil, it was the same for the host nation and also for the Korea Republic.
Lea Paulin, Katarina Strazar and Lara Opeka combined to win the junior girls’ team title, the Slovenian trio recording a 3-2 win against the outfit formed by the Czech Republic’s Linda Zaderova and Jana Vasendova who allied with Hong Kong’s Poon Yat.
Katarina Strazar
Mainstay of the victory was Katarina Strazar, she beat both Jana Vasendova (11-6, 11-5, 11-6) and Linda Zaderova (9-11, 7-11, 11-8, 11-8, 11-9) to set the scene for Lea Paulin to be the heroine. She duly obliged; she accounted for Jana Vasdendova in straight games (11-3, 11-8, 12-10).
At the semi-final stage, the Slovenian trio had recorded a 3-2 win in opposition to the combination of Serbia’s Radmilsa Tominjak and Reka Bezeg who lined up alongside Bulgaria’s Kalina Hristova. Rather more comfortably, Linda Zaderova, Jana Vasendova and Poon Yat had secured a 3-0 victory margin when facing the outfit formed by Finland’s Ramona Maarit Betz, Italy’s Nicole Aria and Romania’s Patricia Ianau.
Gold for Korea Republic
Tense moments for Slovenia, in the cadet boys’ team event it was the same for Korea Republic’s Lee Jungmok and Kwon Hyok. A 3-2 win was the order of proceedings in opposition to Chinese Taipei’s Chao Po Yu and Hsu Hsien-Chia.
Notably at the semi-final stage both teams had beaten Romanian opposition by the 3-1 victory margin. Lee Jungmok and Kwon Hyok had overcome Andrei Istrate and Horia Ursut; Chao Po Yu and Hsu Hsien-Chia ended the title hopes of Dragos Bujor and Luca Oprea.
The team events complete, attention now turns to the individual competitions; play in Ootcec concludes on Sunday 6th October.
Stephanie Meadow is looking to make the most of her chance at the LPGA’s Volunteers of America Classic this week.
With the help of a blistering start Thursday at Old American Golf Club outside Dallas, Meadow charged to the top of the leaderboard.
Meadow’s five consecutive birdies on the front nine fueled an 8-under 63, good for a two-shot lead on Amy Olson and Dori Carter and a three-shot lead on Moriya Jutanugarn, Cheyenne Knight and Ruixin Liu.
Former world No. 1 Inbee Park and reigning U.S. Women’s Open champ Jeongeun Lee6 are among those four back
“I know I need a big week this week, so whatever I score today didn't really matter,” Meadow said. “I'm just trying to get to the end goal.”
While Meadow would love to win her first LPGA title, there’s potentially a nice consolation prize if she doesn’t. This is the LPGA’s final domestic full-field event of the year, a last chance for many players along the bubble of the top 100 on the tour’s money list. Meadow is 112th on the money list. The top 100 at season’s end keep their tour cards.
“It's been a pretty tough year, but I've been playing well the last few months, so I just feel like if I can just have a good week, I have nothing to lose,” Meadow said. “I'm just going to go out there, make smart choices. I'm not going to be stupid aggressive, but give myself some opportunities.”
Meadow, 27, made plenty of headlines as a gifted amateur out of Northern Ireland and later as a four-time All-American at the University of Alabama. She finished third at the U.S. Women’s Open at Pinehurst in her first start as a professional in 2014, but her fight to make it as a pro was fraught with challenges. The way she has met them earned her the LPGA’s Heather Farr Perseverance Award as a tour rookie in 2015. Meadow put her career on hold for more than a month that rookie season, returning home to help care for her father, Robert, who died of pancreatic cancer in May of that year.
In 2017, Meadow faced another challenge, ongoing back pain, which led her back to the Symetra Tour, where she earned her tour card back last year.
“I believe in myself, and we’ll see what happens,” Meadow said.
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