I Dig Sports
GLENDORA, Calif. – NHRA officials have announced the extension of its partnership with K&N Filters, a leader in filtration technology, as the official filter and air intake of the NHRA.
“K&N has been a wonderful partner of NHRA Championship Drag Racing for decades and we are so pleased that they are continuing their sponsorship,” said Brad Gerber, NHRA vice president and chief development officer. “Through this extension, K&N continues to demonstrate its commitment and support to the drag racing community.”
The multi-year sponsorship will television elements, on-site activations and social media content. Celebrating its 50th anniversary this year, K&N has a solid presence in NHRA drag racing. In fact, K&N chief engineering officer, Steve Williams, is the current Lucas Oil Drag Racing Series Super Comp World Champion.
“It was very important for K&N to continue our official partnership we have had with NHRA for many years,” said Williams. “Our heritage was born out of racing and we continue to support fans and racers through our sports marketing programs. K&N is celebrating 50 years in business by releasing our new K&N Washable Home Air Filter using breakthrough technology developed through racing.”
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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – American Flat Track officials have finalized a contract that will return the series to Oklahoma’s Remington Park in 2020.
The OKC Mile, absent from the 2019 series schedule, will return to the schedule on June 20, 2020.
Consistently one of the highest-attended events of the season, the OKC Mile has always been a unique event producing heart-stopping racing for a sellout crowd of devoted flat track fans.
“We were sad that a scheduling conflict deprived our fans of an OKC Mile in 2019,” said Michael Lock, CEO of American Flat Track. ”Since that, we have been working hard with the facility and our man in O.K., Shawn Brassfield, to ensure that we could return to put on another exciting weekend of AFT racing in 2020.”
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We’re back with a new edition of the SPEED SPORT Power Rankings! Was Brad Sweet’s victory in the Kings Royal enough to catapult him to the top of the Rankings? Click below to find out!
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The Nashville Predators have signed forward Colton Sissons to a seven-year, $20 million contract that runs through the 2025-26 season.
Sissons, 25, scored 15 goals and had 30 points -- both career highs -- in 75 games with the Predators this past season.
"Colton will be an important part of our team for the next seven seasons, and we are happy he has made a long-term commitment to our organization and the city of Nashville," Predators president David Poile said Tuesday in a statement released by the team. "He's a heart and soul player who is versatile and can fill many important roles on our team, including on the penalty kill and power play. His offensive production has increased each season, and he remains an integral part of our defensive structure down the middle of the ice. Colton is also an up-and-coming leader in our organization, which is something we value strongly."
A second-round draft selection in 2012, Sissons has spent his entire five-year career with the Predators. He has 37 goals and 40 assists in 265 career games.
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Hale Irwin has been named the 2019 recipient of the Payne Stewart Award, presented annually by the PGA Tour to the golfer who best exemplifies the values and character of the three-time major champion who died in a 1999 airplane crash.
Irwin, 74, was born in Joplin, Missouri, and since turning professional in 1968 has won over 90 times worldwide. That includes winning 20 times on the PGA Tour and holding the PGA Tour Champions’ most-ever victories with 45.
But it’s his “exceptional character, sportsmanship and unwavering commitment to charitable impact” that led to the award, which he’ll receive at a special ceremony during next month’s Tour Championship. The ceremony will be shown live on Golf Channel during Golf Central on August 20 from 7-8 p.m. ET.
“It’s just awesome, it’s absolutely awesome,” Irwin said. “My goodness, how good can it get? If you have character, charity and sportsmanship, what do you have when you mix it all together? I think you have the Payne Stewart Award. That’s the definition of this award, and hopefully for all of us who have been the recipient of that, fulfill that obligation, that demand.”
As the 22nd recipient of the Payne Steward Award, he joins great company in last year’s winner Bernhard Langer, Ben Crenshaw (2001), Gary Player (2006), Ernie Els (2015) and Stewart Cink (2017).
“Hale Irwin is an incredibly deserving Payne Stewart Award recipient,” Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan told PGATour.com. “Starting with his first PGA TOUR title in 1971 to his most recent PGA TOUR Champions victory in 2007, his accomplishments over the course of a career that spans more than 50 years is nothing short of spectacular.”
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Following his six-shot rout at The Open Championship at Royal Portrush, Shane Lowry was set to fly across the Atlantic to play in Memphis at the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational. He has now withdrawn from the event, according to the PGA Tour.
There is no official reason listed for the withdrawal, but earlier Tuesday Lowry tweeted that he couldn’t “wait to come home tonight” for a “really special night” in his hometown of Clara in Ireland.
Lowry earned his first PGA Tour victory at this event in 2015 when it was held at Firestone CC in Akron, Ohio. This year marks the tournament's debut in Memphis, taking over from the former FedEx St. Jude Invitational that was annually played in June.
There are no alternates for WGC events, meaning that Lowry will not be replaced at TPC Southwind. Instead the field will reduce to 63 players, including Dustin Johnson who won on this course last year and Justin Thomas, who is technically the tournament's defending champion following his victory last year at Firestone.
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Which of Chelsea's 'loan army' could play under Lampard?
Published in
Soccer
Tuesday, 23 July 2019 01:58
With Chelsea's transfer ban limiting new manager Frank Lampard's options to refresh his Chelsea team, he might have to dip into the pool of young loan talent that has been stashed around the football world in recent years.
Here are a few players returning to Stamford Bridge after loan stints who could help Chelsea and Lampard out this season:
- Barnwell: Can 'loan army' come to Chelsea's rescue?
- Marcotti: Chelsea's transfer ban explained
Mason Mount, MF
If any player at Chelsea is going to learn from Frank Lampard, it's Mason Mount. Much like his boss, Mount has a knack of timing a run from deep into the penalty area just so, and while he doesn't have Lampard's physicality or power of shot just yet, he still has time. He has broken double figures in both seasons that he has spent out on loan -- at Vitesse Arnhem in the Netherlands and Derby County last season, under Lampard -- which for a 20-year-old midfielder is pretty exceptional.
He has the talent, but will that mean he'll get into the first team? Well, he has a pretty decent chance: Ruben Loftus-Cheek's Achilles injury will keep him out for the opening weeks of the season, meaning his direct competition probably will be the inconsistent Ross Barkley and Mateo Kovacic.
"Mason's part of the first-team squad this year and it's time for him," Lampard said recently.
Expect to see plenty of Mount this season.
Chances of making the first team: 8/10
Tammy Abraham, ST
Opportunity knocks. The area that Chelsea's transfer ban has impacted the club the most is at centre-forward, because with Alvaro Morata and Gonzalo Higuain banished, Chelsea's only two senior No. 9s are Olivier Giroud, who managed only two league goals last season, and Michy Batshuayi, who was loaned out twice last season (Valenica and Crystal Palace). Neither is a guarantee to produce goals, which might mean Lampard has to be creative by, for example, trying Pedro as a false nine.
Lampard's other option is giving Abraham a try. At the moment, there is a slight fear that the gangly Londoner falls into that category of being excellent in the Championship but not quite good enough for the Premier League. He excelled on loan at Bristol City in 2016-17 and was a big reason Aston Villa got promoted last term, but he only managed five goals for Swansea the season before while on loan in the top flight. Admittedly, that was in a poor team, so he could do better surrounded by a higher calibre of player. He surely will have the chance to do so.
Chances of making the first team: 8/10
Fikayo Tomori, CB
There's a grace to Fikayo Tomori, who also starred last season under Lampard at Derby, that you don't often see in defenders. He is the sort of centre-back who will arrive, as if from nowhere, on the scene of a burgeoning attack to relieve his rival of the ball in the calmest manner possible. He has the mental and technical gifts, but the question about the 21-year-old is whether the Premier League will be too much for him physically: He is relatively short for a centre-back at 6-foot-1, and while his other skills have hitherto made up for that, they might not be able to do so in the top flight.
The chances are he will make the squad for the start of the season, but getting into the first team might be more of a challenge, particularly if Lampard, as expected, only uses two centre-backs. Antonio Rudiger, David Luiz and Andreas Christensen will be ahead of Tomori in the pecking order, but Tomori easily could dislodge the latter as the season goes on.
Chances of making the first team: 6/10
Kurt Zouma, CB
This does feel a little like cheating, given that Zouma is a few years older than the other returning candidates and has been around for some time. That said, he is still just 24, and he was part of Chelsea's loan diaspora last season. He did pretty well at Everton, to the point that they have reportedly been trying to get him back all summer, and Lampard has spotted his quality too.
"I want him here, simple as that," Lampard said recently of Zouma. "We are competitive with the centre-backs we've got in the team. He had a very good season at Everton, and I understand why they want him, but he's a Chelsea player and I want him. He's working really hard, and if he competes for a position and plays well this season, then he plays."
Chances of making the first team: 5/10
Reece James, RB
Most sets of fans get excited about a talented young player coming through the ranks, and Chelsea's are no different: This time last year, their big obsession was Callum Hudson-Odoi, and this summer it looked like Reece James would be the target of their affections. A right-back who was one of the best players in the Championship when on loan with Wigan last season, James easily could be the long-term successor to Cesar Azpilicueta. Crystal Palace seem to think he is decent, anyway: They reportedly had a £20 million bid for James rejected recently, which in turn should tell you Chelsea rate him too.
The problem is that James suffered ankle ligament damage while playing for England at the Toulon Tournament, and he recently had surgery that will probably keep him out for a decent chunk of the coming months. Whether he plays when fit again will very much be dictated by circumstance: If Chelsea are struggling, they might be looking for some young blood to pep up the team. But he might well just be loaned out again in January.
Chances of making the first team: 4/10
Kenedy, MF
On the face of things, a player who was in and out of the Newcastle team last season wouldn't seem like an obvious fit for a side with designs on Champions League qualification. Kenedy, 23, has obvious talent though, with a whipcrack left foot and bags of pace, the problem being that he hasn't applied that talent particularly consistently.
Lampard is smart and realistic enough to know that, given their situation, he has to take what he can, as he said in so many words.
"I need to assess the players for as long as I can in preseason to make sure we pick the right squad," he said after their recent friendly against Kawasaki Frontale. "If Kenedy continues to show the attitude and play the way he did today, he is making a great case to stay, having been on loan in recent seasons."
Chances of making the first team: 3/10
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1 Marc-André ter Stegen
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45' 13 Neto
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23 Samuel Umtiti
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45' 15 Clément Lenglet
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3 Gerard Piqué
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45' 6 Jean-Clair Todibo
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18 Jordi Alba
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45' 28 Guillem Jaime
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16 Oriol Busquets
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45' 2 Nélson Semedo
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5 Sergio Busquets
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45' 4 Ivan Rakitic 90'+1'
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8 Ricard Puig
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45' 21 Frenkie De Jong
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20 Sergi Roberto
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45' 19 Carles Aleñá
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17 Antoine Griezmann
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45' 12 Rafinha
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24 Alex Collado
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45' 14 Malcom
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11 Ousmane Dembélé
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45' 7 Carles Perez
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Ireland arrive on the grandest stage ... just as the scenery is being changed
Published in
Cricket
Tuesday, 23 July 2019 07:20
Big picture
Well, how do you follow that? The Greatest Game at the Greatest Venue. The Greatest Day for English cricket in, at the very least, a generation. And if Liam Plunkett's telling comments in the aftermath are anything to go by, the Greatest Comedown imaginable for a band of England cricketers who, last Sunday afternoon, reached the highest high of them all - an unforgettable World Cup triumph at Lord's.
Well, in keeping with the sport's ever-grinding treadmill, the only fit and proper follow-up is to march onwards, ever onwards, to a very different slice of cricketing history. Three strips north of the patch of grass laid out for that epic encounter with New Zealand, England and Ireland will do battle for the very first time in Test history, in a contest that offers a very abrupt change of pace from everything that we've so far witnessed this summer.
First things first, let's pay tribute to the visitors, for - with respect to their first overseas Test against Afghanistan in Dehradun in March - this is unquestionably the biggest occasion for Irish cricket since their inaugural Test against Pakistan last May. And in so many ways it is bigger still than that emotional home unveiling in Malahide.
Just try to imagine the huge pride that Ireland's players will feel as they walk through the Long Room for that very first time tomorrow, to compete in a Test match at Lord's, no less. There is no more fitting ceremony to mark the completion of their journey from Associate obscurity to Full Member acceptance, and coming so soon after a World Cup from which they were forced to look on enviously from the sidelines (and watch a former team-mate raise the trophy on England's behalf), the occasion is sure to be all the sweeter.
But let's be frank, the timing is not exactly ideal. In fact, it utterly sucks. Schedules are no-one's friend, and the ECB are entitled to say, if not now, then when could they possibly have issued that maiden invitation? But there are only two contests on English cricket's minds this summer - the World Cup that has already been, and the Ashes that are looming large in barely a week's time. Everything that occurs in the next four days (and that in itself is a telling detail) will be viewed through a light blue filter, a green-and-gold filter, or both.
Of course, that in itself will throw up some intriguing subplots. England have confirmed two debutants in their ranks for Wednesday morning - the familiar face of Jason Roy at the top of the order, and the lesser-exposed Olly Stone in the pace attack - and while both men will be justifiably proud when they receive their maiden caps before the toss, they will also know that this is just the pre-amble, an audition for a far more prestigious role in August and September.
And Roy aside, what of the other World Cup survivors - the captain Joe Root, the keeper Jonny Bairstow, and the seamer Chris Woakes, whose chronic knee problems have been managed so efficiently that he is now back to being a front-line Test option after not featuring in the side for almost a year? How do they manage the emotions of returning to the scene of that triumph? Should they hold anything in reserve, pacing themselves for stiffer tests to come, or should they throw themselves wholeheartedly into the fray, and honour the occasion as an equal, even when pragmatism says that it is not?
Of course they'll give it their all. Root is the Test captain, and rightly proud of the honour; Bairstow doesn't get out of bed with anything less than 100 percent commitment. Woakes was a centurion in his last Test at Lord's and has missed enough matches in his six-year career to know never to take anything for granted. But it doesn't make it right to expect them to be able to dredge up another performance so soon after playing their hearts out on the biggest stage of all. As shown in the new film, The Edge, which charts the rise and fall of England's 2009-14 team, the dangers of burn-out are all too real and all too easily ignored.
But, the show must and will go on, and it's fair to say that Ireland won't care too greatly if their opponents' minds are caught in no-man's land. Even eight years on, there are enough survivors in Ireland's ranks from that mighty victory in the 2011 World Cup to know how sweet it can be to fell a giant when they are least expecting it. They've spent enough of their careers punching upwards to give it one last heave for glory.
That said, there is a certain poignancy about Ireland's international fortunes at present. They are not so much a team in transition as a team basking in the last sunbeams of a golden generation. Kevin O'Brien, Tim Murtagh and Boyd Rankin are closer to their 40th birthdays than their 30th; Ed Joyce and Niall O'Brien have already retired since that inaugural Test. Will Porterfield has been captain for a remarkable 11 years and counting.
That said, England are missing a raft of key performers - not least the ever-green James Anderson - and if their new-look top-order suffers a familiar wobble on another grass-tinged deck, the circumstances are ripe for an almighty World Cup comedown. But for that to happen, Ireland may require a new generation of heroes to make their presence known. That faithful old guard can't be expected to do the job every time.
Form guide
England WLLWW (last five completed matches, most recent first)
Ireland LL---
In the spotlight
Jason Roy is the anointed one. The manner in which he tore into Australia's bowlers in that crushing World Cup semi-final was all the evidence required. Like David Warner before him, he is all set to complete the transition from white-ball to red-ball opening, and given the purity of the technique that lurks behind his extraordinary power, he is surely as well placed to make a success of the promotion as any player who has gone before him. That said, he didn't have much fun against the swinging ball in the World Cup final (though he was hardly alone in that). If he can get set, however…
If Ireland are to compete on an equal footing, then local know-how is sure to be a factor. Enter Tim Murtagh, 38 next week and still making the ball talk on the Lord's slope for Middlesex week in, week out. He's picked up 291 wickets at 23.98 in his Lord's career to date, including two of his four ten-wicket hauls. The degree to which he can set the agenda could define his team's prospects.
Team news
Despite some optimistic noises about James Anderson's calf injury, England's senior seamer was never going to be risked with the Ashes just around the corner. Which means that Stuart Broad and Chris Woakes are the likely new-ball pairing, with the young gun Olly Stone lurking at first change to unleash his 90mph offerings, in only his third first-class outing since suffering a stress fracture of the back. Lewis Gregory will have to wait his turn after England opted for a twin-spin attack, with Jack Leach's left-armers set to partner Moeen Ali, who will form part of a familiarly interchangeable raft of allrounders in the middle order, albeit with Jonny Bairstow pushed up to 5. Roy and Rory Burns will form an all-Surrey opening partnership.
England 1 Jason Roy, 2 Rory Burns, 3 Joe Denly, 4 Joe Root (capt), 5 Jonny Bairstow (wk), 6 Moeen Ali, 7 Chris Woakes, 8 Sam Curran, 9 Jack Leach, 10 Stuart Broad, 11 Olly Stone
There's the realistic prospect of as many as three Test debutants in Ireland's ranks, with the young allrounder Mark Adair and the more seasoned seamer Craig Young in the frame, alongside the spinner Simi Singh, who could yet feature if Ireland ape England's strategy and opt for two slow bowlers. Will Porterfield was giving little away on the eve of the game, saying only that all 14 squad members were fit, although it emerged later on Tuesday that James McCollum had suffered a back spasm.
Ireland (possible): 1 Will Porterfield (capt), 2 Paul Stirling, 3 Andy Balbirnie, 4 James McCollum, 5 Kevin O'Brien, 6 Gary Wilson (wk), 7 Mark Adair, 8 Andy McBrine, 9 Craig Young / Simi Singh, 10 Boyd Rankin, 11 Tim Murtagh
Pitch and conditions
Another lush green offering has been served up at Lord's, which may give Root a restless night given how strokeless he was rendered on a similar deck in the World Cup final - that one was two-paced and sticky, and favoured the slower seamers. The weather is set fair for at least the first three days, with a threat of rain at this stage for Saturday.
Stats that matter
This will be the first home England Test match since the 2005 Ashes - 89 Tests ago - in which Alastair Cook has not featured, and the first since August 2006 in which he has not opened the batting.
This will also be the first Test match to feature numbers on the back of England's shirts - the captain, Joe Root, will be wearing 66.
Joe Denly will be making his first appearance in a home Test match, almost a decade after he made his ODI debut in Stormont against an Ireland that still features three of the same names.
Quotes
"It's right up there - if not the pinnacle for everything that's been achieved for the last while for Irish cricket. We have got quite a few World Cups under our belt, little things like that. They have been pretty big occasions, but getting to Test cricket and then having the opportunity to play here at the home of cricket is a pretty special thing."
Will Porterfield on a special occasion for Irish cricket
"They are a side that have always performed well, probably over-performed at times, I hope that doesn't sound that I am underestimating them or not giving them a fair shout - they have upset sides like England in previous World Cups and they ran us close in the one-day format at the start of the year … it is great for the game that sides like Ireland are getting a chance in this format and I think they have earned the right to get this fixture. "
England captain Joe Root on Ireland's Test arrival
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Marcus Trescothick is set to join the England coaching team for the first two Tests of the Ashes series.
Trescothick, the former England opening batsman, has recently announced his decision to retire as a player at the end of this season and is currently struggling to break into the Somerset side. He will spend the training days ahead of the Edgbaston and Lord's Tests with the England squad at both training sessions and at the team hotel.
Jonathan Trott has fulfilled a similar role with England ahead of the Test against Ireland.
The appointment does not necessarily suggest that Trescothick - or Trott - is about to be appointed as the England team's batting coach. The ECB have yet to identify a successor to Mark Ramprakash, who left his role a couple of months ago, but are using the likes of Trott and Trescothick to help ease the burden on Graham Thorpe - the ECB's lead batting coach - on training days where coaches are expected to provide throw-downs for several hours at a time.
Thorpe is currently suffering from a sore shoulder and missed England training on Tuesday due to illness.
As a vastly experienced and successful player - the 2005 Ashes series was among his 76 Tests - Trescothick has the respect of all current players and understands the demands, both emotionally and technically, of playing at international level.
He will be on hand both in training sessions and at the team hotel, to support players as required. And, aged 43, the sessions may also help him to decide if he wants to pursue a career in coaching.
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