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It began exactly three months ago, in Ranchi. Coming into that game, Australia had won only eight of their last 33 ODIs going back to the start of 2017, and were still coming to terms with their two best batsmen serving a year-long ban. Their captain Aaron Finch was struggling to buy a run, and India's fast bowlers, away and at home, had been ruthlessly zoning in on his frailties against the incoming ball.

India had just beaten Australia 2-1 in an ODI series in their own backyard, and were leading the five-match return series 2-0.

Everything turned around in Ranchi, where Finch made 93 in a 32-run win for Australia. Since that innings, Finch has averaged 71.44. Since that match, Australia have won ten ODIs on the bounce, the last two at this World Cup with a full-strength squad including David Warner and Steven Smith.

This Australian resurgence has challenged what had been a pretty set narrative in the months preceding the World Cup, that England and India would be the teams to beat, with the rest trailing some way behind. Nope, Australia have snarled. We're here too.

And, in their most recent game against West Indies, they did that most Australian thing, that don't-kid-yourselves-thinking-we're-beaten thing. Think Mohali, 1996, or Headingley, 1999, or Port Elizabeth, 2003. The fear factor is back.

Their opponents on Sunday, however, won't be scared. India occupy a different level of ODI pedigree to the two teams Australia have beaten at this tournament so far. Their batsmen aren't going to get out slogging when the required rate is under control, as West Indies' did. Their bowlers, you suspect, wouldn't have let them turn 79 for 5 to 288 all out. India will give Australia plenty to worry about - if not fear - themselves. Jasprit Bumrah is bowling like a demon, the wristspinners are whirring away menacingly, Rohit Sharma has begun his tournament with a match-winning hundred, and Virat Kohli is, well, Virat Kohli.

This World Cup has already seen some fine contests. We've seen Pakistan defy expectations against England, Bangladesh methodically dismantle South Africa, West Indies rattle Australia, and New Zealand wobble alarmingly against Bangladesh. But we haven't yet seen a clash of the big contenders. Sunday will be just that.

Form guide

Australia WWWWW (last five completed matches, most recent first)
India WLLLW

In the spotlight

Usman Khawaja's form leading up to the World Cup - five fifties and two hundreds in his last ten innings, at the top of the order - prompted Australia to push him to No. 3 and leave out Shaun Marsh to accommodate David Warner and Steven Smith. His first two innings at the tournament, however, have brought him scores of 15 and 13, and awkward dismissals on both occasions. Can he turn his form around against one of the best bowling attacks in the world?

India's last ODI visit to The Oval wasn't a happy one, but their defeat in the Champions Trophy final included one incredible innings: Hardik Pandya's 43-ball 76, with six sixes and a control percentage of 100. Pandya was out injured during India's recent home series against Australia, and his subsequent return to fitness and peak hitting form has been one of the team's biggest positives going into the World Cup.

Team news

Australia have played the same XI in both their games so far, and though some of their players haven't hit top form just yet, there isn't a compelling reason to make any changes just yet.

Australia (probable): 1 David Warner, 2 Aaron Finch (capt), 3 Usman Khawaja, 4 Steven Smith, 5 Glenn Maxwell, 6 Marcus Stoinis, 7 Alex Carey (wk), 8 Nathan Coulter-Nile, 9 Pat Cummins, 10 Mitchell Starc, 11 Adam Zampa

Given Australia's troubles against the short ball against West Indies, India could look to bring Mohammed Shami - who can hurry batsmen with the bouncer, as he showed during a six-wicket haul in the Perth Test in December - into their attack. Who could he come in for, though? Bhuvneshwar Kumar would be the obvious option, but without him India's tail will begin at No. 8, unless they also replace one of the wristspinners with Ravindra Jadeja. Playing all three quicks could also be an option, if the conditions point in that direction.

India (probable): 1 Rohit Sharma, 2 Shikhar Dhawan, 3 Virat Kohli (capt), 4 KL Rahul, 5 MS Dhoni (wk), 6 Kedar Jadhav, 7 Hardik Pandya, 8 Bhuvneshwar Kumar, 9 Kuldeep Yadav, 10 Jasprit Bumrah, 11 Yuzvendra Chahal

Pitch and conditions

The Oval has been among the most high-scoring grounds in England since the 2015 World Cup, and a flat pitch can be expected once again. The weather is expected to be dry with a bit of wind about.

Strategy punts

  • If Australia go in with the same team balance they chose against West Indies, they'll again need Glenn Maxwell and Marcus Stoinis to share the fifth bowler's quota. Given that they're likeliest to bowl the bulk of their overs through the middle Powerplay (11-40), India could think of promoting Hardik Pandya to No. 5, if they're in a position to do so, and take advantage of having only four fielders protecting the boundary. Apart from Maxwell and Stoinis, it would also put pressure on Adam Zampa, who has suffered at Pandya's six-hitting hands in the past.

  • One way for Australia to use up a couple of Maxwell's overs could be to give him the new ball. Shikhar Dhawan has been out six times to offspin in ODIs since the start of 2018, and averages 22.50 against that style of bowling in that period.

Stats and trivia

  • Australia have an 8-3 record against India in the World Cup, and have only lost once in seven meetings - the 2011 quarter-final in Ahmedabad - since the 1992 edition.

  • Australia (11 out of 11) and India (5 out of 5) are the only two teams to have taken 100% of their catches at the World Cup so far.

  • Apart from the middle overs, Yuzvendra Chahal and Kuldeep Yadav have also been a valuable source of wickets in the early death overs (41-45). Chahal has 18 wickets at an average of 14.27 in this phase, while conceding just 5.39 per over. Kuldeep has been almost as impressive: 16 wickets, an average of 18.12, and an economy rate of 6.49.

  • Marcus Stoinis needs 18 runs to get to 1000 in ODIs.

Quotes

"Winning those last three games in India gave us some self-belief we can beat this side in their home conditions and that gives us real confidence coming into a game like this."
Australia captain Aaron Finch

"See, short ball for any batsman is not easy. Even the best guy who can pull the ball, who can hook the ball, will find it difficult. We understand that. And probably we have the bowling attack to do that. Having said that, you don't want to be carried away with that."
Rohit Sharma weighs in on the biggest tactical trend of this World Cup

It's not quite the new India-Sri Lanka, but if auditions were being held for India's new go-to opponent, it's fair to say Australia would be a shoo-in. All that's needed is for India to postpone a series, or pull out of one and rope Australia in as a last-minute banker. It will happen soon enough.

The two sides have already played eight ODIs across both countries this year alone, and without looking it up, if you can remember how the two series panned out, you're welcome to take over Statsguru.

A lot has been made of the ICC's desire to ensure India and Pakistan play at every one of their events. But the two teams that have actually played against each other most often at ICC events? India and Australia. And the punchline to this is that New Zealand and Sri Lanka are the two other teams who have played each other most often at ICC events (both rivalries, 20 games young now).

But it's not just those eight ODIs - and Tests and T20Is. It's also about how the IPL is a virtual home for Australians, opponents to and team-mates of the players they take on at The Oval on Sunday. For the degree of familiarity, if the two teams combined to put out one team at an ICC event, nobody would bat an eyelid.

Yet the overkill has served a purpose for Australia at least. It was the ODI series in India earlier this year where they turned around their ODI form, form which now is accompanied by all those murmurs that this (like five others) is Australia's World Cup.

Now it's not as if they are genetically wired to win cricket tournaments, but you can see why people are thinking it. They're winning games - and the win over West Indies was exactly the kind of win that's not going to dial this talk down.

Steven Smith and David Warner are back, with runs. It's Australia. They've found a way to win an early tough game. Their captain believed, even without Warner and Smith, and back when they couldn't win a backyard game, that he had the side to win this World Cup. Watch out. This is a trope that endures as much as the one around Pakistan at these tournaments.

But that familiarity with India will help them on Sunday in, for example, knowing what to expect when Kuldeep Yadav or Yuzvendra Chahal come on. On that last tour, Australia picked up quick on how to play each and controlling Kuldeep was instrumental in turning a 0-2 deficit into a 3-2 win.

"Yeah, I think winning them last three games is really important for us in India, to one, get some self-belief that we can beat this Indian side in their home conditions," Aaron Finch said. "For that, I think when you look back, it comes down to taking them key moments in games and making sure that no matter what the situation of the game or the series or the tournament, whenever you're playing India, you have to believe that you can beat them because they're a world-class side.

"So to be able to beat them in their home conditions three times in a row was really important for the confidence of the side, especially going into a game like this."

The problem with this India attack - and side - is that it isn't just the one or two. There's difficulties everywhere. Jasprit Bumrah and Bhuvneshwar Kumar to see off, there's Shikhar Dhawan, Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli to see the backs of. There's Hardik Pandya to account for. Even late-career MS Dhoni, nowadays modelling the Misbah-ul-Haq approach with the bat.

And as much as Australia have the confidence of beating them recently, and playing with and against them a lot, one-off tournament games are unforgiving. Before you know it they're over and if you learnt something in the way you were dismissed, or how one batsman played you, there's no immediate point: this isn't a bilateral series.

"We saw in the latest series we played against them that regardless of what the scoreline might be, whoever turns up and produces their best on the day will win," Finch said. "It's about everyone chipping in and contributing as best they can to help Australia win tomorrow."

Thiem outlasts Djokovic to reach French final

Published in Breaking News
Saturday, 08 June 2019 08:07

PARIS -- Novak Djokovic's 26-match Grand Slam winning streak ended with a dramatic 6-2, 3-6, 7-5, 5-7, 7-5 loss Saturday to Dominic Thiem in a rain-interrupted French Open semifinal that spanned more than four hours over two days.

Thiem wasted two match points with quick unforced errors when serving for the victory at 5-3 in the fifth, but he made his third chance count, smacking a forehand winner to break Djokovic in the last game.

"It's never easy to go on, go off, put the system on 100% and go down to 0% in the locker," Thiem said. "But if you win, everything is good."

The top-ranked Djokovic had trouble with Thiem, to be sure, but also with the weather, with the chair umpire and with his odd propensity for heading to the net much more often than usual, including some serve-and-volleying that often failed.

"Look, there is always something large at stake when you're one of the top players of the world and play in the biggest tournaments," Djokovic said. "These kind of matches, one or two points decide a winner."

He was stopped two victories short of collecting his fourth consecutive major championship, a run that began on the grass at Wimbledon last July, then continued on the hard courts of the US Open and Australian Open.

Instead, it is Thiem, an Austrian ranked No. 4, who now gets a chance to win his first Grand Slam trophy on the red clay of Roland Garros.

Thiem will face 11-time French Open champion Rafael Nadal on Sunday in a rematch of last year's final. Nadal won that one, part of an 8-4 lead for the Spaniard in their head-to-head series.

"All the time, if someone reaches the finals here, it's against Rafa," Thiem said with a laugh.

It will be the fourth straight day that Thiem is in action because of postponements, whereas Nadal will be well-rested, having played his quarterfinal Tuesday and his semifinal Friday, when he beat Roger Federer 6-3, 6-4, 6-2.

On Friday, Thiem had just broken Djokovic to go up a break at 3-1 in the third set when their match was suspended because of a shower. They resumed 18 1/2 hours later, in dry, breezy conditions. The wind that was so fierce Friday -- spreading loose, rust-colored clay dust from the court surface all over the place, making for something that seemed like a sandstorm -- was much more manageable Saturday. It rippled players' shirts but did not cause havoc with serve tosses and shots the way it had the evening prior.

They repeatedly engaged in long and entertaining baseline exchanges that lasted 10 shots, 20 shots or more. They used speed and anticipation to track down each other's shots. They walloped the ball from all angles.

The very longest of these tended to go Djokovic's way: He won 37 of 61 points (61%) of nine or more strokes.

For whatever reason, Djokovic felt compelled to try to shorten points on occasion, hardly his usual strategy.

So that led to this key statistic: He won only 35 of 71 points when he went to the net. Thiem, meanwhile, took 18 of 20 on his more judicious forays forward.

The most glaring examples of this came at the end of the third set, when it appeared Djokovic might really be letting the whole match get away.

Serving at 15-all while down 6-5, Djokovic was agitated by a warning from chair umpire Jaume Campistol for letting the serve clock expire and wouldn't let it go, complaining during the game and, more vociferously, at the changeover, so much so that he was called for unsportsmanlike conduct.

The lack of focus drifted into his choices during points, too, including a mediocre volley that let Thiem deposit a backhand passing winner for a fourth set point. Yet another serve-and-volley attempt came next, and Thiem produced a low forehand return right at Djokovic's feet to end the set.

All match, Djokovic kept digging a hole, then climbing out. Could he do it again?

He was three points from defeat while serving at love-15, down 5-4 in the fourth set, but came through there to hold, broke in the next game when Thiem double-faulted, and forced a fifth.

Then Djokovic got broken to trail 3-1 in the deciding set when he missed a volley, and Thiem held for 4-1.

At deuce in the ensuing game, a shower came. Shortly before they came back to play, Djokovic tried to stay loose by playing soccer with a tennis ball while Thiem did sprints in a stadium hallway.

On the first point when they returned, Djokovic paused, thinking a shot by Thiem landed out. Campistol ruled it was in. Djokovic eventually took that game. But he was a point from losing when Thiem served at 5-3, 40-15. Except, Thiem just couldn't close.

Dumped a backhand into the net. Pushed a backhand wide. Sent a forehand long. Slapped a backhand into the net.

That could have been it for him. Hard to recover from that sort of collapse, especially against someone like Djokovic.

But Thiem regrouped in time. It was Djokovic who faltered, something not seen on a Grand Slam stage since the 2018 French Open quarterfinals.

Barty wins French Open for 1st Grand Slam title

Published in Breaking News
Saturday, 08 June 2019 09:47

Ashleigh Barty stormed to her first Grand Slam title Saturday, defeating Marketa Vondrousova 6-1, 6-3 to win the French Open title.

In the first major final for both players, Barty was dominant, breaking Vondrousova on all three of her service games in the first set and twice more in the second, including the title-clinching game.

Vondrousova, 19, was the first teenage finalist at the French Open in more than a decade. She had not lost a set in this tournament prior to Saturday.

OAKLAND, Calif. -- It can happen so suddenly -- the end of a season, a dynasty, an arena. Few people in and around the NBA had internalized the idea -- swirled it around in their brains, digested it, felt it -- that the Toronto Raptors, the NBA's accidental pseudo-contender who catapulted themselves toward something greater with a trade for the ages, could clinch the NBA championship Monday.

The two fans I met from Malaysia who paid more than $10,000 each for tickets to Games 3, 4, and 5 did not expect that they might get to see the series-clincher on Monday. One Raptors assistant coach wandered onto the floor after Toronto's Game 4 decimation of the Golden State Warriors, a bewildered look on his face, and tried to retrieve his wife and two young children from the crowd of 500 or so delirious Raptors fans who stayed half an hour after the game singing songs.

The Raptors are here for lots of reasons, but mostly because of Kawhi Leonard, who has asserted his claim as the world's best player over the past month. Leonard did something that only LeBron James had approximated before him, and LeBron had help from another all-world scorer in Kyrie Irving, who poured in 90 combined points over the last three games of the 2016 Finals -- when the Cleveland Cavaliers completed the unprecedented comeback Golden State will attempt now.

Leonard broke the Warriors.

If there was a moment when you knew it, perhaps this was it:

That is what Leonard had reduced Golden State to: leaving Danny Green, one of the great 3-point shooters in NBA Finals history, wide open in the strongside corner -- a no-no against even average shooters. A team that does that is desperate. A team that does that is out of answers. It has lost itself.

I asked Green in the locker room after the game if he was surprised to be left so open. "That open? Yes." Green said. "But teams have been doing that. You've got [Leonard], a special guy, going off, and you gotta help from somewhere."

Throughout these strange, injury-ravaged Finals, there has been a debate over how much help the Warriors should send at Leonard -- that perhaps they should let Leonard "get his," or try to, and stay closer to Toronto's army of outside shooters. Nick Nurse, Toronto's head coach, said he felt Golden State creeping toward the right balance in the Warriors' Game 2 win.

He urged his team to veer just a bit away from the pick-and-roll -- to use more off-ball screening and cutting.

"They've done a great job of clogging up our pick-and-rolls," Nurse told ESPN after Game 3. "We've got stuck in them a lot. So we tried to get away from them a little -- a little more cutting." The Raptors, at times, looked like the old-school, Kevin-Durant-less Warriors.

When they ran the NBA's staple play, Nurse pushed his players to vary both the combinations of players involved and the techniques. So there was Leonard in the second half of Game 3 scampering up the right wing to screen for Pascal Siakam, a nominal power forward who's really just a Pascal Siakam, only Leonard never set the screen; he darted suddenly away from Siakam and toward the top of the arc, earning just enough separation from a temporarily startled Draymond Green to ease into an open catch-and-shoot 3.

Kyle Lowry executed the same slip-the-screen trickery with Leonard -- fading out to the right wing on a cut in Game 3 that jumbled Golden State's defense and conjured another open look.

Lowry and Leonard struggled to develop the sort of two-man chemistry Lowry enjoyed with DeMar DeRozan. Lowry was startlingly passive for the first 40 or 50 games of the season. Even in grinding through these playoffs, the Lowry-Leonard pick-and-roll -- such an enticing weapon, something that should be an automatic mismatch generator -- never really got rolling.

Until Game 3. "For me, it has been adjusting to what he does," Lowry told ESPN before Game 4.

The Warriors couldn't dictate how much help they might send at Leonard -- and when -- if they didn't know what was coming.

At times in Game 4, the Raptors let Leonard work without a pick. He bludgeoned Golden State, drawing fouls and rising for long 2s:

Leonard has a unique combination of footwork and strength. Defenders bounce off him, he hits the brakes, and what looked half a second ago like a difficult shot becomes a 50/50 proposition. That is the ultimate playoff weapon. When there are only four and then two teams alive, you don't get to pick the shots you want. You take the shot you get, or the shots you are given, and make the best out of them. Those shots allow Toronto to control the tempo of the series.

Leonard is an absolute battering ram. When Kevon Looney, replacing the shade of DeMarcus Cousins, pressured Leonard on the pick-and-roll in Game 4, Leonard revealed counter after counter.

He waited out the trap, and coaxed Looney into retreating with a canny pass fake to Marc Gasol. And then Leonard just kind of meandered and burrowed to where he wanted to go. When he rose up, Looney rose with him -- exposing a 2-on-1 under the rim. Looney probably should have let Andre Iguodala handle Leonard alone there. That is the kind of thing you say when you haven't watched Leonard rain midrange death on everyone for the past two months.

From there, it's Siakam to Gasol on a gorgeous sequence that is emblematic in its own way of how Toronto has pushed the Curry-era Warriors into the deepest hole it has ever faced -- with or without Durant. When the Warriors loaded up Leonard in Game 4, he trusted the other Raptors, and they paid off that trust with some of their best passing sequences of the postseason.

Ibaka makes the first pass to his most convenient release valve -- Lowry -- and keeps going. Lowry follows with the give-back -- the pass the defense doesn't expect.

By the fourth quarter, the Warriors didn't know what was coming. A defense that has spent the past half-decade playing one step ahead -- sneering and roaring at opponents who didn't expect them to pop up right there -- was suddenly playing from two steps behind. Those are the sorts of sequences Masai Ujiri and his staff envisioned when they acquired Gasol. They essentially bet that adding one more passing hub -- a big man equivalent to Lowry -- would give them access to a different style of offense when they needed one.

The passing carried over into those precarious minutes at the start of the second and fourth quarters when Nurse rested Lowry and Leonard at the same time. (If the Warriors can't win those minutes, they are toast.)

Ibaka has thrown three or four inside-out passes like that over the past two games. They have been some of the finest passes of his career. Ibaka is still not exactly a good passer. He is probably the worst passer in Toronto's playoff rotation. He doesn't read the floor as fast, or possess the sense of anticipation of Lowry and Gasol. But he has worked at it. The work is painstaking, boring, outside his skill set. It has paid off over these past few games, including Game 4, one of the best of Ibaka's career.

When I entered the Raptors' locker room after Game 4, Ibaka and Green were standing facing each other; Ibaka was reenacting a sequence in which he had demurred on a contested floater and touched a pass to Siakam in the corner. He was proud. Green told him he remembered the play. They dissected it together.

Both Ibaka and Gasol over the past two games in Oracle Arena ramped up their rolling to the rim. Both prefer to pop for jumpers, or flare out for dribble handoffs. But they and Nurse's coaching staff noticed they could get behind Cousins and Andrew Bogut if they cut hard out of screens for Leonard and Lowry, and it worked. They both dunked, and drew fouls. Gasol drew help, and dished to corner shooters.

That's a simple play, but it stands out as unusual for Leonard -- an early pass, not one that comes only after the defense has swarmed him.

Leonard even hid down in the dunker spot, usually a place for bit players, as Ibaka and Fred VanVleet worked the pick-and-roll late in the third quarter Friday; Leonard floated under the play and across the paint for a bucket to put Toronto up by 12. That was not vintage Leonard. That was unexpected Leonard.

To get this close to a title, you have to be a shapeshifter on both ends. A team that was once predictable and monotonous has proven itself as such even though its lead superstar is not known as a playmaker. They have toggled seamlessly from one variety of half-court set to another, and another, and another. When they sensed chances to run, they ran.

It all starts with Leonard -- his ability to both start and finish possessions in a variety of ways and dictate pace. We spend a lot of time nitpicking stars who fail by some impossible Jordanian standard in the playoffs. Some of that is dumb noise -- Damian Lillard hitting the second series-ending buzzer-beater of his career, and two rounds later facing questions about his viability as a postseason superstar.

Some of it is interesting and worthwhile: Is Chris Paul's career proof of the difficulty in building around a 6-foot player? What does it mean that James Harden has underperformed his incredible regular-season standards by 5 or 10% in most postseasons? The playoffs are harder than the regular season. Perhaps some slippage should be expected. But the questions are legitimate.

Perhaps we have not spent enough time amid all of that calling Leonard what he now indisputably is: one of the greatest postseason performers in the history of the sport, the rare superstar who gets better in the playoffs.

Leonard won Finals MVP in 2014, a year after exploding as a 21-year-old in the 2013 Finals. He averaged 28 points, eight rebounds and five assists in the 2017 playoffs -- and locked up everyone on defense -- before one false Zaza Pachulia step ended his season, and really his San Antonio career.

In Game 4 of the first round against Memphis that year, Leonard scored 43 points and swiped six steals in almost single-handedly dragging the Spurs to a win in one of those incredible feats that gets lost in history because it happened in an unremarkable first-round series.

He took the ball on one end, and scored on the other. He almost didn't need help. The memory of that game popped back up when Leonard opened the second half of Game 4 Friday with a 3-pointer, a steal, and another 3-pointer to give Toronto the lead.

He is one of two players to have logged at least 1,000 career postseason minutes and shot at least 50% overall and 40% from 3-point range. (Al Horford is the other, at much lower long-range volume.)

Leonard hit an all-time shot to win Game 7 against Philadelphia in the second round, and turned the next series when Nurse assigned him to Giannis Antetokounmpo in Game 3. But don't forget the triple Leonard hit over Joel Embiid with one minute left in Game 4 against Philadelphia to put Toronto up 94-90 -- on the road, and trailing the Sixers two games to one. Talk to people within the Raptors, and they'll tell you that game -- and the time between Games 3 and 4 of that series -- was their point of greatest stress in these playoffs.

Philadelphia overwhelmed them in Game 3. The Sixers' size troubled Toronto. The Raptors would have to summon more than they had expected. Leonard's shot held off a potential doomsday scenario.

Now he has them one win from history. If they finish the Warriors, some will cry "asterisk" because of injuries to Durant and Klay Thompson. Game 3 was indeed a bummer. It did not feel like a Finals game.

But you can only play the teams in front of you. Every postseason is marked by some important injury. Thompson missed only that one game, and the Warriors came into these Finals having won six straight playoff games -- and 31 of 32 overall -- when Curry played without Durant.

The Warriors are giants, as Steve Kerr called them after their Game 5 win over Houston. Never count them out. Toronto has work to do, still. Leonard will be ready.

Sources: Rockets, D'Antoni close to extension

Published in Basketball
Saturday, 08 June 2019 09:53

The Houston Rockets and Mike D'Antoni have rekindled discussions about a contract extension for the head coach and are close to nearing an agreement, sources told ESPN on Saturday.

Rockets owner Tilman Fertitta has agreed to eliminate the buyout language that was the primary reason that D'Antoni and his agent, Warren LeGarie, ended talks on May 30, sources said.

Fertitta and Rockets general manager Daryl Morey visited D'Antoni at his offseason home in West Virginia this week to smooth over any hard feelings. LeGarie was not part of those discussions and told ESPN that a deal still needs to be worked out through him.

"Did Mike speak to those guys down there? Yes, he did," LeGarie told ESPN. "As always, they asked Mike what he thought, and Mike said, 'Sounds great, but talk to Warren.' Mike's job is coaching, and he leaves the negotiating to me.

"Mike is always affable with everybody out there, not trying to raise the rancor in a situation clearly gone astray."

After the previous talks ended, Fertitta told reporters during a hastily arranged media availability that the offer to D'Antoni was a one-year extension with a $5 million base salary plus $4 million in incentives for advancing in the playoffs.

However, the original offer included only $2.5 million in guaranteed money, due to a buyout in case the Rockets fired D'Antoni before the end of the season, or if they did not make the playoffs and terminated him after the season.

D'Antoni, who is under contract through the 2019-20 season, has a 173-73 record in three seasons with the Rockets. Houston is 23-16 in the playoffs during that span, losing to the Golden State Warriors the past two seasons.

Phillies' Dominguez on IL, TJ surgery an option

Published in Baseball
Friday, 07 June 2019 14:18

Philadelphia Phillies reliever Seranthony Dominguez has a UCL injury in his right elbow, and Tommy John surgery is one of the treatment options being considered, general manager Matt Klentak said Friday.

The right-hander has been placed on the 10-day injured list and will get a second opinion on the injury, Klentak said.

Dominguez left Wednesday's game against the San Diego Padres with what manager Gabe Kapler described as elbow soreness. He had an MRI on Thursday.

Dominguez has a 4.01 ERA in 27 appearances this season but has been a mainstay on the pitching staff, especially as injuries mounted in the bullpen. Relievers Tommy Hunter, David Robertson, Adam Morgan, Pat Neshek, Edubray Ramos and Victor Arano are all on the injured list.

BAL and UKWL: A look ahead to national league action

Published in Athletics
Saturday, 08 June 2019 06:27

Birchfield and Thames Valley Harriers are in confident mood ahead of meets at Barnet and Leigh

After a big win in the opening fixture, Birchfield Harriers seek to continue the defence of their BAL title but should face tougher competition from local clubs Newham and hosts Shaftesbury, who were second and fourth in Swansea, at the second match at Barnet on Sunday (June 9).

Birchfield team manager Dave Lawrence is hopeful of having a similar team to that which finished fifth in the recent European Champion Clubs Cup.

They will hope to include their A-string winners from last time, Christian Byron (800m), Kadar Omar Abdullahi (3000m), Ryan Webb (high jump), Harry Coppell (pole vault) and Craig Murch (hammer).

Thames Valley Harriers, who were also fifth at the European event last week, are confident as they begin the defence of their UK Women’s League title at Leigh on Sunday.

Team manager Manuel da Silva said: “On paper, we have one of our strongest teams, going into the first UKWAL match of the season with a mixture of those who competed in Spain and others that are relatively new to the team.

“I am confident that the team will do well but expect Birchfield Harriers and Edinburgh AC to make it another exciting season.”

Among those the London club expect to call upon to challenge for top scores will be recent Southern 400m hurdles champion Jess Tappin.

Commonwealth and European representative Amelia Strickler is expected to turn out in the shot put. Annie Tagoe and Rachel Miller should figure highly for them in the sprints. Angela Barrett and Philippa Rogan should likewise perform well for the champions in the triple jump and high jump respectively.

Teams

BAL (in opening fixture finishing order): Birch eld Harriers, Newham & Essex Beagles, Harrow AC, Shaftesbury Barnet Harriers, Woodford Green with Essex Ladies, Cardiff AAC, Blackheath & Bromley Harriers, City of Sheffield & Dearne AC

UKWL (in order of placing in 2018): Thames Valley Harriers, Birch eld Harriers, Blackheath & Bromley, Edinburgh AC, Windsor Slough Eton & Hounslow, Trafford, Notts AC (promoted), Cardiff AC (promoted)

Australian eighth seed Ashleigh Barty and Czech teenager Marketa Vondrousova, the world number 38, will bid to win their maiden Grand Slam title in an unlikely French Open final on Saturday.

Play between Barty and Vondrousova, 19, is due to start at 14:00 BST.

Barty, 23, who quit tennis to play cricket in 2014, described reaching a Slam final as "crazy".

After becoming the first teenage Grand Slam finalist since 2009, Vondrousova said: "It is the best week of my life."

Vondrousova has not dropped a set in the tournament and ended British number one Johanna Konta's run with a 7-5 7-6 (7-2) win in their semi-final on Friday.

She has become the first teenage finalist at Roland Garros since Serbia's Ana Ivanovic in 2007.

Vondrousova and Barty have the youngest combined age of two female Grand Slam finalists since the 2008 French Open when Ivanovic beat Dinara Safina.

The pair have met twice before in tour-level matches, Barty not dropping a set in victories on the grass in Birmingham in 2017 and the Cincinnati hard court last year.

Barty aiming to cap her 'incredible journey'

Barty's first Grand Slam final comes almost three years to the day since she reappeared in the WTA rankings - at 623rd - after taking a break from the sport for more than a year to play professional cricket.

The Queenslander retired in 2014 and played for the Brisbane Heat in the women's Big Bash after saying tennis was a "lonely sport".

But she decided to return 17 months later and has since won four tour titles, including the biggest victory of her career at the Miami Open in March.

Now she is the first Australian woman to reach a first Grand Slam final since Sam Stosur at the US Open in 2011.

"It is crazy, it really is," Barty said.

"It's been an incredible journey the last three years. It's been an incredible journey the last two weeks.

"I feel like I have played some really good tennis, some consistent tennis."

Barty has the richer pedigree of the two finalists, having climbed into the world's top 10 after reaching her first Grand Slam quarter-final on home turf in Melbourne in January.

Her exploits at Roland Garros mean she is assured of a ranking inside the top five when they are released next week, with the number two spot awaiting if she succeeds on Saturday.

Seven-time Grand Slam champion Evonne Goolagong Cawley was the last Australian woman to be ranked as high as second - in December 1976.

"My team and myself have worked so hard to put ourselves in these positions. Now we get to go out there and really enjoy it," Barty added.

"That's the only way to approach it is to go out and enjoy it, have fun, try and play with freedom.

"That's ultimately when I play my best tennis and that's what we are after in the final."

Vondrousova 'never imagined' reaching the final

Vondrousova had only reached the second week of a Grand Slam once before this tournament - at last year's US Open - but has eclipsed that with her scintillating run at Roland Garros.

The left-hander has enjoyed a fine year after reaching the Hungarian Open and Istanbul Cup finals, along with quarter-final runs at more prestigious tournaments in Indian Wells, Miami and Rome.

Victory over Konta was her 15th victory on the clay this year, a tally only matched on the tour by the Briton and Croatian 31st seed Petra Martic - who Vondrousova beat in the Roland Garros quarter-finals.

"It's amazing. I never imagined this, I'm just very happy with everything," she said.

Vondrousova, who keeps opponents guessing by playing with plenty of variety, has won a tour-high 27 matches since January's Australian Open.

If she beats Barty then she will climb to a career-high ranking of 11, with a place in the top 20 already assured.

"I'm having so much fun on court. I'm playing good," said the Czech, who is the first teenage Grand Slam singles finalist since Caroline Wozniacki was runner-up at the 2009 US Open at the age of 19.

"It's really amazing when you're playing like this and winning all the matches. It's huge."

So, if the percentage is high for male left handers, why have only three ever won the men’s singles title at a World Championships and not one of them Chinese or Hungarian, the two most successful countries in the history of the sport?

Sweden’s Stellan Bengtsson was the first, he won in Nagoya in 1971, Japan’s Seiji Ono succeeded in 1979 in Pyongyang; the most recent is Frenchman Jean-Philippe Gatien in 1993 in Gothenburg.

It is one of those questions to which there is no logical answer, just as it is suggested that there are more left handed golfers in Canada than in the United Sates!

However, the pressing point is which of those left handers on duty in Hong Kong’s Queen Elizabeth Stadium still be present when the penultimate day of play concludes?

Lin Gaoyuan, the top seed, faces colleague and fellow left hander, Wang Chuqin; Lin Gaoyuan starts as the favourite not only because he is the senior player but earlier this year he prevailed in the final at the Seamaster 2019 ITTF World Tour Hungarian Open.

Awaiting the winner is the player who succeeds in the one all right handed contest, Sweden’s Mattias Falck, the no.7 seed faces China’s Liang Jingkun, the no.3 seed; despite the heroics of Mattias Falck at the Liebherr 2019 World Championships in Budapest, is Liang Jiangkun the slight favourite? He beat Mattias Falck in their one prior meeting in a world ranking event when in 2017 they met in Qatar; since then much water has flowed under the bridge.

Will a left hander survive to reach the final? Mattias Falck and Liang Jingkun may well have other ideas.

The question is the same in the lower half of the draw; left handers meet in the guise of Germany’s Timo Boll, the no.4 seed and Chinese qualifier Zhou Yu. They have never met before, status and experience is on the side of Timo Boll but Zhou Yu is a young man with a point to prove. He returns to action following his three month suspension by the Chinese Table Tennis Association, as a result of ripping the rubber off his racket in January at the Seamaster 2019 ITTF World Tour Hungarian Open when facing Chinese Taipei’s Chuang Chih-Yuan. In Hong Kong he is in blistering form with added motivation.

Awaiting the winner is the victor of the one contest that witnesses a left hander versus right hander, the all Japanese duel sees Tomokazu Harimoto, the no.2 seed, face Jun Mizutani, the no.9 seed.

Experience favours Jun Mizutani but in their meetings in world ranking events, Tomokazu Harimoto has won on both occasions; he prevailed at the Liebherr 2017 World Championships and at the Seamaster 2018 ITTF World Tour Austrian Open.

Jun Mizutani to win; then succeed in the semi-finals, before on the last day of play clinching the title.

Now that would be something; Sunday 9th May is his 30th birthday!

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