I Dig Sports
As Charlie McAvoy broke into the St. Louis Blues' zone and put a shot past Jordan Binnington to tie Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final, the cheers from Boston were probably echoed 2,000 miles away at USA Hockey's offices in Colorado Springs, Colorado. McAvoy was one of three American-born players to score big goals in Game 1 for the Bruins.
Those cheers will continue next month when Jack Hughes and a cavalcade of top American prospects will likely be selected early in the first round of the 2019 NHL draft. Like McAvoy and the other exceptional U.S.-born players born in 1997, the 2001 birth-year class may be just as good if not better. Collectively, the two groups very well could comprise the core of American hockey's future.
There are at least 10 American players widely projected to be selected in the first round this June, which would rival the record of 12 set in 2016, a class led by Auston Matthews. And the 2019 class could be extremely top heavy. With Hughes projected to go No. 1 to the New Jersey Devils, four of his USA Hockey's National Team Development Program teammates -- Alex Turcotte, Trevor Zegras, Cole Caufield and Matthew Boldy -- could each also go in the top 10. That would represent the highest number of American-born players selected in the top 10 in draft history. Additionally, the No. 1-ranked goaltender in the draft class, Connecticut native Spencer Knight, comes from this U.S. group.
As the number of U.S.-born players across the NHL increases, the quality has as well. Suddenly, USA Hockey has a new core of players, largely homegrown and trained in their national team program, coming up while winning World U18 and World Junior Championships and then finding fast success in the NHL.
That 1997-born class has made a near-immediate impact in the league. It includes 10 first-rounders selected over the 2015 and 2016 drafts. All but Brock Boeser were alumni of the National Team Development Program (NTDP). At various points, that 1997-born team included Matthews, Matthew Tkachuk, Zach Werenski, Noah Hanifin, McAvoy, Jack Roslovic, Christian Fischer, Jordan Greenway, Troy Terry, Tage Thompson, Luke Kunin, Caleb Jones and Colin White, all of whom played NHL games this season.
Of the top Americans in the NHL since 2016, four of those players -- Matthews, Boeser, Alex DeBrincat and Tkachuk -- are among the top 15 in points per game played. Matthews is also the top goal scorer among Americans over the past three seasons with 111 and is inching his way toward becoming the new face of USA Hockey, albeit from Canada's biggest market.
Peter Ward was in charge of scouting and recruiting the '97 birth year for the NTDP as the organization's director of player of personnel at the time. Now an amateur scout with the Vegas Golden Knights, he was able to see the growth of this group up close and personal, but it was evident early on that there was something special there.
"The core, we knew it would be good," Ward said. "[Matthews] first popped on my scene at 13 and then I just kind of kept tabs on him. At 13, you don't know. We brought him out at Christmas time to skate with the 1995's and he was blowing by guys two years older than him. [Then head coach] Don Granato says offer him now right after that practice."
Matthews was the first player to commit, and the rest started to fall in line. One of the last players to even be invited to camp was actually McAvoy.
"Our area scout went and saw him, and he kept on telling me you gotta keep an eye on this kid," Ward recalled, admitting he nearly made an egregious error in not including him. "I thought he was good, [but] didn't have a lot of size at the time. We got him into camp. He was the last add. Once we got him there, Don said, 'We gotta take that kid.'"
In the years since, McAvoy has become a first-round pick and top-pairing defenseman in the NHL, won a World Junior gold medal for USA Hockey in 2017 and has represented the U.S. at multiple world championships.
In all, 21 players who spent either the first, second or both years at the NTDP from the 1997 birth year were drafted. More than half of them have already played in the NHL.
But there is some belief that this year's NTDP team could have as many, or more, players selected over the next two drafts.
"One of the most important factors at the NTDP is that we don't make mistakes and we have a class that's well-rounded that pushes from the bottom to the middle, and from the middle to the top," said John Wroblewski, who coached the 2001 birth-year players at the NTDP. "Jeremiah Crowe [then player personnel director and now a pro scout with the Buffalo Sabres] did a fantastic job putting this team together."
Wroblewski noted that the most skilled players would be challenged by the ones who were more defensively sound, and vice versa. And the team also includes two exceptional goalies.
"Steel forges steel," Wroblewski said. "I like to use Zegras and Hughes as a microcosm of the group. Trevor doesn't become who he is without chasing Jack. I don't think Jack gets there without Trevor pushing him. I think it encompasses this class and what we're trying to do."
The players noticed the benefits, too.
"When you see anyone on your team do something well, you want to show that yourself too," said Turcotte, who is projected to be a top-five pick. "It gets everyone to work harder. When you see your teammates succeed, you're happy for them, but you want to do the same thing."
"Every kid that comes down in practice, there's something special they can do," says Knight, the only goaltender currently projected to be a first-round pick this year. "There's no shot off. We're competitive and we just make each other better."
Even outside of the NTDP, this year's American-born prospects are something to behold. Arthur Kaliyev had 51 goals for the Hamilton Bulldogs in the OHL this year. Bobby Brink had the most productive season in the USHL by a non-NTDP player since Thomas Vanek in 2001-02 with an average of 1.58 points per game. Nicholas Robertson was a standout performer at the Hlinka-Gretzky Cup and a leading player for the Peterborough Petes. And Everett Silvertips goaltender Dustin Wolf is one of the more highly-regarded goaltenders in the draft class having posted a .930 save percentage after replacing budding young Philadelphia Flyers star Carter Hart this season.
While these two birth years have a higher concentration of elite players than some of the surrounding years, USA Hockey will continue to lean on 1994-born Seth Jones and Jacob Trouba, 1996-born Jack Eichel and Dylan Larkin, 1999-born Quinn Hughes and of course the 1988-born Patrick Kane as it builds national teams.
There is an undeniable truth in the progress of the American player, becoming more skilled, more creative and more entertaining than the years and years of north-south speedy, grindy players. The elites were fewer and farther in between.
Part of that trend may be thanks to the changing culture in American player development, and specifically USA Hockey's American Development Model (ADM). It puts a greater emphasis on skill development at the grassroots level by providing guidance on practice and game structure for the younger levels. The adoption of long-term athlete development principles, heavy doses of research and borrowing from other sports and countries' development structure has been key.
It has been nine years since that model was put into place, so the 2001 birth-year players have essentially grown up with this system, even if they didn't necessarily realize it.
Ken Martel, the technical director of the ADM, says it would be hard for the program to take much credit for the development of this exceptional group, but notes that the winds of change are blowing throughout the country when it comes to philosophies on how to help players reach new heights.
"There's been a cultural shift in how we're operating at the youth level that the ADM has pushed," Martel said. "Nothing we've done is rocket science. It's not anything that people hadn't done before. We just didn't do enough of it."
A larger focus of the ADM is to encourage less formulaic and structured practices to help foster creativity and hockey sense. There has also been a push for more practices and fewer games at the younger levels, encouraging more puck touches on a weekly basis. At the youngest levels, there has been movement to shrink the playing area to cross-ice or half-ice competitions to make the surface more age-appropriate and allow players more opportunities to be close to the puck.
While there is a desire to create better players, one of the more important things the ADM has aimed to do with these changes is to foster retention. There is evidence it's actually working, as USA Hockey has posted positive retention in each of the past two years. As more kids stay in the game longer, the talent pools become deeper.
"We see draft classes like [the 2019 crop] and we wonder what can the future hold," Martel said. "This is special. This is not normal. Every country goes through some cycles."
It seems the past few years have been an acceleration of a larger trend over the past few decades. In 2018-19, 28.6 percent of the players who played in an NHL game were U.S. born, according to QuantHockey.com. Just five years ago, it was 24.3 percent, and 20 years prior, 16.2 percent of the league was American. That's a pretty rapid change.
Despite that growth, it has been 23 years since the U.S. won a best-on-best senior tournament in men's hockey and nearly 40 since the men last claimed an Olympic gold medal. With the status of the World Cup of Hockey and NHL participation in the Olympics in flux, there may not be many opportunities for the U.S. to break those lengthy streaks.
Should that change, the likelihood of the 1997 and 2001 birth years playing a significant role in turning the tide seems awfully high.
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Stanley Cup Playoffs Daily: Blues cap wild Game 2 with OT win
Published in
Hockey
Thursday, 30 May 2019 04:54
It was a win more than a half-century in the making. The St. Louis Blues defeated the Boston Bruins 3-2 in overtime to take Game 2, but most importantly, win the franchise's first-ever Stanley Cup Final game.
Here's everything you need to know about how Game 2 played out in this edition of ESPN Stanley Cup Playoffs Daily.
Jump ahead: Last night's game | Three stars
Play of the night | Social post of the day
About last night ...
Game 2: St. Louis Blues 3, Boston Bruins 2 (OT) (Series tied 1-1)
The first period was a little nutty. Hometown favorite Charlie Coyle scored first -- on the power play -- before Robert Bortuzzo tied it. Fourth-liner Joakim Nordstrom gave Boston another lead before Vladimir Tarasenko evened things up again. Things calmed down offensively in the second and third (especially for the Bruins, who had a hard time sustaining any offensive zone pressure), but the tone was set. This was a heavy game. This was a physical game. This is likely how the series is going to be won.
The Bruins played most of the game with five defensemen after Matt Grzelcyk was sent to the hospital after hitting his head into the boards on a check by Oskar Sundqvist. That likely led to fatigue. In the end, Carl Gunnarsson won it in overtime for the Blues, becoming the 19th St. Louis player to score this postseason. But what will make Gunnarsson the stuff of legend is how he did it. After clanging one off of the post late in the third period, Gunnarsson took a bathroom break during intermission. That's when he stood next to his coach at the urinal and declared: "I just need one more chance."
Carl Gunnarsson told Chief he needed just "one more chance" while standing side-by-side at the urinal. #stlblues #WeAllBleedBlue pic.twitter.com/l8ID419sNC
- St. Louis Blues (@StLouisBlues) May 30, 2019
Three stars
1. Carl Gunnarsson, D, St. Louis Blues. Gunnarsson became only the third player in NHL history to score his first playoff goal in a Stanley Cup Final overtime game. It also was his first multipoint game since Oct. 18, 2015 -- a string of 253 games.
Gunnarsson one-times OT winner, evens series
Carl Gunnarsson one-times Ryan O'Reilly's pass into the back of the net in overtime, giving the Blues a 3-2 win to even the Stanley Cup Final at 1-1.
2. Joakim Nordstrom, C, Boston Bruins. The fourth-liner and defensive specialist was exceptional Wednesday night, but will need some significant time in the ice bath to recover. Besides his one goal, Nordstrom blocked five shots, including three in a 50-second span on the penalty kill, which roused the Bruins faithful at TD Garden.
3. Vladimir Tarasenko, RW, St. Louis Blues. With another goal on Wednesday, the Russian winger became the fourth player in franchise history to record an eight-game point streak in the postseason. He sits one game shy of the all-time mark held by Tony Currie from 1981.
Play of the night
Gunnarsson off the post.#StanleyCup #Stlblues pic.twitter.com/Yuovr2OHC8
- STLSportsCentral (@stlsportscntrl) May 30, 2019
The shot off the post that laid the groundwork for overtime dramatics.
Dud of the night
It's not all positive for St. Louis in analyzing Game 2. The Blues vowed to be more disciplined after uncharacteristically taking five penalties in Game 1. Well, they ended up short-handed five times again, including becoming the first team with multiple goalie interference penalties in a Stanley Cup Final game since 2008.
Social post of the day
We have a lot of questions, unknown fans.
Full beers? Full beers?! pic.twitter.com/uulyhbDuTF
- Greg Wyshynski (@wyshynski) May 30, 2019
Quotable
"[Craig Berube] just came in and said, 'Good job,' and told the story ... you don't hear that story very often. That's not a place to have a conversation, but I guess it works. It's a good story. I don't know if he's making it up, because that's a great story." -- Alex Pietrangelo on how the team learned of the bathroom convo between Berube and Gunnarsson
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Ariya defends, amateur stars make pro debuts at U.S. Women's Open
Published in
Golf
Thursday, 30 May 2019 00:37
CHARLESTON, S.C. – Ariya Jutanugarn isn't concerned about making history with a second straight U.S. Women's Open. She's more focused on the lessons learned from last year's back-nine collapse that nearly kept her from the championship.
Jutanugarn held a seven-shot lead through 63 holes at Shoal Creek on what looked like a romp to her second major championship. Instead, Jutanugarn lost it all and was forced into a four-hole playoff where she finally prevailed over Hoo-Joo Kim for the title.
The 23-year-old Jutanugarn is hopeful she'll be back in the mix at the Country Club of Charleston this weekend. She's sure she won't let her mind wander as it did down the stretch a year ago.
Jutanugarn said she stood at the 10th tee on Sunday's final round in 2018 thinking she's going to keep the seven-shot lead until the last hole and ''it should be easy for me to win the tournament.''
She added: ''But that's not a good way to think about that.''
That became apparent after making triple bogey on the 10th to dent her psyche. She closed the tournament bogey-bogey to drop into the playoff and won with a nifty up-and-down from the bunker.
Jutanugarn was grateful to hang tough and finish on top when others might have let emotions derail them. She's also happy with her increased resolve, knowing success won't simply fall in her lap because of her talent.
She says she needs to ''stick with my process'' because thinking about a big lead ''is not helping me to even hit a good golf shot.''
Jutanugarn, of Thailand, will need plenty of strong shots to keep pace with a stacked field that includes world No. 1 Jin-Young Ko of South Korea. She won the year's first major, the ANA Inspiration, last month. If Jutanugarn succeeds, she'll be the first with consecutive U.S. Women's Open titles since World Golf Hall of Famer Karrie Webb in 2000-01.
The only golfer since then with two U.S. Women's Open titles is Inbee Park, the champion in 2008 and 2013.
''If I can write my name one more time on the trophy, that will be just something unreal,'' Park said.
Whoever comes out on top will earn the first $1 million first prize for a U.S. Golf Association women's champion. The organization announced this week it was upping the overall prize money by $500,000 to $5.5 million, boosting the winner's share from $900,000.
''They deserve that and it's going to be awesome to see that check handed out Sunday,'' said two-time U.S. Open winner Meg Mallon, who earned $110,000 for her first title in 1991.
Missing is 2014 U.S. Women's Open winner Michelle Wie, who withdrew last week with a right hand injury.
Those teeing it up Thursday will face a tricky Seth Raynor-designed layout with several narrow fairways and par 5s that twist enough to make it difficult to hit greens in two. The putting surfaces are full of slopes.
And then there's No. 11, a par-3 nightmare with large bunkers along both sides and a huge front slope on the green that sends short tee shots back into the fairway. Brittany Lang, the 2016 open champion, spent several minutes running balls up the front slope during her practice round.
''It's kind of the hole where, OK, you accept bogey,'' Morgan Pressel said. ''If it happens, give yourself a good look at par. I think that's kind of probably everybody's strategy going into the week.''
Making her anticipated professional debut is NCAA champion Maria Fassi of Mexico. Fassi won the NCAA individual title this month at Arkansas and finished second to Jennifer Kupcho at the inaugural women's amateur event at Augusta National. Kupcho is also playing the U.S. Women's Open.
Players will face sweltering heat, starting with the first round on Thursday. Temperatures were in the mid-90s on Wednesday and were expected to remain there through the weekend. Several players used umbrellas on the walks between shots during the steamy practice round.
Bronte Law, who earned her first LPGA tour victory last week at Pure Silk Championship in Williamsburg, Virginia, said she'll keep hydrated and hit fewer practice shots to stay cooler.
''Hopefully, it shouldn't be too much of an issue,'' she said.
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The seeds for next season's Champions League group-stage draw are almost set after Chelsea won the Europa League on Wednesday night.
Chelsea will be in Pot 1 as a European titleholder, with the only outstanding issue being whether Liverpool or Tottenham join them by winning the Champions League on Saturday.
Chelsea and Tottenham or Liverpool will be with the winners of the top European leagues: Barcelona (La Liga), Manchester City (Premier League), Juventus (Serie A), Bayern Munich (Bundesliga), Paris Saint-Germain (Ligue 1) and Zenit Saint-Petersburg (Russian Premier).
It means the Premier League will have three teams in Pot 1.
The rest of the teams are seeded based on UEFA's five-year coefficient score for performance in European competition, with the strongest teams in Pot 2 and the weakest in Pot 4. One team from each pot will be drawn into the eight Champions League groups in the draw ceremony on Aug. 29.
Ajax, if they come through qualifying, will benefit from Chelsea winning the Europa League by taking the spare place in Pot 2.
Provisional teams can also be drawn up for the other pots, based on the highest-ranked clubs progressing through qualifying. Teams in bold are guaranteed to be in that pot.
POT 1: Liverpool or Tottenham, Chelsea, Barcelona, Manchester City, Juventus, Bayern Munich, Paris Saint-Germain, Zenit St Petersburg
POT 2 (provisional): Real Madrid, Atletico Madrid, FC Porto*, Liverpool or Tottenham, Borussia Dortmund, Napoli, Shakhtar Donetsk, Ajax*
POT 3 (provisional): Benfica, Dynamo Kiev*, Lyon, Bayer Leverkusen, FC Salzburg, Valencia, Inter Milan, Celtic*
POT 4 (provisional): FC Copenhagen*, Dinamo Zagreb*, Lokomotiv Moscow, Genk, Galatasaray, RB Leipzig, Atalanta, Lille
*denotes must go through qualifying
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Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson has told ESPN he was "saddened" by predecessor Loris Karius' mistakes in last season's Champions League final.
Jurgen Klopp's side have made it to the Champions League final for the second consecutive season and will face Tottenham in Madrid on June 1. Last season, they were beaten 3-1 by Real Madrid in Kiev, with Karius at fault for two of Los Blancos' goals.
- When is the Champions League final?
- Who qualifies for Europe from the Premier League?
And Alisson, who was in goal for Liverpool's semifinal opponents Roma last season, offered support to Karius.
Asked how he felt watching Karius' mistakes, he said: "I was saddened. We know the feeling of making a mistake in a competition as big as the Champions League; it's something that can stick with you for the rest of your career.
"But in life we always have the chance to make it better. I try to stay aware of everything. When I do something well, I don't let it get to my head. And when I make a mistake, I don't let it either."
Alisson joining as a replacement for Karius in the summer was pin-pointed as one of the main reasons behind Liverpool's improvement in form this season. But the Brazil international said he does not feel any extra pressure given Karius' mistakes -- and added that the responsibility is shared among the players.
"I don't think you can put it one guy's shoulders," he said. "The team has 11 guys.
"When we win, everyone wins. And when we lose, everyone loses. It wasn't Karius who lost that match, Liverpool did. This year we have a new opportunity, my first one.
"We will do everything to win and try to ease the pressure of being in the Champions League final."
Meanwhile, midfielder Fabinho said the Liverpool players are stronger because of their defeat in Kiev last season.
"We do not talk about what happened [in Kiev] in the dressing room much," he told ESPN. "I have not asked anyone what the days after the final were like either.
"But I think that having already played last season's final gives the team more experience. We already know the mistakes which need to be avoided.
"We are relaxed. It will be a different rival and our team is also different. We will do our best to win the final."
Information from ESPN FC's Eduardo Fernandez-Abascal
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South Africa women will host Australia for three ODIs and as many T20Is in March-April 2020, soon after the completion of the T20 World Cup. The ODIs will be part of the ICC Women's Championship that aims to identify seven direct qualifiers for the 2021 Women's World Cup in New Zealand.
The fixtures unveiled on Thursday also included an itinerary for the emerging teams' tournament, in which South Africa will first host Bangladesh in three one-dayers and three T20s from July 23 to August 4.
South Africa have rewarded their best performers from the women's academy with berths in the emerging team, with the aim to build on their gains from last year's Emerging Tri-series against England Women's Academy and Australia's Shooting Stars.
"We are very excited to announce these two home tours, with more quality women's cricket being played on home soil, said Vincent Barnes, CSA's High Performance manager. "We've seen some thrilling performances recently from our national team and the Australia tour will be another opportunity for them to impress in South African conditions against elite opposition."
The exposure to an emerging tour is valuable as South Africa, semi-finalists at the 2017 World Cup, look to expand their talent pool in the country by tapping the grassroots. With the ICC indicating the possibility of staging an age-group World Cup for women soon, South Africa's step towards increasing their exposure to competitive cricket will be seen as a welcome development.
"There's a lot of cricket coming up for the Women's team over the next two years, with the T20 World Cup next year and the Women's World Cup in 2021, so it is important to ensure the development pipeline continues to produce and that is where the National Academy and the emerging side will prove to be pivotal.
"We have seen the likes of Nondumiso Shangase, Faye Tunnecliffe and Sinalo Jafta make their breakthroughs from the programme, going on to earn their national colours, so that is promising for the future."
South Africa's Emerging Team squad: Tazmin Brits, Faye Tunnicliffe, Lara Goodall, Saarah Smith, Robyn Searle, Tumi Sekhukhune, Zintle Mali, Nonkululeko Thabethe, Jade de Figuerido, Nadia Mbokotwana, Nondumiso Shangase, Evodia Yekile, Nadine de Klerk.
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Big Picture
With the World Cup wheels having been well-oiled by a mouth-watering opening match between South Africa and England at the Oval, two rather more distant contenders for the trophy kick off their official campaigns at Trent Bridge. West Indies and Pakistan are few people's picks for an appearance at Lord's come the 14th of July, but two teams that have the Cricket World Cup in their blood for very different reasons will look to add sweat and tears to that concoction and brew something special over the coming six weeks.
For West Indies, the World Cup is their reference point to glory, so sweetly timed was this competition's induction to cricket for that magical side which dominated the sport for the best part of 20 years it took them three editions and eight years before they finally let a trophy leave their grasp. It was 40 years ago when they last lay claim to one of these, and after all that time spent wandering in the desert, they may feel destiny has the Promised Land in reach once more.
How easy is it to forget, then, that but for a bit of Harare afternoon rain falling just the right side of DLS calculations one March day, this grand side would have been by a Caribbean beach, watching Scotland take the field against Pakistan tomorrow? Much water, if you will excuse the pun, has passed under the bridge since, and West Indies look a completely different side to that one, if only because off-field matters seem more under control than they have for many years.
The squad seems to have unity and togetherness, something they haven't been famed for, and a much-settled, respected captain in Jason Holder. The side's balance was evident in their crushing defeat of New Zealand in Tuesday's warm-up, a destructive batting display laying down a marker of sorts.
Pakistan have a strange relationship with the World Cup, particularly since 1992, where an odds-defying win crafted the team's reputation and gave them their brand of unpredictability. They come into the tournament having lost 10 ODIs on the bounce, in addition to a warm-up loss against Afghanistan - and a record against the top five that reads three wins in 23 since their famous Champions Trophy win in 2017.
The fast bowling, Pakistan's stock trade, has seen one after another lose form and effectiveness, with Mohammad Amir, once the prince of this generation, the heir apparent to Wasim Akram, only barely squeezing into the final 15. Hasan Ali is the obvious leader of the attack, though a bowling average of nearly 60 since the Asia Cup last year is worrying, and Shaheen Afridi is the only one to keep both average and economy rate respectable over this period.
The batting looks to have caught up somewhat to modern standards, with Pakistan becoming the first team to reach three consecutive ODI totals of 340 earlier this month against England (though they lost all three matches). In any case, they must be wary of a West Indies side that pummelled New Zealand's bowling attack for 421, and the batting is a department Pakistan are not about to outgun West Indies in any time soon.
The odds may not be in Pakistan's favour, but that was the case in 2017, too, when, having barely qualified for the Champions Trophy, they caught fire and singed England and India in the semis and final, laughing the face of logic. The squad that defied those odds carried 11 of the players that return to England with that trophy tucked under their arms, and will wonder why they should be rated any inferior to the teams they left in their wake just two years ago.
Form guide
West Indies LLWLW (last five completed matches, most recent first)
Pakistan LLLLL
In the spotlight
Shimron Hetmyer is the second-youngest in the West Indies squad, but is assured of his place in Guyana's cricketing history at 22. An Under-19 World Cup winning captain, Hetmyer showcased his array of hitting ability which he married with consistency when England came calling earlier this year in a series West Indires squared 2-2. It isn't just the average and the numbers - four hundreds and two half-centuries in just 24 innings - but the technique and obvious promise the left-hander possesses. The biggest stage of them all is another fine opportunity to showcase his abilities.
Fakhar Zaman's average since the Asia Cup in September 2018 has dropped down to 32; it had been 76 until then. His strike rate has taken a hit too - 91 against a career strike rate of 98, and so has Pakistan's ODI form in this period. With Fakhar assigned a role of a dasher, one that most others in the side aren't equipped with, his ability to execute it is likely to be directly proportional to Pakistan's fortunes at the World Cup.
Team news
Pakistan have a fully fit squad to choose from, with the only real question being the bowling combination they go with. Shadab Khan's fitness means one of Mohammad Hafeez and Shoaib Malik could prove superfluous to requirements, though the vast experience of both means neither is an easy drop.
Pakistan (possible): 1 Imam-ul-Haq, 2 Fakhar Zaman 3 Babar Azam, 4 Haris Sohail/Mohammad Hafeez 5 Sarfaraz Ahmed (capt, wk), 6 Imad Wasim 7 Asif Ali, 8 Shadab Khan, 9 Mohammad Amir, 10 Hasan Ali 11 Shaheen Afridi
West Indies line-up is harder to predict, with Shannon Gabriel the only bowler to play no part in the warm-up against New Zealand.
West Indies (possible): 1 Chris Gayle 2 Evin Lewis 3 Shai Hope (wk) 4 Shimron Hetmyer 5 Darren Bravo 6 Jason Holder (capt) 7 Andre Russell 8 Ashley Nurse 9 Kemar Roach 10 Sheldon Cottrell 11 Oshane Thomas/Shannon Gabriel
Pitch and conditions
Overcast skies are expected for much of the game at Nottingham, but rain should not play spoilsport. It also gives each side the chance to bowl first and pit their swing bowlers against the opposition to see if overhead conditions can be utilised to their advantage.
Stats and trivia
Jason Holder is one of only two captains to have also captained his side at the previous World Cup; Eoin Morgan of England is the other one.
This is the fourth time in six World Cups that Pakistan begin their campaign against West Indies. The previous three openers saw them win once, while West Indies triumphed twice.
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Sussex sign Australia's Alex Carey for Vitality Blast
Published in
Cricket
Thursday, 30 May 2019 03:48
Sussex have signed Alex Carey, the Australia wicketkeeper-batsman, for their Vitality Blast campaign. Carey will link up again with Jason Gillespie, his coach at Adelaide Strikers, for the tournament in England, which begins after the conclusion of the World Cup.
Carey is Australia's vice-captain and first-choice gloveman for the 50-over tournament, and has been capped 38 times in the white-ball formats since debuting in 2018. He helped Strikers to the 2017-18 Big Bash title and has experience of playing club cricket in England with East Grinstead.
"I'm very excited to get the opportunity to play with Sussex," he said. "I played for East Grinstead in the Sussex Premier League a few years ago and now to play for the Sharks in the Blast is super exciting.
"I've heard the fans are the best in the country and I can't wait to join Dizzy and the guys in July."
A pocket-rocket batsman and tidy keeper, Carey has a T20 career strike rate of 128.93 and scored his maiden hundred in the format last year. His arrival comes after Sussex allowed Michael Burgess, who kept wicket during the club's run to Blast Finals Day last season, to leave for Warwickshire.
"We're delighted to be able to offer this opportunity to Alex and excited for him to be linking up with us," Gillespie, Sussex's head coach, said. "He's been impressive opening the batting for the Strikers in the Big Bash and now he's getting experience in the middle order with Australia.
"He can certainly clear the ropes but he's also able to read and adapt to different conditions. That versatility will give us options on how best to utilise his batting in this year's Blast. Alex is also a world-class keeper so to have a player like him joining the Sharks is a real coup for the club.
"I know Alex well from the Adelaide Strikers and he knows Sussex well from his time playing league cricket in the county, so I've no doubt he'll fit in nicely in our dressing room."
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BCCI suspends Rinku Singh for taking part in Abu Dhabi T20 tournament
Published in
Cricket
Thursday, 30 May 2019 04:38
Taking part in an "unauthorised" T20 tournament in Abu Dhabi has landed Uttar Pradesh batsman Rinku Singh in trouble, with the BCCI suspending him for three months.
The tournament in question was the Ramadan T20 Tournament, organised by Abu Dhabi Cricket earlier this month, in which Rinku led his team Deccan Gladiators to the title by smashing a 58-ball 104 and then picking up two wickets against New Medical Centre.
"Mr. Singh did not seek permission from the BCCI before taking part in the T20 league hence directly violating the BCCI rules and regulations," a BCCI statement said. "As per the BCCI norms, a player registered with the Board cannot play in any tournaments abroad without the Board's permission."
Rinku, the 21-year-old middle-order batsman and part-time offspinner, was in the India A squad for the ongoing four-day series against Sri Lanka, but the BCCI said he had been withdrawn for the second and final game, which starts on May 31 in Hubli. He didn't figure in the XI in the first game, which the Indians won by an innings and 205 runs.
"Mr. Rinku Singh therefore has been suspended with immediate effect for a period of three months starting June 1, 2019. He has been removed from the current India A squad set to play a multi-day game against Sri Lanka A starting May 31, 2019.
"The BCCI will not tolerate such violations in the future and strict actions will be taken if a player is found violating the BCCI rules and regulations."
Rinku, who made his name initially as more of a white-ball dasher, had a breakout season in the Ranji Trophy this past season, piling up 953 runs in ten games at an average of 105.88 with four centuries and three fifties. He was the third highest run-getter overall.
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Tony Palladino bags seven wickets as Derbyshire's seamers finish off Leicestershire
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Cricket
Thursday, 30 May 2019 05:17
Derbyshire 139 and 214 (Madsen 51) beat Leicestershire 120 (Palladino 5-29) and 168 by 65 runs
Derbyshire's seamers needed less than a session to take the six wickets needed to wrap up a 65-run win in their Specsavers County Championship match against Leicestershire at the Fischer County Ground.
Leicestershire resumed their second innings on 110 for 4, needing another 124 runs to win. Hassan Azad and Harry Dearden played solidly enough in the first half hour to give the home dressing room hope, although Azad did not add to his overnight score of 44 before he was dismissed.
With the score on 123, Derbyshire captain Billy Godleman asked for the ball to be changed. It was a risk, given it was his second, and therefore under the new rules this season, final such request, but the ball was changed and Luis Reece immediately obtained a little more swing, the left-armer finding the edge of Azad's bat and Wayne Madsen taking the catch. Reece then picked up the wicket of Dearden, winning a leg before decision with a full delivery into the pads.
Matt Critchley, at third slip to the bowling of Logan van Beek, juggled an edge from Dieter Klein four times before eventually hanging on. Lewis Hill and Will Davis edged Ravi Rampaul out-swingers to wicketkeeper Harvey Hosein, and last man Mohammad Abbas was bowled by Tony Palladino. It was the second wicket for the innings for Palladino, who turns 36 next month, and his seventh for the match as he added 2 for 30 to his first-innings 5 for 29.
Madsen, who made 47 in Derbyshire's first innings was the highest scorer for the match with his 51 in the second.
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