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The Edmonton Oilers named Dave Tippett as their new head coach on Tuesday.

He takes over a team that has missed the playoffs in 12 of the past 13 seasons, despite picking first overall for three straight years from 2010 to 2012 and again in 2015.

There is pressure to win while superstar captain Connor McDavid is still in his prime -- and under contract. McDavid, 22, has a deal that runs through 2025-26 with a $12.5 million cap hit.

The Oilers fired Todd McLellan in November, and used longtime NHL coach Ken Hitchcock for the remainder of the season.

Ken Holland was named the team's new general manager and president of hockey operations earlier this month and informed Hitchcock that he would not return as coach.

Tippett, 57, has 14 years' experience as an NHL head coach, most recently with the Coyotes from 2009 to '17. He has also coached the Dallas Stars and has a 553-413-28-120 record in the regular season and 21-26 in the postseason. He led the Stars to the Western Conference finals in 2008.

Sources: Faber set to make UFC return July 13

Published in Breaking News
Tuesday, 28 May 2019 10:50

A UFC Hall of Famer is returning after a lengthy absence.

Urijah Faber, a pioneer for lighter-weight fighters in MMA, will fight Ricky Simon in a bantamweight bout at UFC Sacramento on July 13 at Golden 1 Center, sources confirmed to ESPN on Tuesday. The Wrestling Observer Newsletter was the first to report the news.

Faber, 40, is a Sacramento native, so the return location is significant. The bout will not be the main event, sources said.

Faber (34-10) has not fought since UFC on Fox 22 in December 2016, a unanimous decision win over Brad Pickett in Sacramento. Faber announced that would be his retirement bout, but never wrote a letter to the UFC or removed himself from the USADA drug-testing pool to formally retire.

"The California Kid" was inducted into the UFC Hall of Fame in 2017. Faber, who became a father for the first time earlier this year, is a former World Extreme Cagefighting featherweight champion who defended the belt a record five times. He is also the patriarch of Team Alpha Male, one of MMA's top teams.

Faber's ability to draw fans with his bouts in the 145-pound division was one of the main reasons the UFC decided to acquire WEC and its lighter-weight classes in 2006. The belief at the time was that weight classes below 170 pounds would never be popular, but Faber's fights garnered big ratings and sold tickets.

Simon (15-1) is a rising star in the bantamweight division. The Washington state native, who trains out of Portland, Oregon, has won eight straight, including his first three fights in the UFC. Simon, 26, is a former Legacy Fighting Alliance bantamweight champion. He trains with the likes of Chael Sonnen and Paige VanZant.

UFC Sacramento does not yet have an announced main event. The card will also feature a bout between strawweight contenders Cynthia Calvillo and Livinha Souza.

Recent highlights from the world of athletics

Separate reports on Götzis Hypomeeting, Manchester BMC Grand PrixVitality Westminster Mile and Vitality London 10,000 action on a busy bank holiday weekend can be found by clicking each event name, while other recent highlights are below.

Simplyhealth Great Birmingham 10km, May 26

Doug Musson won the men’s title in 30:22 ahead of Leeds City’s Graham Rush with 30:40 and his fellow Notts AC runner Stuart Spencer with 31:05.

Birchfield Harriers’ Chloe Richardson claimed women’s race victory in 34:56 from Liverpool Pembroke & Sefton’s Kirsty Longley with 36:24.

World 10,000m medallist Jo Pavey, who has joined forces with Great Run title partner Simplyhealth to encourage families to exercise more together, was among those taking part and she ran 36:50 to finish third and top W45.

Rush and Longley were the leading masters at an event which included a masters international.

The official race starter was Hayley Carruthers, who hit the headlines and inspired many after cameras captured her crawling over the finish line in a PB performance at the London Marathon.

European Clubs Cup, Castellón, May 25-26

Turkish Enka won the women’s competition and Playas de Castellon the men’s as both British clubs – Birchfield’s men and Thames Valley Harriers’ women – finished fifth.

World champion Ramil Guliyev won the 200m in 20.32 and the 100m in 10.16 as Kyle de Escofet was third in 10.30, while Ivet Lalova-Collio claimed a 11.28/23.10 sprint double and Rachel Miller finished second in the shorter event with 11.49.

Ferguson Cheruiyot beat Marcin Lewandowski in both the 800m and 1500m and European champion Yasemin Can won over 1500m and 3000m.

Amelia Strickler threw a 17.83m PB to win the shot, while Cátia Azevedo won the 400m in 52.44 from Zoey Clark with 53.35.

NCAA East Preliminary, Jacksonville Fl, May 23

Grant Holloway ran 13.10 for the 110m hurdles and Daniel Roberts clocked 13.13.

Jaron Flournoy won his 200m semi-final in 20.09, while Japan’s Hakim Sani Brown won another in 20.13. Nick Gray ran a 20.14 PB in the first round.

BIGish Jumps & Throws Fest, Bedford, May 27

Naomi Ogbeta recorded a UK-leading 13.81m in the triple jump.

Nick Percy also excelled with a 61.68m discus throw while Abigail Irozuru’s 6.57m won the long jump.

Chris Baker achieved a 2.22m high jump.

IFAM International Outdoor, Oordegem-Lede, Belgium, May 25

Seb Rodger won the 400m hurdles in 49.60 for his quickest time in two years, while Alastair Chalmers came close to his own British junior record with 50.14.

Joe Reid finished fourth in the 800m in a PB of 1:47.77, while Isabelle Boffey also ran a PB in the women’s event as she was fifth in 2:03.84, achieving a European U20 qualifying standard.

England U20 and senior Combined Events Championships, Bedford, May 25-26

John Lane won the decathlon with a CBP score of 7786 points, while four athletes scored over 7000 points in the junior event which was won by Jack Turner with 7297 points.

Holly Mills won the under-20 heptathlon with a PB of 5722 points.

Nottwil Grand Prix, Switzerland, May 26

USA’s Daniel Romanchuk improved his own T54 5000m world record to 9:44.33, while Canada’s Brent Lakatos broke the T53 400m world record which had stood for nearly a decade, clocking 47.34 after contesting the 5000m a short while before.

USA’s Tatyana McFadden won both the women’s T54 5000m in 10:57.80 and 400m in 52.46, while Britain’s Hannah Cockroft won the T34 400m in 58.56.

Lee Valley, May 27

Lucy-Jane Matthews set a UK age-16 100m hurdles best of 13.53 (-0.4m/sec), improving on the 13.71 mark which had been set by Sally Gunnell.

Edinburgh Marathon Festival, Scotland, May 25-26

The Scottish running festival featured nine races including a full marathon, half-marathon, team relay, 10km and 5km, plus four junior events.

Kenya’s Dan Tanui won the men’s marathon in 2:30:13 from South London’s Ollie Garrod in 2:32:10 and JSK Running Club’s Tom Roche in 2:32:19.

The women’s title was claimed by Winchester’s Melanie Wilkins in 2:42:56 for a huge PB to improve on her 3:17:03 from 2014 as she dominated ahead of Fife’s Megan Crawford in 2:54:02 and Cardiff’s Carys Hughes in 2:54:07.

“This is my first time in Edinburgh and I’m very happy to win!” said Wilkins.

Karl Darcy (67:40) and Molly Browne (78:27) won the half-marathon, while 10km winners were Ewan Cameron (33:17) and Sarah Cumber (38:26) and the 5km victors were 16-year-old Cameron Bullen (17:40) and Catherine Meyer in a course record (18:37).

European Masters Mountain Running Championships, Janske Lazene, May 25

Britain claimed three individual medals in these uphill championships.

Colin Donnelly won the M55 event by 11 seconds, also beating all the M50 athletes. Guy Whitmarsh claimed M75 gold and Steve Herington won bronze in the M70 race.

Scotiabank Ottawa Marathon, Canada, May 25-26

Kenya’s Albert Korir ran 2:08:03 and Ethiopia’s Tigist Girma 2:26:34 to win the marathon in wet conditions.

Offenburg, 26 May

Germany’s European silver medallist Andreas Hofmann narrowly won with a world-leading 89.40m throw ahead of Bernhard Seifert’s 89.06m.

Salomon GoreTex Maxi-Race, Annecy, France, May 24

Britain’s Andrew Douglas and Kenya’s Lucy Wambui Murigi claimed victory in the first leg of the World Mountain Running Association World Cup.

Douglas clocked 75:10 for the 16.5km event, which took place on a point-to-point course with 945 metres of ascent and 990m of descent.

Murigi won in 1:30:27 ahead of Ireland’s Sarah McCormack in 1:32:33.

Osaka fights back from brink to reach second round

Published in Tennis
Tuesday, 28 May 2019 09:24

World number one Naomi Osaka avoided a premature end to her bid for a third straight Grand Slam title by coming from behind to reach the French Open second round.

Osaka, 21, twice had to stop Slovakia's Anna Karolina Schmiedlova serving out the match before winning 0-6 7-6 (7-4) 6-1 at Roland Garros in Paris.

Schmiedlova, ranked 90th in the world, made very few errors until victory was in sight, but the pressure of a career-best win told as Japan's Osaka fought back.

The US Open and Australian Open champion, playing in her first Grand Slam as the top seed, will face two-time Grand Slam champion Victoria Azarenka of Belarus in the second round.

Azarenka, 29, beat 2017 French Open champion Jelena Ostapenko 6-4 7-6 (7-4) in one of the most anticipated ties of the round.

Coming into Tuesday's opening match, Osaka had lost only once in the first round of a Grand Slam - at Roland Garros against Alison van Uytvanck in 2017.

That tally looked set to double after a dismal 22-minute first set in which Osaka won nine points.

Osaka, who has been struggling with a hand injury recently, never looked comfortable in the first half of the match, making 34 unforced errors in the opening two sets.

Schmiedlova, the 24-year-old playing her first match against Osaka and with a solitary win against a top-10 player, made only five unforced errors on her way to going a set and a break up.

But, tightening up as victory loomed, allowed Osaka to break back at 5-4 and 6-5.

From that point Schmiedlova never looked like threatening again.

Osaka's body language steadily improved, along with her ball striking, and she dropped only six more points to take the final five games.

While she did enough to advance, she will know she must improve with Azarenka - and potentially Serena Williams further down the line - looming.

1. Tradition and Innovation

China and Japan are the only national associations to organise ITTF World Tour events since the concept was born in April 1996.

The 2019 China Open represents the 33rdedition of what is widely regarded as the most prestigious event on the ITTF World Tour, which counts a total of 12 events throughout the year.

How could there be 33 editions between 1996 and 2019 you ask? That is because the China Open was held twice a year between 2004 and 2013 except for 2010.

Steeped in history and tradition, the China Open has also been a venue for new ideas with the 2018 edition marking the first ITTF World Tour event to feature the Mixed Doubles competition.

Also held every year since 1996, the Japan Open will be in its 24thedition when play kicks off in Sapporo this June.

By contrast, the Hong Kong Open is the ‘baby’ of the ITTF World Tour, having been added to the circuit for the first time in 2018.

2. Stars on show in Shenzhen!

Boasting an entry list stronger than most World Championships and Olympic Games, the 2019 China Open will be showcasing quite literally the very best talent that international table tennis has to offer.

Of the top 50 Men’s Singles players on the planet, 46 are in Shenzhen to battle it out for glory, while all of the top 35 world-ranked names are present.

The fact that there are more titles (171) won by Men’s Singles participants at the China Open than the total number of entries (153) underlines the incredible calibre on show!

Competition for the Women’s Singles title is set to be red hot as well. The top five seeds all have experience of winning it before: the Chinese quintet of Ding Ning (2014, 2016, 2017), Zhu Yuling (2015), Chen Meng (2012, 2013), Wang Manyu (2018) and Liu Shiwen (twice in 2009).

Liu will be looking to capitalise on her fine recent form, which saw her clinch gold at the 2019 World Table Tennis Championships in Budapest, having finished runner-up at the most recent ITTF World Tour event: the Qatar Open in March. The question now is ‘can she go on to win her first China Open in a decade?’

More history in the making for Ma Long?

Three-time World Champion, reigning Olympic Champion and former Grand Slam winner, Ma Long (CHN) is also the name on everyone’s lips when it comes to the China Open, where he will be defending his crown.

‘The Dragon’ has already won a record seven Men’s Singles titles at his native ITTF World Tour event and, if he makes it eight times this week, he will set yet another record of 28 career ITTF World Tour triumphs!

The 30-year-old equalled Vladimir Samsonov’s benchmark of 27 titles at this year’s Qatar Open on his comeback from injury and he’s not looked back since, winning his third straight World Championships last month in Budapest.

Make sure you don’t miss potentially more history in the making for Ma Long, who would add further weight to the argument that he is the greatest male table tennis player of all time.

Europe’s chances in China?

A notoriously tough event for players outside the host nation, there are only three non-Chinese names to have ever tasted success in the Singles competitions of the China Open:

Croatia’s Zoran Primorac (1997) and German duo, Timo Boll (2006) and Dimitrij Ovtcharov (2017), form that select group of players, while no player born outside China has ever lifted the Women’s Singles trophy.

Joining Boll and Ovtcharov as the other two Euroean seeds in Shenzhen are Liam Pitchford (ENG) and Mattias Falck (SWE). Interestingly, Pitchford was the last ever player to defeat Ma Long on the ITTF World Tour at the 2018 Bulgarian Open.

Meanwhile, Falck enters this event in the best form of his life having won a silver medal at the World Championships in Budapest exactly one month ago.

Double Trouble?

A couple of high-profile changes have been made in the Doubles game, as national associations appear to be testing different partnerships in the build-up to the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games.

In the Mixed Doubles, the 2019 World Championships winning pair of Xu Xin and Liu Shiwen (CHN) will not be teaming up for any of the upcoming events, as Chen Meng replaces Liu at the China Open, while Zhu Yuling is set to join Xu in Japan.

Also in Shenzhen, Tomokazu Harimoto and Kasumi Ishikawa (JPN) are back together after the combination was broken up prior to the World Championships, where the latter had played alongside Maharu Yoshimura.

Meanwhile in the Men’s Doubles, the proven partnership of Mattias Falck and Kristian Karlsson (SWE) will not be on show in Shenzhen, as the former focuses on his Singles game, meaning that Karlsson is joined by Jon Persson.

Who will be the heroes in Hong Kong?

Kazuhiro Yoshimura (JPN) was an unlikely hero in the very first Hong Kong Open last year, emerging from the qualification rounds to win his debut Men’s Singles title on the ITTF World Tour.

Wang Manyu (CHN) picked up the Women’s Singles crown in what was a remarkable 2018 for the 20-year-old talent, while compatriots Chen Xingtong and Sun Yingsha (CHN) held their nerve to win Women’s Doubles gold.

The biggest cheers of that unforgettable inaugural event came for local heroes, Ho Kwan Kit and Wong Chun Ting (HKG) as they celebrated the Men’s Doubles title in front of their fans.

Who will be the stars this time around? Click here to see the entries.

Japanese names jump out!

Sandwiched between the China and Japan Opens, the Hong Kong Open is still being taken very seriously indeed by the Japanese Table Tennis Association (JTTA), who are sending their star players to the Queen Elizabeth Stadium.

Tomokazu Harimoto (2nd seed), Koki Niwa (8th) and Jun Mizutani (9th) will have high hopes in the Men’s Singles competition, while it would almost be remarkable if Japan did not claim gold in the Women’s Singles, where Kasumi Ishikawa (1st), Mima Ito (2nd), Miu Hirano (4th), Saki Shibata (8th) and Hitomi Sato (9th) are all in the mix.

Masataka Morizono and Maharu Yoshimura will be gunning for glory in the Men’s Doubles, while Ishikawa and Hirano team up in the Women’s Doubles.

Rising stars in the Land of the Rising Sun 

That was the story at last year’s Japan Open, where Harimoto, then 14 years of age, defeated two World Champions, Ma Long in the quarters and Zhang Jike in the final, to claim Men’s Singles gold in breath-taking fashion.

Meanwhile, Mima Ito fought back from three games down to pull off a sensational semi-final comeback victory over Chen Xingtong before going on to beat Wang Manyu 4-2.

Those victories for Harimoto and Ito made them the first Japanese players in five years to win the Men’s and Women’s Singles titles on home soil.

China set to ‘spoil party’ in Sapporo?

For the upcoming 2019 Japan Open, Team China look very keen for a different outcome to last year, as they send a full-strength line-up to Sapporo, including the highest ranked male and female players in the world, Fan Zhendong and Ding Ning, both top seeds.

Harimoto (4th seed) is the only non-Chinese player to break into the top five seedings across the Men’s and Women’s Singles competitions, with Lin Gaoyuan, Xu Xin, Ma Long, Liang Jingkun, Chen Meng, Wang Manyu, Liu Shiwen and Zhu Yuling all due to battle it out in Japan.

Will they make amends one year on?

You won’t miss any of the action!

In addition to extensive coverage on internationally broadcast TV, you can watch live streaming of multiple tables at all three ITTF World Tour events on itTV!

ITTF.com is the place for all live blog updates, features and interviews, while the ITTF’s social channels will be awash with the very best video and photographic content coming straight from court and behind the scenes! Follow the action on FacebookInstagramTwitterYoutube and Weibo.

An amazing month of elite international table tennis and gripping stories are coming your way! Enjoy the ride!

Leicester head coach Murphy gets three-game ban

Published in Rugby
Tuesday, 28 May 2019 09:05

Leicester Tigers head coach Geordan Murphy has received a three-game ban for verbally abusing match officials.

The Irishman accepted two charges brought by the RFU following his side's 32-31 defeat by Bath in their final Premiership fixture on 18 May.

The 41-year-old will be banned for the first three matches of the 2019-20 season and not be able to coach.

Murphy has also been fined £1,500 and told to write a letter of apology to the match officials.

He has been ordered to write to referee Sean Davey, who was television match official at Welford Road, and send copies to the other officials at the game.

Murphy will also have to write an open letter to Leicester players and other staff apologising for his actions.

Tigers finished 11th in the Premiership this season after losing 15 of their 22 games.

RFU judicial officer Jeremy Summers said: "While the disappointment of the club's season is well known, criticising the TMO as Mr Murphy did was both wholly unacceptable and entirely inconsistent with the values of the game.

"Unfortunately match officials continue to be subject to improper attack, and those that find themselves before disciplinary panels in respect of such conduct should expect to be sanctioned appropriately."

Gilliland Returns To K&N East

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 28 May 2019 08:27

ROSEVILLE, Calif. — Todd Gilliland will return to compete in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East, joining with Bill McAnally Racing for Saturday’s race at Memphis Int’l Raceway.

Gilliland, a two-time champion in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West who now drives for Kyle Busch Motorsports in the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series, will team with BMR regulars Derek Kraus and Brittney Zamora.

Kraus, driver of the No. 16 NAPA AUTO PARTS Toyota Camry that Gilliland piloted at BMR, leads the championship standings as the K&N East heads to the three-quarter-mile Tennessee tri-oval for the 150-lap event.

Gilliland will drive BMR’s No. 19 NAPA Power Premium Plus/NGK Toyota Camry at Memphis – filling in for Hailie Deegan, who will be competing in an ARCA Series race over the weekend at Pocono Raceway in Pennsylvania.

Gilliland, 19, has 19 career wins in NASCAR K&N Pro Series competition. He won K&N West titles with BMR and NAPA in 2016 and 2017.

He has one previous series start at Memphis. In that event two years ago, he appeared headed for a win; but a flat tire with less than 20 laps to go took him out of contention and left him to finish eighth.

Kraus – a 17-year-old NASCAR Next driver from Stratford, Wisconsin – has won two of the four K&N East races this year and has a four-point lead in the championship standings. He kicked things off with a victory in the season opener at Florida’s New Smyrna Speedway and scored his other win in the second of two races of a doubleheader at South Boston Speedway in Virginia.

Zamora – a 20-year-old series rookie from Kennewick, Washington – drives the No. 99 NAPA Filters/ENEOS Toyota Camry. She also had a big weekend in the K&N West doubleheader at Tucson – winning her first career pole award, leading her first laps of competition in pacing the field for 26 circuits, and finishing third in just her fourth series start.

SPEED SPORT Power Rankings

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 28 May 2019 09:07

The Memorial Day weekend is now in the rearview, which means it is time for a new edition of the SPEED SPORT Power Rankings! Who is No. 1 this week? Click below to find out!

Modifieds Returning To Martinsville Speedway

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 28 May 2019 09:15

MARTINSVILLE, Va. – For the first time since 2010, the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour will return to Martinsville Speedway in 2020 for the MaxPro Window Films 200.

The modifieds, which were a fixture at Martinsville for decades, will compete in a 200-lap race on May 8, 2020 as part of the spring race weekend.

“We get asked a lot about the modifieds a lot – from fans, from drivers, from media,” Martinsville Speedway President Clay Campbell said. “Now, we can say, ‘Yes, we will have them back next year.’ These cars are such an important part of Martinsville Speedway history and the time is right to bring them back.”

North Carolina-based Maxpro Window Films, an industry leader in window film technology, has signed on to sponsor the race.

“Maxpro Window Films is excited to be a supporter of and partner with Martinsville Speedway and NASCAR,” Executive Vice President of Sales and Marketing Elizabeth Dillon said. “Not only are NASCAR fans a natural market for Maxpro’s automotive line of window films, but a lot of our employees and management team have deep roots in the Martinsville and Henry County area and we are proud to be associated with an organization with the history and tradition of Martinsville Speedway, so it’s a good fit for Maxpro.

“The modifieds have always been a fan favorite at Martinsville and Maxpro is thrilled to welcome them back for the Maxpro Window Films 200 and to sponsor their return. It’s always an exciting race and having it under the lights will be special. We look forward to an exciting weekend and we are thrilled to be part of it.”

The modified division first raced at Martinsville in 1960 and raced every year through 2002. Modifieds later returned to Martinsville in 2005 and competed at the track through the 2010 season. Virginian Ray Hendrick, who also is the career leader in overall wins at Martinsville with 20, is the all-time leader in modified wins at Martinsville with 13. NASCAR Hall of Famer Richie Evans is second with 10.

In qualifying for a 1986 modified event, Greg Sacks set the Martinsville Speedway track record for all divisions with a one-lap average of 101.014 miles-per-hour, a record that still stands.

“The NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour and Martinsville Speedway are a perfect match,” said Brandon Thompson, NASCAR Managing Director, Touring Series. “When you talk history and legacy – names like Evans, (Jerry) Cook and (Geoff) Bodine are synonymous with Martinsville. The Modified division and Martinsville Speedway are the cornerstones on which the sport was built. We’re excited about adding names like (Doug) Coby, (Justin) Bonsignore, and maybe even (Ryan) Preece – a new generation of Modified racing stars to the half-mile and look forward to being part of an incredible race weekend.”

The Maxpro Window Films 200 will add to an already exciting 2020 season at the historic half-mile speedway. The NASCAR Cup Series race will be under the lights in the spring, and the NASCAR Xfinity Series will return to the Speedway for the first time since 2006 as part of a triple-header weekend in the fall that will be the final race before the Championship Round of the NASCAR Playoffs for all three national touring series.

“I don’t know that I’ve ever felt this much excitement about an upcoming season at Martinsville Speedway,” Campbell said. “From the fans to competitors and media, it’s industry-wide excitement and we are all really looking forward to it.”

Scoring: NCAA Men's Championship

Published in Golf
Tuesday, 28 May 2019 03:43

The NCAA Division I Men's Championship is underway at Blessings Golf Club in Fayetteville, Arkansas. Here's a look at scoring for the match-play portion.

Quarterfinals:

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