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Ref ends U.S.-Mexico early amid anti-gay chants

Published in Breaking News
Thursday, 15 June 2023 23:55

The United States men's national team's 3-0 win over Mexico in the Concacaf Nations League semifinal on Thursday was halted before the completion of second-half stoppage time due to the referee's discretion.

Referee Ivan Barton, who had already handed out four red cards in the game, paused the game in the 89th minute due to anti-gay chanting heard from the crowd at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas. Play resumed, and with four minutes left to go in injury time, Barton blew the final whistle after a goal kick by U.S. goalkeeper Matt Turner was once again greeted by the anti-gay chant.

Concacaf told ESPN after the match that the game was not abandoned due to federation protocols regarding the chant, but at the "referee's discretion."

The governing body said in a statement later on Friday: "Concacaf strongly condemns the discriminatory chanting by some fans during the CNL Semifinal match between Mexico and the United States.

"Chants heard during the game led to the activation of the anti-discrimination protocol by the match officials. Additionally, security staff ejected several fans for engaging in unacceptable behavior in the stadium," the organisation said.

"These incidents were extremely disappointing and tarnished what should have been a positive occasion to showcase high-quality football in our region.

"The Confederation is in the process of urgently establishing further details and reports from security and match officials and will make a further statement in short order."

The Mexican Football Federation (FMF) has struggled in recent years with curtailing the anti-gay chant that is typically yelled during opposing goal kicks.

FIFA has issued fines to the FMF because of the action of fans, which included a $108,000 sanction in January for the chant at the 2022 World Cup.

The FMF has made attempts to eradicate the discriminatory yells through avenues such as public service announcements, social media posts and pre-game announcements from players.

Concacaf also announced earlier in the day that it had relaunched a "What's Wrong is Wrong" anti-discrimination campaign that aims to "raise awareness about the importance of inclusivity and equality." As part of the campaign, Concacaf said there would be increased security and a "more proactive approach to ejecting fans who engage in discriminatory chants."

Whether U.S Soccer acts in a more rigid manner remains up in the air. In April, the federation enacted a policy that could punish discriminatory chants during games. If derogatory chants are heard, a team could be banned from taking part in an international game in the U.S. for two years. A second violation would result in a five-year sanction, and a third would be a permanent ban.

A source told ESPN earlier this year that as long as Mexico makes a good faith attempt to eradicate the chants, there wouldn't be any sanctions. There's also uncertainty about what threshold would need to be crossed for the ban to potentially go into effect.

LOS ANGELES – Given his colorful history at the U.S. Open, Phil Mickelson was pleased with his 1-under 69 to start the week at Los Angeles Country Club. Whether he’s pleased with the state of professional golf remains unknown.

Mickelson managed to get to 3 under for the round through 13 holes but bogeyed Nos. 6 and 7 (he started on No. 10). He concluded his round with a par at the ninth, where he had to back off a putt after being heckled by a fan for more than 30 seconds. He finished the day in a tie for 25th and well off the lead held by Xander Schauffele and Rickie Fowler.

“The course is a great setup. They moved some tees up and they put some pins where they allowed us to get off to a good start,” said Mickelson, who has never won the U.S. Open but has six runner-up finishes in the national championship. “But it will play a lot harder as we go on.”

Last week’s announcement that the PGA Tour had reached a “framework” agreement with the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabi, however, was not something he was interested in addressing.

“I don’t want to detract right now from this tournament and where I’m at,” Mickelson said. “I’m playing well, I want to get myself in contention and I really don’t want to [talk]. I’ll talk about it maybe after [the tournament].”

Mickelson joined LIV Golf last year and has been an outspoken critic of the Tour and its leadership.

LOS ANGELES – Sam Bennett got his first taste of a major championship at last year’s U.S. Open. Ten months later, he stunned the world with one of the greatest amateur performances in Masters’ history, playing in the final group of the third round alongside Jon Rahm and Brooks Koepka.

Coming into this week, Bennett was no longer a wide-eyed kid with zero expectations. The USGA thrust him into the spotlight with another meaningful group, this time teeing it up with last year’s winner Matt Fitzpatrick and the reigning Champion Golfer of the Year Cam Smith

Surely, there had to be some pressure in Bennett’s mind, right?

“There's no nerves. I feel like I belong,” he said.

“The experience I got playing the weekend at the Open, the weekend at the Masters, I feel like I belong and I'm comfortable on this stage.”

Bennett continues to back up those words. The former Texas A&M Aggie bested both Smith and Fitzpatrick Thursday, posting a 3-under 67 that has him tied for seventh.

This round could have been even better, but back-to-back bogeys to close dropped Bennett out of the top-5. Still, he looks destined for a third-straight made cut in majors.

What makes the 23-year-old so successful at the biggest tournaments? Bennett, who won the U.S. Amateur Championship last year, believes he thrives on difficult courses that require accuracy off the tee and perhaps minimize the variance in putting. He hit 11-of-13 fairways and 14 greens in regulation during the opening round.

And the young star has an old-school mentality. He doesn’t like stressing too much over his TrackMan numbers and doesn’t overcomplicate the game. So far in his career, that feels like a good recipe for these high-stakes events.

“I tend to play good under some pressure because I'm not thinking of anything, and I just let my body take over,” he said.

LOS ANGELES – After breezing through a half-dozen interviews and satisfying a long line of autograph-seekers, Rickie Fowler hung around the scoring area long enough to congratulate the newest member of the 62 Club.

Fowler had held the U.S. Open single-round scoring record by himself for less than 25 minutes before Xander Schauffele rolled through and matched him with an 8-under round of his own. No one else in the early wave at Los Angeles Country Club shot better than 67, the early record-setters seeming to defy belief.

“I personally did not see that,” Scottie Scheffler said, “but I guess it was out there. That’s some serious golf.”

The afternoon starters approached the mark but ultimately fell short in a round in which six players shot 65 or lower on a favorable day that felt more like the old L.A. Open than the national championship.

Of course, there were ample reasons why a pair of Cali kids each carded their lowest major round by three strokes and wiped out 127 years of U.S. Open history in less than a half-hour. Separated by a single group in the morning wave, Fowler and Schauffele warmed up in a drizzle and then played under overcast skies, enough to take some of the fire out of the wickedly fast greens. There was virtually no wind, making the fairways (already 43 yards wide on average) play true to their massive size. And the USGA adopted a kinder, gentler setup (“There were definitely some gettable pins,” Scheffler said) that allowed the 156-man field to get through in a reasonable timeframe.

“It’s not really what you expect playing a U.S. Open,” Schauffele said, “but monkey see, monkey do. Was just chasing Rickie up the leaderboard. Glad he was just in front of me.”

Fowler set the pace by carding a tournament-record 10 birdies, a continuation of the rejuvenated form that has seen him end his prolonged slump and return to the top 50 in the world. Since reuniting nine months ago with swing coach Butch Harmon, Fowler has morphed from a below-average ball-striker on Tour to one of the game’s best. Thursday was an important step, the first time in four years that he’s actually thrust himself into the mix at a major. Walking off the green, he nonchalantly told caddie Ricky Romano that this was how he’d been playing of late – he just dropped a few more putts.

“It’s been trending in the right direction,” Romano said, “and it just kind of all came together today. Golf is a lot of confidence, and I think he’s just built a lot of it.” 

No one should have been surprised by Schauffele’s torrid run. Of the world-class players without a major title, Schauffele has played the best in the game’s biggest events over the past six years, particularly in this championship, with six consecutive top-15s.

“It’s built for his game,” said his caddie, Austin Kaiser. He’s consistent. Complete. Unflappable.

Even with Schauffele’s game in gear, Kaiser said he would have taken a 3-under start at the beginning of the day and stayed home. Maybe a 64 was out there, he said, if someone really got cooking.

But a 62?

“It’s unspeakable out here,” Kaiser said.

Schauffele, however, seemed less impressed. It might have been a historic day – the USGA collected artifacts from both players to store in their museum – but ultimately it didn’t mean much to him. In interviews he was quick to downplay the achievement. 

“It’s just Thursday,” he said. “It’s literally just the first day of a tournament. It's a good start.”

His reluctance to gloat was likely twofold: The Open is one-quarter complete, and the USGA is likely to tighten the screws over the next three rounds. There was a general sense that the first round was the easiest LACC would play for the entire week, and the setup czars might be keen to exact some revenge.

“I think the USGA will be a bit frustrated that the number was that low today,” Scheffler said.

“I’m sure after Rickie did what he did they will make it quite a bit harder for us,” added Max Homa.

Smiled Kaiser, “I’m sure the USGA is kind of sweating right now.”

John Bodenhamer, the USGA’s chief championships officer, warned the field that, even with LACC’s unique features, “it’ll be a good ol’ fashioned U.S. Open” in spots.

“We haven’t thrown in the towel, that’s for sure,” Bodenhamer said. “It’s going to be tough. That is what we do.”

The opening-round scoring average (71.3) suggested otherwise, the lowest mark – by nearly a stroke – in tournament history. But with a dry forecast that should allow the USGA to have complete control of the setup, it shouldn't stay forgiving for long. They can deprive the greens of water. Cut holes on humps, mounds and knobs. Extend some tee markers. Dial up the torture meter. Bodenhamer promised a "spicier" setup.

“You just wait until this place firms up,” Schauffele said. “It’s going to be nasty.”

GolfChannel.com senior writers Rex Hoggard and Ryan Lavner are on site in Los Angeles, California, for the 123rd U.S. Open. They are providing daily "mini-pods" recapping each round at LACC on the Golf Channel Podcast with Rex & Lav.

Day 1

So. Much. Red. It was a record-breaking first round at Los Angeles Country Club, where a pair of 62s were shot on Thursday. Does that take away the "U.S. Open" feel? And is the USGA about to unleash the beast?

Red cards fly as U.S. trounces Mexico in NL semi

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 15 June 2023 23:06

Christian Pulisic scored late in the first half and early in the second, Ricardo Pepi added a late goal and the United States beat Mexico 3-0 on Thursday night to reach the CONCACAF Nations League final against Canada.

Pulisic, who was making his first start for club or country since April 15, put the U.S. ahead in the 37th minute and doubled the lead in the 46th. He has 25 goals in 59 international appearances, including four goals against Mexico. Pepi scored in the 79th, five minutes after entering.

The U.S, and Mexico each finished with nine players after Weston McKennie, Sergiño Dest, César Montes and Gerardo Arteaga received red cards in a testy second half that included play being stopped in the 90th minute by Salvadoran referee Iván Barton because of anti-gay chants from the crowd.

Play resumed, but so did the chants, and Barton ended the match in the eighth minute of 12 scheduled minutes of stoppage time.

McKennie and Dest will be suspended for Sunday's final after picking up the red cards.

"I'm upset, the game didn't need to turn into this," said Pulisic. "We don't expect this to happen anymore. Now we are missing two good players for the final."

Christian Pulisic, right, and Gio Reyna celebrate after a U.S. goal against Mexico in the Concacaf Nations League.

Getty Images


With its first three-goal victory over Mexico in 23 years, the U.S. stretched its unbeaten streak against El Tri to six (three wins, three draws), matching the Americans' longest, from 2011-15.

B.J. Callaghan coached his first game as the second U.S. interim coach after Anthony Hudson quit to join a Qatari club. Shortly before the game, news broke that the U.S. was set to rehire Gregg Berhalter as its permanent manager.

Folarin Balogun made his debut, starting at forward after the 21-year-old decided to play for the U.S. over England and Nigeria.

The U.S. went ahead when Giovanni Reyna poked the ball off Montes and then while prone, poked it forward off Jorge Sánchez. Pulisic burst behind the defenders, took a pair of touches and from the edge of the 6-yard box slotted the ball past goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa.

"We struggled a lot with the ball, things didn't go well at all, it's a loss that hurts us," said Mexico's Ochoa. "We feel sorry for the fans. This is the beginning of a process and we have to learn from this."

McKennie started the move for the second goal with a long pass down a flank to Timothy Weah, who put in a cross. A sprinting Pulisic got behind Israel Reyes and Sánchez, stabbing the ball in with his left foot from 6 yards,

Montes was given a straight red card in the 69th for kicking Balogun while the two were battling for the ball. McKennie was given a red card two minutes later for placing a hand on Sánchez's neck during the ensuing argument and for shoving.

Pepi scored his seventh international goal, taking a pass from Dest, taking a touch and rounding Ochoa. Dest and Arteaga were sent off in the 86th for hitting one another above the neck.

Reyna, his hair dyed blond, made his first start for club or country since March 27, also the last time Dest and goalkeeper Matt Turner had appeared in any match.

Canada beat Panama 2-0 in the opener on goals by Jonathan David in the 25th and Alphonso Davies in the 69th. Mexico and Panama meet in the third-place match.

Toronto Nationals have entered into a deal with the two-time PSL champions Lahore Qalandars to outsource their coaching staff headed by director of cricket and head coach Aqib Javed to lead the franchise in the upcoming Global T20 [GT20]. The team had also picked four Pakistani players - Shahid Afridi, Zaman Khan, Saim Ayub, and Abdullah Shafique - in the recent draft.

"We are excited about our association with Lahore Qalandars," Nationals owner Manzoor Chaudhry said. "Cricket being a global sport is proliferating and connecting cricketing communities together. They won the PSL title twice and contributed a lot in Pakistan with their player development program and with such credibility, their assistance will be invaluable. So it's an incredible opportunity for us to rope them into Canada to manage our team. We are looking forward to forging a long-term deal in the future."

The deal will see the Qalandars' team management taking all cricketing decisions for Nationals. Apart from Aqib, full-time bowling coach Waqas Ahmed, fielding coach Shahzad Butt, and performance analyst Nabeel Edger Pace will also be involved.

Former Australia fast bowler, Geoff Lawson was Nationals' head coach the last time GT20 was held in 2019. They made it to the playoffs only to crash out in the Eliminator. In 2018, they finished bottom with Phil Simmons as head coach.

"We are thrilled to be a part of the GT20 here in Canada and assisting Toronto Nationals with setting up the roster and providing them our full coaching staff in the upcoming season," Lahore Qalandars owner, Sameen Rana said. "In our responsibility, we will help the franchise to achieve their winning ambitions in the league. The deal is a first of a kind and it is initially for a season and we will see how it goes.

"For us, it could also serve as a talent scouting on some unseen players from associates countries. Who knows we could find another Tim David out of another associate country who outshines and become a part of a bigger cricket ecosystem."
The GT20 returns after a four-year gap. The first two seasons took place in 2018 and 2019, but following payment disputes and the Covid pandemic, the league has not been held.

The tournament has since undergone a revamp, with the title holders Winnipeg Hawks and Edmonton Royals not part of the competition anymore. Their places have been taken by Surrey Jaguars and Mississauga Panthers. Each team has included two marquee players and three Canadian players from the national side, as well as three emerging Canadian players, and four players from Associate countries in their roster of 16 at a cost of US $579,500.

The GT20 will resume on July 20, with the final scheduled for August 6.

Sources: Berhalter set to return as USMNT coach

Published in Breaking News
Thursday, 15 June 2023 22:00

Gregg Berhalter is set to return as manager of the United States men's national team, sources told ESPN on Thursday night, confirming a report by The Athletic.

The deal is close to being finalized and would run through the 2026 World Cup, sources said. An official announcement by U.S. Soccer on Berhalter, who led the U.S. at the 2022 World Cup, is expected Friday.

Berhalter, 49, was hired in December 2018 after the failure to qualify for that year's tournament and coached the Americans to the Round of 16 of last year's World Cup, where they were eliminated with a 3-1 loss to the Netherlands. The U.S. gets an automatic berth in the 2026 World Cup as co-host with Mexico and Canada.

Berhalter led the Americans to 37 wins, 11 losses and 12 draws and was discussing a new contract with USSF sporting director Earnie Stewart when the family of Giovanni Reyna, upset with his lack of playing time in Qatar, contacted the USSF about an allegation involving Berhalter in a 1992 encounter with the woman who became his wife.

Gio Reyna's parents -- former U.S. captain Claudio Reyna and midfielder Danielle Egan -- were angered that Berhalter discussed his issues with Gio at a management conference after the World Cup that, while not identifying Gio, clearly were about the 20-year-old midfielder.

The USSF retained the Alston and Bird legal team to investigate the 1992 encounter, and the law firm said in a report released March 13 that while Berhalter's conduct "likely constituted the misdemeanor crime of assault on a female," he did not improperly withhold information when he was hired.

"There is no basis to conclude that employing Mr. Berhalter would create legal risks for an organization," the report said.

Stewart announced Jan. 26 that he was quitting and was replaced in late April by Southampton director of football operations Matt Crocker, who was tasked with leading the search for a new coach. Crocker said he planned to make a decision by late summer.

Earlier Thursday, Jesse Marsch's agent, Ron Waxman, tweeted his client would not become the American coach. Marsch had been the presumed favorite to land the job.

Anthony Hudson, one of Berhalter's assistants, became interim coach on Jan. 4 and coached the Americans to two wins, one loss and two draws, then quit on May 30 to become coach of the Qatari club Al Markhiya.

B.J. Callaghan, another assistant, replaced Hudson and led the Americans for the CONCACAF Nations League semifinal against Mexico on Thursday night, a resounding 3-0 win that puts the Americans through to the finals against Canada.

ESPN's Jeff Carlisle and Jeremy Schaap contributed to this story. Information from The Associated Press was also used.

Christian Pulisic scored late in the first half and early in the second, Ricardo Pepi added a late goal and the United States beat Mexico 3-0 on Thursday night to reach the CONCACAF Nations League final against Canada.

Pulisic, who was making his first start for club or country since April 15, put the U.S. ahead in the 37th minute and doubled the lead in the 46th. He has 25 goals in 59 international appearances, including four goals against Mexico. Pepi scored in the 79th, five minutes after entering.

The U.S, and Mexico each finished with nine players after Weston McKennie, Sergiño Dest, César Montes and Gerardo Arteaga received red cards in a testy second half that included play being stopped in the 90th minute by Salvadoran referee Iván Barton because of anti-gay chants from the crowd.

Play resumed, but so did the chants, and Barton ended the match in the eighth minute of 12 scheduled minutes of stoppage time.

McKennie and Dest will be suspended for Sunday's final after picking up the red cards.

"I'm upset, the game didn't need to turn into this," said Pulisic. "We don't expect this to happen anymore. Now we are missing two good players for the final."

Christian Pulisic, right, and Gio Reyna celebrate after a U.S. goal against Mexico in the Concacaf Nations League.

Getty Images


With its first three-goal victory over Mexico in 23 years, the U.S. stretched its unbeaten streak against El Tri to six (three wins, three draws), matching the Americans' longest, from 2011-15.

B.J. Callaghan coached his first game as the second U.S. interim coach after Anthony Hudson quit to join a Qatari club. Shortly before the game, news broke that the U.S. was set to rehire Gregg Berhalter as its permanent manager.

Folarin Balogun made his debut, starting at forward after the 21-year-old decided to play for the U.S. over England and Nigeria.

The U.S. went ahead when Giovanni Reyna poked the ball off Montes and then while prone, poked it forward off Jorge Sánchez. Pulisic burst behind the defenders, took a pair of touches and from the edge of the 6-yard box slotted the ball past goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa.

"We struggled a lot with the ball, things didn't go well at all, it's a loss that hurts us," said Mexico's Ochoa. "We feel sorry for the fans. This is the beginning of a process and we have to learn from this."

McKennie started the move for the second goal with a long pass down a flank to Timothy Weah, who put in a cross. A sprinting Pulisic got behind Israel Reyes and Sánchez, stabbing the ball in with his left foot from 6 yards,

Montes was given a straight red card in the 69th for kicking Balogun while the two were battling for the ball. McKennie was given a red card two minutes later for placing a hand on Sánchez's neck during the ensuing argument and for shoving.

Pepi scored his seventh international goal, taking a pass from Dest, taking a touch and rounding Ochoa. Dest and Arteaga were sent off in the 86th for hitting one another above the neck.

Reyna, his hair dyed blond, made his first start for club or country since March 27, also the last time Dest and goalkeeper Matt Turner had appeared in any match.

Canada beat Panama 2-0 in the opener on goals by Jonathan David in the 25th and Alphonso Davies in the 69th. Mexico and Panama meet in the third-place match.

Nikola Jokic has had a media tour unlike those usually seen from a Finals MVP.

It certainly wouldn't be hard for him to bask in the glory of it all. Jokic's performance in leading the Denver Nuggets to the franchise's first title was historic -- he became the first player in NBA history to lead all players in points, rebounds, and assists in a single postseason. There wasn't a reporter in the building on Monday who didn't want the center's attention come the final buzzer.

But attention seemed like the thing Jokic wanted least. With the nonchalance of a man who can now go home, the Serbian star has dealt with the media spotlight throughout the week with a measured calmness. Here are the best moments of his straightforward handling of this week's final blitz of attention:

No place like home

Jokic's first thoughts after completing a historic run for both himself and his team? That he could get back home now. Jokic's job was to get the Nuggets the Larry O'Brien Trophy, and it was a job completed -- as Nuggets fans have come to expect in just about all aspects of the center's performances -- with clinical efficiency.

Champagne problems

Popping champagne in the locker room is almost as much of a tradition for recently crowned champions as lifting the trophy, a tradition that the Nuggets didn't skip out on. Jokic, however, seemed somewhat unprepared for the customary spraying of champagne, caught on film taking a swig from the bottle before putting it down, somewhat confused as to what to do next. Eventually, he did give it a half-hearted shake.

No parade, no complaints

The story of Jokic's return timetable didn't fade quickly. After the game, Jokic was asked if he was looking forward to the customary celebratory parade. For most players, this is a cut-and-dry "yes" -- it's a ticker tape celebration traversing the length of the city, all in your honor. Who wouldn't want that? Jokic, apparently. Ever unenthused, the center briefly put his head in his hands before deadpanning "No. I need to go home."

Joker's last hurrah

After his initial reaction to the championship parade date, you'd be forgiven for wondering if Jokic would even show up Thursday morning. Show up he did, however, and confirmed that he had come around on enjoying the parade. Addressing an enthusiastic crowd of Nuggets faithful, Jokic's final expletive-punctuated statement before his presumed departure back to Serbia left Denver in cheers.

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