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Iga Swiatek might not have been able to keep the lid of the French Open trophy in her grasp, but another dominant victory at Roland Garros showed the world number one has no intention of loosening her grip of the women's game.

The 22-year-old from Poland won her third title in four years at the clay-court Grand Slam by digging in to win 6-2 5-7 6-4 against Czech opponent Karolina Muchova on Saturday.

Not everything went to plan for Swiatek, who led 6-2 3-0 before Muchova's fightback created tension for the world number one.

Ultimately, she regained composure when it mattered, winning the final three games from a break down in the decider.

Then came another moment of panic in the post-match celebrations.

Seconds after being presented with the Coupe Suzanne Lenglen, which she also lifted in 2020 and 2022, fear spread across Swiatek's face when the lid flew off the trophy when she was shaking it in celebration.

"I honestly felt like I was holding it with my finger, so I guess all the emotions caused that," the four-time major champion said with a smile.

Looking at the trophy in front of her during her news conference, she said: "Sorry. I don't mean to be disrespectful.

"I'm glad the trophy is fine and it won't happen again - probably.

"I just hope I'm going have a chance to hold it again in future years."

After extending her recent dominance on the Paris clay, it looks a strong possibility.

Swiatek has been the dominant player on the WTA Tour over the past 15 months, replacing the retired Ashleigh Barty as the world number one last year and holding the top ranking for 62 consecutive weeks.

This season she has come under pressure from Belarus' Australian Open champion Aryna Sabalenka - who could have replaced her as number one here - and Kazakhstan's Wimbledon winner Elena Rybakina.

Having won the past five majors between them and led the tour this season, the trio have become known as the emerging 'big three' of the Women's Tennis Association (WTA).

"I don't really analyse that," Swiatek said.

"I know that this is something that kind of you guys created and I understand that fans love that. I'm trying to just be focused on my work.

"I look at my clay-court season and I see at every tournament I really played consistently.

"I reached quarter-finals, semi-finals, finals. I won Stuttgart, I won this tournament. I'm focused on myself and I don't care about the other two players."

Clay is the surface where she particularly excels and Swiatek looked on course for another straightforward victory in her third Roland Garros final.

Leading by a set and a break, Swiatek was heading towards a quick win before 43rd-ranked Muchova fought back to make a contest of what had been a one-sided final.

Showing signs of tension in the deciding set, Swiatek fell a break down at 4-3 and had to show her resolve to come through.

"After so many ups and downs, I kind of stopped thinking about the score," she said.

"I wanted to use my intuition more, because I knew that I can play a little bit better if I'm going to get a little bit more loosened up. It helped, for sure, in the third set."

Swiatek, who turned 22 earlier in the tournament, is the youngest woman to win consecutive Roland Garros titles since Monica Seles in the early 1990s.

Tournament director Amelie Mauresmo said she expects Swiatek to win "many more titles" in the future, and did not rule out the Polish player from emulating Rafael Nadal's record of 14 titles.

"I don't know what I'm kind of capable of," said Swiatek, who also won last year's US Open.

"I will work day by day to play the best game possible and to develop as a player.

"I'm not setting any crazy records or goals for myself. I know that keeping it cool is the best way to do it for me. I'm trying more to do that."

This will not be your typical U.S. Open.

But will we get a typical U.S. Open champion?

The Los Angeles Country Club (par 70, 7,423 yards) could be one of the lowest-scoring U.S. Opens in recent memory. With benign weather conditions expected, the course's only defenses will be brilliant architecture, uneven lies and firm-and-fast surfaces. Don't get me wrong, it won't be a pushover, but if guys are flushing it, they can score.

The five par-3s, ranging from potentially 80 yards to 290 yards, are one of the more unique aspects of LACC. The finishing stretch, Nos. 16-18, is a brute. There is room for lots of variety around the greens, which makes chipping and bunker play a key separator. The fairways are some of the widest we've seen at a U.S. Open, though they'll be firm and angles will still be important, so don't ignore good drivers. It's just strong approach play, especially over 200 yards, and good scrambling should win out over everything else – and this is a U.S. Open, so you have to be able to make a bunch of 5- to 10-footers for par.

Only a handful of players – notably Jon Rahm, Max Homa, Collin Morikawa and Scottie Scheffler – have played LACC in competition, so there's not much course history to lean on.

With all that said, it's time to identify not just the favorites for LACC, but where EVERY player in the 156-man field stacks up:

(Note: As of Saturday, three spots remained, likely to go to alternates from final qualifying.)

1. Scottie Scheffler: Not a shock, but LACC sets up well for Scheffler, the Tour’s leader in approach play, who is fifth in par-3 scoring and three-putt avoidance, and seventh in strokes gained around the green. He also played the Walker Cup here in 2017. But even without all that, his current form is eye-popping – 16 straight finishes of T-12 or better, a run that includes a couple wins. He’s the favorite.

2. Xander Schauffele: Last year’s U.S. Open marked the first time in six starts that he didn’t finish in the top 7; he was T-14. Might be the best mid- to long-iron player in golf in recent months. Also, he ranks No. 13 in strokes gained putting this season and is fourth on Data Golf’s trending table behind Scheffler, Brooks Koepka and Jon Rahm. I’m ready to go all-in on X-Man.

3. Brooks Koepka: Major Brooks is back after his T-2 at the Masters and PGA Championship victory. Has all the tools. Has the confidence again. Healthy. And he just doesn’t ever make a ton of bogeys. Maybe that’s why he’s got a couple of these U.S. Opens already.

4. Cameron Smith: Firm and fast conditions, uneven lies and lots of opportunity to get creative around the greens all play right into Smith’s hands. He’s also not been worse than 11th in his last five worldwide starts, including a T-9 at the PGA.

5. Jon Rahm: Has cooled a bit by his standards with a T-50 at PGA and T-16 at Memorial, but there are some positive signs – No. 1 in par-3 scoring, strong mid-iron play of late. Perfect spot to reassert his dominance.

6. Max Homa: Yes, he shot 61 here en route to winning the 2013 Pac-12 Championship. But that’s not why he’s ranked this highly. Owns a handful of top-10s in the past few months. Ranks second in par-3 scoring and fifth in strokes gained putting in addition to being top 12 in strokes gained approach. Some slight wedge play improvement and he can win.

7. Rory McIlroy: His mini-slump appears over, and though his early week will be filled with a few distractions on the heels of this week’s PGA Tour-PIF news, once the championship starts, McIlroy figures to adjust nicely to the layout, which he didn’t see in person ahead of this week. Top 13 in strokes gained approach and around the green, and he’s usually a lethal long-iron player, though recently he’s not been quite as elite.

8. Patrick Cantlay: After slow start to pro career in majors, he now has four straight top-15s in them. Few have been hitting their long irons better. Not going to give away a lot of pars. Has been alternating strong weeks and decent weeks recently; trend indicates a strong week at LACC. Top 15 seems highly likely. Contending will boil down to playing par-3s better than he has (166).

9. Justin Rose: Has missed four of his past seven U.S. Open cuts, but you can ignore that. Great in majors so far this year – T-16 at Masters, T-9 at PGA – and he checks all the boxes. Top 20 in strokes gained approach with stellar long-iron play. T-11 in par-3 scoring. Top 50 in strokes gained around the green and putting.

10. Tyrrell Hatton: Owns three top-15s in last five major starts and has been on a heater with five straight top-20s entering Canada. Ranks No. 11 in strokes gained putting and a nice scrambler – he might just have to rely on those two aspects more than some of the other elite players.

11. Rickie Fowler: A lot to like here – trending (sixth on Data Golf), top 10 in approach, top 25 around the greens and third in par-3 scoring.

12. Mito Pereira: Don’t be surprised if he leads the field in greens in regulation this week. Should do a lot more than just make his first U.S. Open cut. Third in most recent LIV start.

13. Collin Morikawa: Back spasms knocked him out of Memorial when he was just two shots off the lead and about to tee off in the final round. If healthy, he’s an elite iron player who is No. 11 in par-3 scoring. Short putting is always a concern, though Morikawa’s approach play usually always makes up for it. Was one of three players to go 4-0 in the 2017 Walker Cup at LACC; he also teamed with Norman Xiong that week to post a record 8-and-7 foursomes victory. But again, is he healthy enough?

14. Gary Woodland: Should rank among leaders in strokes gained approach (No. 11 this season), and he’ll need to do so considering he’s No. 180 in strokes gained around the green. No top-10s since Riviera, but I have a feeling he has a nice week.

15. Tommy Fleetwood: Bouncing back from a momentum-killing MC at Colonial with a nice performance in Canada. Tops on Tour in strokes gained around the green. Top-50 approach player and putter as well. One drawback is his best U.S. Open finish in four appearances since going fourth-second is T-50.

16. Viktor Hovland: Fresh off a win at Memorial and riding three straight top-7s in majors. Top 13 in strokes gained approach and par-3 scoring. Mid- to long-iron play is spectacular. Slightly improved chipping, though could get into a some tough spots around LACC, so he gets knocked down a few spots for that.

17. Matt Fitzpatrick: Battled a neck injury earlier this year, but he has started to really find his groove again – T-10 at Masters, won RBC Heritage, T-9 at Memorial. Now gets to defend his U.S. Open title. Outside the top 100 in strokes gained approach, but best with the longer irons. Also, a world-class scrambler and putter.

18. Wyndham Clark: Boasts four top-12 finishes, including a Wells Fargo title, in his last seven starts. Can bomb it, hitting his mid-irons very well right now, solid chipper and putter. A definite sleeper this week.

19. Hideki Matsuyama: Even while battling a bad neck, he’s been decent with basically seven straight top-30s. Gets a lot of praise for his ball-striking, but he’s eighth on Tour in strokes gained around the green.

20. Jordan Spieth: His T-5 at Memorial was good to see, but that left wrist injury is worrisome when it comes to betting on the 2015 U.S. Open winner. Firm and fast conditions and uneven lies typically favor Spieth, but statistically, he’s not been elite in any of the major strokes gained categories this season. Might be best to pass for now.

21. Jason Day: Back-to-back MCs since Nelson win, but he’s the Tour's top scrambler and is No. 15 in strokes gained putting.

22. Si Woo Kim: Top-20 approach player who is No. 11 in par-3 scoring and chips it well. If putter shows up, he’s in the conversation. Recently fourth at Memorial.

23. Patrick Reed: In his last 15 major starts, he’s missed just one cut, and he’s missed just one of eight career cuts in U.S. Opens. Top-notch grinder, scrambles well and been elite with mid-irons this year. Throw out a T-39 at LIV D.C. and he’s got momentum, too.

24. Russell Henley: Six top-20s in his last seven starts, including a T-4 at the Masters. Above average iron player and chipper. Will need to make more putts from 5-10 feet, as he struggles from there (189). Wide fairways, but firm, so being No. 1 in driving accuracy – and good from Bermuda rough – still helps.

25. Dustin Johnson: Won LIV Tulsa, but in majors this year, he’s not cracked the top 40. Hard to gauge him using analytics, but would be shocked to see him finish outside the top 40 again.

26. Tom Kim: Though he enters having missed back-to-back cuts, his approach play (T-21 strokes gained) and long-iron skill should allow him to easily make the weekend. And there’s no mud to fall in at LACC.

27. Adam Schenk: Top-40 putter who is above average throughout the bag. Stopped a missed-cut slide with a runner-up at Colonial and T-7 at Memorial. T-24 in U.S. Open debut last year. Could be this year’s Joel Dahmen.

28. Bryson DeChambeau: If he can survive the early-week media stuff, which will surely include questions about his recent CNN interview, he should have a solid week as he’s been one of the best from 200 yards and out this year and he’s shown great results – two LIV top-10s and a T-4 at the PGA in his past three events. The one concern is the one-length wedges and shorter clubs and LACC’s many uneven lies.

29. Denny McCarthy: Last year’s T-7 at The Country Club is no fluke. He’s fourth in strokes gained putting and sixth in conversion rate from 5-10 feet. Average approach player and around the greens, but his putter usually carries him anyway. Plus, he’s in good form, fresh off a runner-up at the Memorial.

30. Tony Finau: Fits the mold of a U.S. Open champ as a top-5 player in strokes gained approach and good scrambler. But he’s been quiet since winning in Mexico and has gone eight straight majors without a top-10 finish.

31. Justin Thomas: A frustrating year has seen him drop to No. 15 in the world rankings. He’s No. 192 in three-putt avoidance and ranks outside the top 35 in approach play, but he also is ninth in strokes gained around the green. He’ll need to scramble a ton to contend.

32. Eric Cole: He’s just outside the top 50 in strokes gained approach, but he’s essentially top 30 in our other metrics, including par-3 scoring, long-iron play, strokes gained around the green and strokes gained putting. Plus, he’s in decent form with three top-25s in his last five starts.

33. Sahith Theegala: Still making cuts, but he’s not sniffed contention since T-5 at RBC Heritage. Luckily, he’s playing a home game and on a layout that suits his style of play. Also, he’s No. 11 in par-3 scoring and top 40 in both strokes gained around the green and putting, so bet he stops his slide.

34. Andrew Putnam: Solid chance he betters his T-34 finish from last year’s U.S. Open at The Country Club. T-5 at Memorial two weeks ago, and he’s No. 11 or better in par-3 scoring, strokes gained putting and three-putt avoidance.

35. Corey Conners: Known as a flusher, and rightfully so at T-21 in strokes gained approach, but better with the shorter irons and not great around the greens. There’s a reason he’s 0 for 4 in making U.S. Open cuts. At least he had a nice week in Canada.

36. Keegan Bradley: Might still be smiling from that T-7 last summer at The Country Club. Always going to flush it, though he is only No. 57 in strokes gained approach right now, but the key could be his putting – he’s a respectable No. 44 in strokes gained putting and No. 13 in three-putt avoidance.

37. Sam Burns: Posted his best U.S. Open finish in four appearances last year (T-27), and he perhaps has extra motivation this week as Burns was snubbed for the Walker Cup team in 2017. Top 10 in strokes gained putting and par-3 scoring, and back on track after a run of MCs, too. All that said, he’s not top tier on approach (158) and around the greens (88), so it’ll be a surprise if he contends.

38. Adam Hadwin: Rock solid on the greens and does damage on par-3s (eighth on Tour in par-3 scoring). Nearly top 50 in approach play, too. Plus, he’s boosted by a nice week in Canada. Could do a lot worse.

39. Harris English: Has climbed back around No. 40 in the world after dropping almost out of the top 100 earlier this year. Top 30 in strokes gained around the green and putting, just needs a good striking week.

40. Adam Svensson: Has finished better than T-40 once since strong week at The Players. Basically a top-50 ball-striker who is ranked No. 24 in strokes gained putting. Solid on par-3s and with long irons.

41. Tom Hoge: Easy to get excited about his ball-striking (No. 4 in strokes gained approach). He also is No. 11 in par-3 scoring and fourth in proximity outside of 200 yards. But his past four major starts have yielded three MCs and he’s not cracked the top 40 since The Players. Don’t get too excited.

42. Ryan Fox: A top-30 machine as he has 10 of them this year, including two in majors. Missed his last three U.S. Open cuts, though.

43. Sungjae Im: Top-25 on Tour around the greens and top 70 in strokes gained approach and putting. Has gone MC, MC, T-41 since that Korean Tour win. About time for him to kick it into gear again.

44. Sepp Straka: Building momentum after T-7 at PGA. Top 10 in strokes gained approach and top-60 putter.

45. Adrian Meronk: Was in as good of form as anyone in the field until a MC by a shot in Canada. Last few starts include a win at the Italian Open and T-5 at KLM Open.

46. Mackenzie Hughes: Strong from 100 yards and in. Nearly top 10 in par-3 scoring. I just wish he was in better form because I think if he’s even average with the longer clubs he’ll be able to notch a third straight U.S. Open top-25.

47. Chris Kirk: Has a chance to keep bogeys off the card – No. 11 in strokes gained around the green and No. 5 in three-putt avoidance – but he’s also got just one top-10 since winning the Honda Classic.

48. Cameron Young: Until he gets better on and around the green (No. 189 in strokes gained putting, No. 140 around the green), Young will have trouble winning a U.S. Open, the only major where he doesn’t have a top-10 or a made cut; he’s 0 for 3 in making weekends. Current form features back-to-back MCs, too.

49. Phil Mickelson: Was his T-2 at the Masters a fluke? T-58 at PGA and back-to-back nearly last-place finishes on LIV may indicate that. But when you consider LACC’s topography and the fact that Mickelson has still been very good of late from 150-200 yards out, don’t count him out of a decent finish.

50. K.H. Lee: Above average ball-striker, chips it very well and good on the par-3s. No top-25s since T-8 at Wells Fargo, though.

51. Nick Taylor: Top 50 in strokes gained approach, around the green and putting. Up and down year, but his good has been really good. Bounce-back week in Canada.

52. Victor Perez: Has missed all three of his U.S. Open cuts, but he’s got some nice performances this year – win in Abu Dhabi, top-10 in Italy and T-12 at PGA.

53. Seamus Power: Was T-12 in his U.S. Open debut last year. Ranks No. 8 in par-3 scoring and is good chipper and elite putter. Ball-striking, especially from outside 200 yards, is a weakness, and would like to see him in better form.

54. Taylor Moore: No top-10s since winning Valspar, but I see some value here. No. 172 in par-3 scoring and just outside the top 100 in strokes gained approach, but he’s No. 16 putting and is best on Tour from 5-10 feet.      

55. Matt Kuchar: Second on Tour in strokes gained around the green, just really struggles from 200 yards and out (third to last on Tour). Has made seven of his past eight cuts, with the only miss coming at the PGA.

56. Kurt Kitayama: Has missed 5 of 7 stroke-play cuts since winning at Bay Hill, but during that span he was T-4 at the PGA. Driver is his weakness, but he’s a top-50 approach player who is an above average putter.

57. Joaquin Niemann: Hasn’t done much since T-16 at Masters, as he’s coming off a MC at PGA and T-31 at LIV D.C.

58. Shane Lowry: While he’s No. 14 in strokes gained approach, he’s not chipping it well and his putter has been awful – No. 176 in strokes gained putting, No. 188 from 5-10 feet. While he’s got eight straight top-25s in non-U.S. Open majors, he’s failed to crack top 40 in five of last six U.S. Open starts.

59. Emiliano Grillo: Top-50 approach player who should take advantage of the par-3s. Chipping is a liability. Win at Colonial should give him confidence.

60. Justin Suh: Has cooled off since contending at The Players with just one top-15. He struggles around the greens (183), but can roll it, ranking 12th in both strokes gained putting and make percentage from 5-10 feet. Four-time All-American down the road at USC.

61. Austin Eckroat: Was T-2 at the Nelson a few weeks ago and recently T-30 at Memorial. Good long-iron player and above average putter, though slightly outside top 100 in strokes gained approach and around the green.

62. Frankie Capan III: Will be a nice story this week as his mom, Charlynn, is on the bag, but she will probably have to carry for 72 holes as Capan can play. He stormed through all four stages of Q-School last year and is coming off a T-6 on the Korn Ferry Tour, where he sits 30th in points.

63. Adam Scott: Owns three top-10s in last four starts, but I’m still concerned. He’s not struck the ball well this season and he ranks No. 193 in par-3 scoring. Also, this is his worst major with just three career top-10s.

64. Pablo Larrazabal: Two wins in last three DPWT starts, but yet to do anything in majors.

65. Thomas Pieters: Has looked rough since joining LIV, but he’s still made his last five major cuts and has cracked the top 30 in his last two U.S. Opens.

66. Sam Bennett: People forget that before he contended and tied for 16th at the Masters, he made the cut in last summer’s U.S. Open. He didn’t have an elite college season as a fifth-year senior, but he enjoys these mammoth challenges.

67. Carson Young: Shot 63-62 to qualify for the U.S. Open. Should hit lots of greens, but then again, he’s never played a U.S. Open setup before. So, consider when he misses greens, he’s No. 173 in strokes gained around them.

68. a-Michael Brennan: I have the Wake Forest standout and reigning ACC individual champ as the current favorite for low amateur. Great ball-striker with nice scrambling ability who is streaky with the putter but has been more consistent on the greens since switching to left-hand low late last fall. Also, did you see that up-and-down to get through final qualifying?!

69. Min Woo Lee: Has cooled off mightily since T-6 at The Players, with a T-18 at the PGA the only top 30 he has since. Expect lots of stingers off the tee, but with lackluster iron play of late, he probably won’t factor.

70. Taylor Montgomery: Not a particularly strong approach player (177), but he’s great everywhere else, including being second in strokes gained putting. He’s also second on Tour in conversion rate from 5-10 feet. Tiebreaker may be the fact that he doesn’t have an individual top-10 since AmEx. He’s currently not the player he was in the fall.

71. a-Michael Thorbjornsen: Qualified for U.S. Open for a second straight year. T-4 at Travelers last summer. Won Olympia Fields and Pac-12s this past season at Stanford. A low-amateur candidate as he plays hard golf courses, including USGA setups, very well.

72. Nick Hardy: An early leader last year at the U.S. Open got through Springfield qualifier for the fifth time last week. Loves these tests, but also note that he’s No. 179 in strokes gained around the green and he doesn’t have an individual top-10 – he won Zurich with partner Davis Riley – since last fall’s Sanderson Farms.

73. Sam Stevens: Prolific mini-tour winner has translated into a very steady Tour pro, who was runner-up at Valero earlier this year. Below average chipper and putter, but gets better as the clubs get longer.

74. Alex Noren: Ranked No. 113 in strokes gained approach but he’s No. 10 around the green and T-19 putting. Missed four straight cuts before T-29 at Colonial and T-52 at Memorial, and he’s just 3 for 9 in making U.S. Open cuts.

75. Dylan Wu: Top-50 in approach play and has strung together a few top-25s in the last month or so. Was T-31 in U.S. Open debut two years ago at Torrey Pines.

76. a-Gordon Sargent: As we saw at the Masters, prodigious speed doesn’t necessarily mean Sarge can contend on the major stage right now. His short game is very much a work in progress. Considering that’s the area where I think guys really separate themselves this week, Sargent has his work cut out for him despite an amazing college season – three wins and T-7 or better in all but one start – under his belt.

77. Romain Langasque: Runner-up in Italy has sparked a nice run on DPWT.

78. Patrick Rodgers: Had a nice mid-spring and is coming off a T-30 at Memorial, but still below average with irons (No. 125 in strokes gained approach). Solid putter and great around the greens, though.

79. Sebastian Munoz: T-4 at LIV D.C. and T-14 last year at The Country Club. Good ball-striker, but not a great chipper or putter.

80. a-Preston Summerhays: Shot 63 at Hillcrest and needed an extra day to punch his U.S. Open ticket. Has been red-hot this spring for ASU, winning once and posting four other top-5s while also tying for 18th at nationals.

81. Hayden Buckley: One of Tour’s best drivers of the golf ball in terms of length and accuracy, but he’s No. 187 in strokes gained around the green. Has missed two straight cuts, too.

82. Matthieu Pavon: Has been steady with 10 straight made cuts on the DPWT.

83. Mac Meissner: How many guys in this field have shot 59 in competition this year? Meissner did so on the Korn Ferry Tour in April, yet he finished T-16 at that event, his last top-20 to date. However, he went to school at SMU and played a ton of rounds on a wide, firm and fast course in Trinity Forest.

84. David Puig: Finally cracked the top 20 in his most recent LIV event, tying for 12th in D.C.

85. Simon Forsstrom: Has gone from Nordic League regular to now DPWT winner this year as a 34-year-old rookie.

86. a-Barclay Brown: Two-time Walker Cupper didn’t have to best of senior seasons at Stanford, but he did save his one top-10 for last, tying for fourth at the NCAA Championship. Also made The Open cut after an opening 68 at St. Andrews last summer.

87. Sergio Garcia: Has missed 14 of 22 major cuts since winning the 2017 Masters. Outside top 20 in each of past two LIV starts. He did well to qualify for a 24th straight U.S. Open, but it’s hard to see him anywhere near the top of the leaderboard.

88. Wilco Nienaber: His drives may never stop rolling, so that length will serve him well. But his no top-25s since a T-2 in Abu Dhabi is concerning.

89. Taylor Pendrith: Lots in the tank power-wise, but he’s barely top 150 in strokes gained approach and around the green. No top-20s since T-7 at Pebble.

90. Brian Harman: While he ranks outside the top 125 in strokes gained approach and around the green and has just one top-10 this season, at Harbour Town, Harman has made each of his past five U.S. Open cuts with a T-2 in 2017 at Erin Hills.

91. Jens Dantorp: Runner-up at the DPWT’s Soudal Open last month and ranked just inside the top 175 in the world.

92. Abraham Ancer: Yet to finish better than T-49 in a U.S. Open, missed the cut at the PGA and has been a non-factor on LIV (nothing better than T-17).

93. Padraig Harrington: Making first U.S. Open start since 2013. T-50 at PGA this year. Been solid in his non-senior starts, and he’s got a win and three runners-up in six PGA Tour Champions majors the past two years.

94. Keith Mitchell: Best finish in last seven starts is T-48. Ranks well outside the top 100 in both strokes gained approach and around the green. Putter could save him at times.

95. Jordan Smith: T-6 his last time out at the Porsche European Open, but that’s only his second top-10 on the DPWT this year.

96. Joel Dahmen: It’s difficult to see him repeating his dream performance from The Country Club as he’s not finished in the top 40 this year. Ranks No. 184 in strokes gained putting, though he’s still been solid on the par-3s.

97. Carlos Ortiz: No top-10s since the start of April on LIV, and he’s just 2 of 8 in making major cuts with no top-50s.

98. Cam Davis: Short game needs a lot of work and he’s still only No. 87 in strokes gained approach. Back-to-back MCs since T-4 at PGA.

99. J.T. Poston: No top-30s in stroke play since T-10 at Valspar. Outside the top 100 in strokes gained around the green and putting, and still just No. 86 on approach.

100. Lucas Herbert: While he’s a DPWT winner this year, he’s struggled on Tour with his approach play (185) and around the greens (177). Also, he’s No. 186 in par-3 scoring.

101. a-Nick Dunlap: Had a nice freshman year at Alabama as the former U.S. Junior champ notched a win and seven other top-15s, including a T-11 at the NCAA Championship. Has a lot of power.

102. Kevin Streelman: Has just one top-10 and six MCs in 14 starts this year. Has a pair of top-15s at U.S. Open, in 2016 and 2021.

103. Luke List: Those not paying attention will think List’s ball-striking talent will serve him well this week. But there many red flags, as List ranks nearly last on Tour in strokes gained putting (196), putting from 5-10 feet (196), three-putt avoidance (184) and, somewhat shockingly, par-3 scoring (189). Plus, he’s missed eight of his last 14 cuts.

104. Vincent Norrman: The Candy Man drives it well and is deft with the longer clubs, but he gets worse as he gets closer to the hole and is No. 189 in three-putt avoidance. Coming off a MC in Canada.

105. Ryan Gerard: Snapped a streak of three straight MCs in Canada. Has played well on major layouts in past – Olympia Fields, Oakmont.

106. Charley Hoffman: Top-5 long-iron player on Tour, but just two players have been worse at putting (No. 195 strokes gained). Last top-10 came in Detroit last summer.

107. a-Karl Vilips: Had a solid junior year at Stanford with a trio of top-6 finishes and a T-22 showing at nationals. People may be surprised that up until Thorbjornsen won the U.S. Junior in 2018, Vilips was considered the better Cardinal recruit.

108. Billy Horschel: Just has not struck the ball well this season, and no stat is more glaring than his DFL rank in approach proximity from 200 yards and out. Has missed five of last seven stroke-play cuts.

109. Francesco Molinari: Owns seven career top-30s in U.S. Opens, including a T-13 two years ago. But he’s ranked outside the top 100 in every strokes gained category.

110. Davis Thompson: No top-30s since runner-up at AmEx. Ranks outside the top 150 in strokes gained approach and putting.

111. a-Mateo Fernandez de Oliveira: His short game will get a chance to shine this week, and he’s starting to figure some things out ball-striking-wise after a down final college season.

112. Ryan Armour: Lot of MCs this year, including in Canada, with no finishes better than T-45. The 47-year-old U.S. Open first-timer is a good long-iron player, but he struggles on and around the greens.

113. Paul Haley: Has missed seven of his last eight cuts on the PGA Tour. Top 70 around the green and putting, though.

114. Scott Stallings: Has struggled with ball-striking and putting, which explains why he’s missed five straight cuts.

115. a-Omar Morales: UCLA plays LACC every Friday, so the sophomore will have lots of familiarity with the layout. Missed the Mexico Open cut by a shot.

116. Jacob Solomon: His best finish on the Korn Ferry Tour this season is T-16, but he also hasn’t missed a ton of cuts.

117. Deon Germishuys: Golf’s very own “Primetime” hails from South Africa and sits just outside the top 200 in the world rankings. Was T-3 at the KLM Open recently.

118. Ross Fisher: The 42-year-old is making his first U.S. Open start since 2018. Has nothing better than a T-40 in his last five DPWT events.

119. Hank Lebioda: One of worst around the greens on Tour and has missed four straight cuts.

120. Alex Del Rey: Former ASU player won the Challenge Tour last year to earn DPWT card, but other than a T-3 in Singapore earlier this year, he’s done little.

121. Nico Echavarria: Since winning in Puerto Rico, he was missed 6 of 8 cuts. Ranks outside top 170 in strokes gained approach and around the green.

122. Aaron Wise: While he’s top 10 in three-putt avoidance, he is the Tour’s worst approach player in the field based on this season’s numbers.

123. a-Ben Carr: U.S. Amateur runner-up missed the Masters cut by two shots. Had a win and seven other top-11s this past season with Georgia Southern.

124. Stewart Cink: Missed six straight cuts at one point this year. Has cracked the top 60 just three times in 12 PGA Tour events this year as well. Hasn’t posted a top-25 in a U.S. Open since 2008.

125. a-Wenyi Ding: Reigning U.S. Junior champ and Arizona State signee has made seven straight pro starts and hasn’t missed a cut.

126. Roger Sloan: Journeyman doesn’t have a top-10 since his T-2 at the 2021 Wyndham Championship.

127. Patrick Cover: Just two top-30s in 12 Korn Ferry Tour starts this year.

128. Berry Henson: A lock for low Uber driver. A couple top-10s on the Asian Tour this year, but that’s about it.

129. a-Brendan Valdes: Auburn junior can get hot and string together some birdies, but he also is prone to some big numbers, which will find him if he’s not careful here.

130. a-Aldrich Potgieter: After missed cuts at Masters and Memorial, length could power Sage Valley champ through to the weekend.

131. Brent Grant: Last on Tour in three-putt avoidance and No. 187 in strokes gained approach. Not a great recipe for a U.S. Open.

132. Martin Kaymer: Off the injured list, but still very rusty. His T-25 at LIV D.C. was the first time he’s cracked the top 40 in four starts this year.

133. Thriston Lawrence: Owns just one top-25 in 13 worldwide starts this year. Hasn’t been a great long-iron player oof late.

134. Paul Barjon: Owns just a single top-25 on the Korn Ferry Tour this year.

135. Ryo Ishikawa: Owns a couple top-4s on Japan Tour this year, but hasn’t done much else.

136. David Nyfjall: What a place to make your pro debut. Notched three top-10s in his final spring semester at Northwestern, including a T-9 at Big Tens.

137. Olin Browne Jr.: The 34-year-old son of Olin Browne is playing his first U.S. Open. He was T-34 in Abaco, Bahamas, on the Korn Ferry Tour earlier this year, his first OWGR-ranked start since 2020. Did win a 54-hole event on the Minor League Golf Tour in April.

138. Gunn Charoenkul: Hot in Asia earlier this year with three top-6s, but has missed three of past six cuts. Clear favorite to be top Gunn.

139. a-Matthew McClean: He said at the Masters that it’s been a while since he’s given an eye exam, and his 11 starts this year prove he’s not some rusty mid-amateur. Coming off a T-7 at the English Amateur.

140. Austen Truslow: One-handed chipper who has been derailed by injuries in recent years. Only two world-ranked starts the past two years – both MCs.

141. Corey Pereira: Lost his Korn Ferry Tour card last August and has played sparingly since then as his girlfriend battles cancer. But he was a talented amateur at Washington, so don’t think he can’t beat some guys.

142. David Horsey: Has made just one of six cuts on the DPWT this year.

143. Ryutaro Nagano: Has missed two of last three cuts on Japan Tour.

144. Alex Schaake: Two-time Big Ten player of the year at Iowa is following his brother Carson’s U.S. Open appearance two years ago. Needed eight playoff holes to get through his final qualifier. Hasn’t played an OWGR-ranked event since missing six of nine cuts on the Forme Tour in 2021.

145. Kyle Mueller: Missed all four of his PGA Tour Canada starts last year as he’s since been relegated to mini-tours. He did win an eight-hole playoff on the GPro Tour last month, though.

146. Jordan Gumberg: Has traveled the world and missed a bunch of cuts in OWGR events recent years. But on the Minor League Golf Tour, he has three wins in the past two years, including one last month.

147. Andrew Svoboda: The former Tour pro now turned club professional is making his first U.S. Open start since 2013.

148. Yuto Katsuragawa: No top-10s on Japan Tour this year and has missed 7 of 8 cuts on the Korn Ferry Tour.

149. a-Isaac Simmons: Just one top-10 for Liberty this past season though it came at the ASUN Championship, where he was fourth.

150. JJ Grey: One of the more emotional stories among this year’s qualifiers, but he’s missed 16 of his last 19 cuts on the Korn Ferry Tour.

151. Jesse Schutte: The 35-year-old and first-time dad (as of last week) has played two OWGR-ranked events in his career, and none since the 2014 Barracuda on the PGA Tour.

152. a-Alexander Yang: Former Junior Presidents Cupper has played sparingly in two seasons at Stanford and doesn’t have a top-50 finish since last summer’s World Amateur Team Championship.

153. a-Christian Cavaliere: Boston College product is ranked No. 1,768 in the world amateur rankings, worst among any of the amateurs in the field.

Last year, PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan said of the Tour’s battle with the Saudi-backed LIV Golf: “If this is an arms race, and if the only weapons here are dollar bills, the PGA Tour can’t compete.”

Now, after last week’s news that the PGA Tour, DP World Tour and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund are combining commercial assets, a move that ends all litigation on both sides, it’s fair to wonder if the Tour was running low on ammunition.

According to a recent Wall Street Journal report, that’s exactly what was happening, as Monahan explained to Tour employees in a company-wide meeting last Thursday that the Tour could not financially sustain a lengthy fight with the Saudis.

“We cannot compete with a foreign government with unlimited money,” Monahan is reported to have told employees, adding that the Tour had already spent nearly $50 million in its legal battle with LIV and tapped into $100 million of its reserves to boost purses (an increase of $100 million at its designated events) and bonus pools (the Player Impact Program doubled to $100 million) to compete with LIV’s extraordinary signing bonuses and prize money.

A source who attended the meeting confirmed such details to GolfChannel.com, adding that Monahan said the DP World Tour had spent around $15 million in legal fees.

Monahan, per that source, added during the half-hour-plus meeting that the PIF “had and still have unlimited resources to take our players and worked to stand up in a matter of months what had taken our organizations decades to build.” And of the legal spending, Monahan said those resources were “diverted from growing our business and serving our players.”

But money talk didn't dominate the agenda, as Monahan also spoke to strengthening the Tour and the game of golf, as well as benefits to having the Saudis as partners rather than competitors.

The WSJ also reported that Monahan was pressed during the meeting how he’d explain this deal to his daughters given the Saudis’ treatment of women, Monahan named his daughters, took a long pause and then explained that the circumstances forced him to “think about all of our players … think about everybody in this room.”

“I understand all the human rights concerns," Monahan is said to have added. “I've had them myself.”

The PGA Tour has since responded to the WSJ report, saying via statement: “To characterize that this agreement was made due to litigation costs and other use of reserves is an oversimplification. With the end of the fractured landscape in the world of men’s professional golf, the PGA Tour has never been a more valuable property. … This transaction will make professional golf more competitive with other professional sports and sports leagues.”

Monahan, who was revealed as part of available tax filings to have earned $13.9 million in 2021, said last week, “I felt very good about the changes we’ve made and the position we were in.” But he also spoke publicly about “significant” financial moves.

“Between our reserves, the legal fees, our underpin (reportedly $50 million and expected to increase in the coming years) and our commitment to the DP World Tour and their legal fees, it’s been significant,” he said.

Per the WSJ, Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund last year counted $606 billion in assets, $45 billion in cash and cash equivalents and $85 billion in treasury assets.

“Whether you like it or not, the PIF were going to keep spending the money in golf,” Rory McIlroy said during his pre-tournament media availability last Wednesday at the RBC Canadian Open. “At least the PGA Tour now controls how that money is spent. So, you know, if you're thinking about one of the biggest sovereign wealth funds in the world, would you rather have them as a partner or an enemy? At the end of the day, money talks and you would rather have them as a partner.”

City's De Bruyne forced off injured in UCL final

Published in Soccer
Saturday, 10 June 2023 16:14

Manchester City were forced to win the Champions League without their key midfield playmaker after Kevin De Bruyne was forced off injured during the first half of Saturday's showpiece clash with Inter Milan.

It is the second time De Bruyne's participation in the Champions League final has been cut short after he was also substituted because of injury during Manchester City's defeat to Chelsea in 2021.

- Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga, more (U.S.)

This time, though, City went onto win the trophy in De Bruyne's absence, with Rodri's second-half goal sealing a 1-0 win and a first-ever Champions League title.

"It has been a hard two months," De Bruyne told BT Sport after the final whistle. "I had a lot of problems with my hamstring and it snapped.

"The team was good enough though and we won. We have been working so long for this, it is amazing.

"We have not lost in the Champions League this year. It was not the best game but now is the time to celebrate."

The Belgium midfielder was substituted after 36 minutes against Inter in Istanbul after picking up a hamstring injury.

The 31-year-old was assessed by medical staff on the pitch before trying to continue but in the end was forced off and replaced with Phil Foden.

Against Chelsea in 2021, De Bruyne suffered a facial injury after a collision with defender Antonio Rudiger. Post-match tests revealed a fractured nose and eye socket.

Before going off on Saturday, De Bruyne's perfectly angled and weighted pass had sent Erling Haaland into space in the penalty area for a powerful left-foot shot that Inter goalkeeper Andre Onana blocked with his left arm.

As De Bruyne walked toward the touchline, Man City coach Pep Guardiola came on to the pitch to greet his player. Guardiola patted the dejected De Bruyne's lowered head.

De Bruyne, who turns 32 later this month, has never won the Champions League.

He placed third in voting for the Ballon d'Or award in 2022, awarded in October to Karim Benzema with Sadio Mané in second place.

Information from the Associated Press was used in this report.

Man City beat Inter for 1st UCL title, clinch treble

Published in Soccer
Saturday, 10 June 2023 16:14

ISTANBUL, June 10 (Reuters) - Inter Milan manager Simone Inzaghi expressed his pride at what his team had achieved even though they suffered a bitter loss to Manchester City in the Champions League final on Saturday.

Inzaghi's side lost the final 1-0 after a second-half goal from Rodri, but the 47-year-old Inzaghi remained upbeat after a tough season in which he came under heavy pressure before guiding his side to third place in Serie A as well as winning the Italian Cup and Super Cup.

"On a night like this, I can’t single players out who played below par. I said yesterday I would not change my players for anyone else, and tonight the world saw why," Inzaghi told Sky Sports Italia.

"They showed the whole world how well they stood up to Manchester City, a side that everyone knows has so much quality.

"I hugged my players one by one, as they were extraordinary, just as our fans were and deserved a different result, but I hope they were happy seeing the way the team played tonight."

Inzaghi has faced harsh criticism from fans and media.

"Both I and my players were attacked and admittedly we lost some games that we shouldn’t have lost, but I think we learned valuable lessons from those defeats," he said, pointing out that the team had won four trophies over the last two years.

"With this spirit, organisation and determination, I think we will be back here again in future," he added.

(Reporting by Tommy Lund in Gdansk, editing by Ed Osmond)

Manchester City lifted the Champions League trophy with a 1-0 win over Internazionale at Istanbul's Ataturk Olympic Stadium.

After a goalless first half in which Kevin De Bruyne exited early with a hamstring injury, Rodri scored the only goal of Saturday's game as Pep Guardiola's side completed the treble, having also secured the Premier League title and the FA Cup.

Inter substitute Romelu Lukaku had a golden chance to equalise late on but Ederson somehow got in the way of his header. The Italians pushed for a goal toward the end but City held on to be crowned champions of Europe for the first time in their history.

- Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga, more (U.S.)


Rapid reaction

1. City complete the treble with Champions League triumph

Manchester City are kings of Europe and treble winners. The Premier League, FA Cup and Champions League all collected in one season write this team into history and earn Pep Guardiola his greatest achievement in an already stellar coaching career.

City were made to work for their narrow victory over Inter in Istanbul. Rodri scored the only goal in a game short on quality and clear-cut chances while City also needed two dramatic late saves from Ederson before lifting the trophy.

For Guardiola, it's the culmination of a quest for another Champions League medal that has taken 12 years. The question that has dogged his path from Barcelona to Bayern Munich and then to City is whether he could win it without Lionel Messi, and he's finally answered it. The 1998-99 Manchester United squad were the only English team to win the treble, and the near-25-year wait for another shows you exactly how hard it is.

City have held off Arsenal in the Premier League, beaten United in the FA Cup final and gotten the better of Real Madrid and Bayern Munich in the Champions League. They have earned their place as champions of Europe and the best team in the world.

2. Rodri comes up big

Guardiola's decision to drop Rodri from his team for the 2021 Champions League final against Chelsea is still such a talking point that it was brought up again during a news conference with the City manager last week. Maybe, then, it was destiny that the Spain midfielder would score the crucial first goal against Inter.

Rodri's first Champions League goal was a big one, coming against Bayern Munich in the quarterfinals, but his second was even more important. He doesn't score many -- just four this season -- but he was in the right place at the right time to run onto Bernardo Silva's cut-back and pass his finish into the net. It was a rare moment of calm during a frantic game that for long spells felt rushed and chaotic.

City's season will be remembered for the trophies and also for Erling Haaland's goals but Rodri has been one of City's best players this season. With Fernandinho gone and Kalvin Phillips struggling to adapt following his move from Leeds United last summer, Rodri has had to play almost every game and he has not let Guardiola down once. City only conceded five goals in the Champions League this season and that owes as much to Rodri's performances as it does to Ederson and his defence.

play
1:32
Michallik on Man City's UCL win: Sometimes you have to grind it out

Janusz Michallik discusses how Manchester City adjusted in the game after Kevin De Bruyne's injury.

3. Inter can be proud of final performance

No one had Inter making it to Istanbul and once they did, almost everyone predicted a comfortable win for City. In the end, the result was one many expected but Simone Inzaghi and his players will return to Italy with their heads held high.

Real Madrid, Bayern Munich and Arsenal are among the best teams in the world, but they have all been thrashed during City's charge towards the treble. Not many this season have made them look uncomfortable but Inter's high, aggressive press seemed to knock City out of their rhythm for large parts of the game.

Lautaro Martinez's chance after a miscommunication between Manuel Akanji and Ederson with the score at 0-0 and Federico Dimarco hitting the bar with a header moments after Rodri's opener were two huge moments for the Italian side that didn't go their way.

It will be little consolation to Inter after losing a Champions League final but they will have won plenty of fans with their performance. It was predicted to be 90 minutes of one-way traffic but Inter more than played their part in what was a fascinating tactical battle. City and Guardiola were made to work for the Champions League trophy.


Best and worst performers

BEST

Ederson, GK, Manchester City
Made two late saves to win the trophy for City.

Rodri, MF, Manchester City
Composed in midfield and scored the winning goal in the second half.

Marcelo Brozovic, MF, Inter
Inter's pressing in midfield was high and aggressive and the Croatian international was key to it.

WORST

Romelu Lukaku, ST, Inter
The Belgium striker should have scored with a late header that cannoned off Ederson.

Edin Dzeko, ST, Inter
The former City striker didn't see much of the ball and was substituted early in the second half.

Manuel Akanji, DF, Man City
Got away with a couple of mistakes in the second half but played his part in Rodri's goal.


Highlights and notable moments

Not many expected Manchester City to struggle so much on the offensive end throughout the night, and certainly fewer thought that it would be Rodri who would score the eventual winner.

Romelu Lukaku came on as an impact sub and came this close to tying up the match. It was a frustrating performance for the Inter striker.


After the match: What the managers and players said

Manchester City's Pep Guardiola to BT Sport, on the win: "It was written in the stars. It belongs to us ... We weren't at our best level. After the World Cup the team made a step forward and we were there. It wasn't our best performance."

Guardiola, on the upcoming summer: "I don't have any energy to think about next season, it's impossible. We need a break, it's too long ... Our players have international games now ... The Premier League finished two or three weeks ago, now people have to come back. It's too much. We will start from zero next season."

Manchester City's Kevin De Bruyne to BT Sport, on his injury: "It has been a hard two months. I had a lot of problems with my hamstring and it snapped."

Inter Milan's Simone Inzaghi to Sky Sport, on the loss: "I congratulated the players. They were great, they played a great game. We lost a final that we wanted to win at all costs, but they must be proud .. I wouldn't trade these players for anyone and today the whole world saw why. We conceded little against a very strong team. We have many regrets, but we must be proud."


Key stats (provided by ESPN Stats & Information)

- Manchester City are the 10th different team (and eighth different club) in men's soccer history to win the European treble (domestic league, primary domestic cup, European Cup). Barcelona and Bayern Munich are the clubs to have done this twice.

- Manchester City join 1998-99 Manchester United as the only men's English teams to win the European treble.

- Pep Guardiola is the first men's coach to win the European treble on multiple occasions after initially doing so in the 2008-09 season with Barcelona. He also joins Carlo Ancelotti (4), Zinedine Zidane and Bob Paisley as the only managers with three European Cup titles.

- Italian clubs lost all three European finals this season (Inter Milan in Champions League, AS Roma in Europa League, Fiorentina in Europa Conference League).

- Erling Haaland is the first Premier League Golden Boot winner to also win the Champions League final since Cristiano Ronaldo did it with Manchester United in 2007-08. Haaland is also the first player to win the Champions League Golden Boot twice before turning 23, joining Lionel Messi.

9.3 overs The Blaze 53 for 4 vs Southern Vipers - Play suspended

Southern Vipers and The Blaze will have to come back on Sunday to complete the Charlotte Edwards Cup final after heavy rain saturated the outfield at New Road, Worcester.

Anya Shrubsole had inspired Vipers to condemn The Blaze to 53 for four in 9.3 overs before lightning in the area took the teams off at 4:35pm, then rain made sure they didn't come back.

Play was officially abandoned at just after 6pm with the decision to come back on Sunday for the reserve day - with the start time yet to be confirmed.

Any action will restart at the halfway point of The Blaze innings, and if there is no chance of play because of rain then The Blaze will win by virtue of finishing top of the group - where they boasted a 100 per cent record.

The reserve day is bad news for some of the Vipers players who were due to take advantage of the short break in the season by taking a holiday.

In the 57 balls possible before the storm breezed in, former England fast bowler Shrubsole pinned her former international team-mate Tammy Beaumont lbw with a trademark inswinger with the third ball of the innings.

She then found Sarah Bryce swinging straight up into the air in the following over as The Blaze slumped to 19 for two, and only reached 34 for two by the end of the powerplay.

Spinners Lauren Smith and Georgia Adams then put the batting side into more trouble, with Georgie Boyce caught behind with one that popped, and Kathryn Bryce was bowled through the gate.

The Vipers had earlier won their Eliminator against Thunder by 18 runs after half-centuries from Danni Wyatt and Maia Bouchier - with Thunder coming up short in the chase of 191.

Gill caught by Green: clean or not?

Published in Cricket
Saturday, 10 June 2023 12:23

It was a spectacular effort from the 6'7" Green once again. He had taken a high one-handed blinder with his right hand in India's first innings to dismiss Ajinkya Rahane, and here he had to dive low to his left and pluck the ball milliseconds before it hit the turf. Replays though suggested it was a close call.

Both Gill and his opening partner Rohit Sharma had seen the edge dying on its way to the cordon, so they waited, bringing the TV umpire into play. Previously, contentious catches referred to the TV umpire used to come with a soft signal - out or not out - from the on-field umpires, and there needed to be conclusive evidence to overturn the on-field decision. The ICC has only just scrapped the soft-signal rule, and this was the first instance of a TV umpire adjudicating a contentious catch on his own. In this case the TV umpire Richard Kettleborough saw enough from the visuals to suggest Green had got his fingers under the ball.

Rohit didn't agree though. He seemed to mouth an audible "No" as the "Out" flashed on the big screen at The Oval. Gill, also, put out a tweet after the day's play, using emojis that suggested he did not believe it was a clean catch.

The replays on the broadcast lost a frame between Green catching with his fingers underneath the ball as he fell to the grass and then throwing it up in celebration. Did the ball in that frame - as he rolled his hand over - touch the turf? There seemed to be no conclusive evidence to say either way, and both of ESPNcricinfo's Match Day experts - Sanjay Manjrekar and Brad Haddin - were of the opinion the right decision had been made.

"When you see it real time, it is very important thing to see and something I have advocated to a lot of people about when there is a review for a low catch that goes upstairs to the TV umpire, they get a lot of angles and the frozen image is something that sets the cat among the pigeons," Manjrekar said. "The viewers see the frozen image and see the leather touching the turf … in real time, it looked like a pretty brilliant catch, just a nice motion. If you ask me if that was a catch, I'd say, yes, brilliant catch."

Haddin said: "I thought it was a clean catch and Green got his fingers underneath the ball. I like it at real time because if you slow it down too much and look at different frames, it can create a lot of doubt. In this case, he had his fingers under the ball and it was a clean catch."

Former Australia captain Ricky Ponting also agreed with the interpretation that it was a fair catch. "When I saw it live, I knew it had carried to him on the full, but I wasn't sure what the action was after that from all replays we have seen," he told the ICC. "I actually think some part of the ball did touch the ground and it is the interpretation of the umpire that as long as the fielder has complete control of the ball before the ball hits the ground then it is out. That must have been what the umpires' interpretation was and I think that is exactly what happened. It carried probably six or eight inches off the ground then there was another action after that."
Former India allrounder and coach Ravi Shastri, speaking after the day's play, said two fingers under the ball often means the ball has touched the ground but, in this case, he could certainly see why the umpire when with the out decision. "If I saw what I saw there as the third umpire, it's very difficult to say that the ball hit the ground, because you could see the two fingers under it," Shastri told Star Sports. "I've always believed when it comes up with two fingers, the chances of the ball touching the ground are much more as opposed to three fingers, where the three fingers come under the ball. So what I can see of Cameron Green there, there are two fingers. So it's a tough one, but you go down the umpire's route, he has to be convinced that the ball has touched the ground.

"And let's not forget, he has got giant fingers, he's a big fellow, and you can see the angle of the fingers, it's under the ball. You've got the thumb on top, the fingers are wrapped around the ball. Richard Kettleborough, I can see where he's coming from."

Former Australia opener and coach Justin Langer, on the same segment on Star Sports, agreed with Shastri's assessment. "Richard Kettleborough is a world-class umpire, and what he goes on, he had to probably give it out. The other thing that I always find interesting is the initial reaction of the fielder. Cameron Green got underneath it and was convinced he had caught it. Often if there's any doubt, you can see it in the body language of the fielder."
Former India spinner Harbhajan Singh and former India batter Virender Sehwag both said the replays viewed by the third umpire were inconclusive, and giving the batter out based on those visuals was incorrect. "Inconclusive evidence. When in doubt, it's not out," Sehwag tweeted, while Harbhajan told PTI: "The replay was inconclusive. They should have zoomed in on his fingers closely before taking the call. It could cost India dearly in the run chase."

That was the last action before the tea interval on the fourth day, with the players leaving the field to boos from the largely Indian crowd. Gill fell for 18 off 19 with his team 41 for 1 in 7.1 overs in a chase of 444.

Kohli, Rahane keep India alive in hunt of 444

Published in Cricket
Saturday, 10 June 2023 10:37

India 296 and 164 for 3 (Kohli 44*, Rohit 43) need another 280 runs to beat Australia 469 and 270 for 8 dec (Carey 66, Labuschagne 41, Starc 41, Jadeja 3-58, Shami 2-39, Umesh 2-54)

Under bright skies and on an Oval pitch that seemed to ease out against all expectations, India's batters set up a potentially thrilling final day, racing to 164 for 3 at more than four an over to keep alive their pursuit of a world-record fourth-innings target. Australia remain favourites, with India needing a further 280 on the final day, but they may have a lot of hard work ahead of them to take the seven remaining wickets, with the second new ball 40 overs away.

India may have still felt a little cross with themselves at stumps, though, losing perhaps a wicket more than they would have liked by then, two of them to aggressive shots. Rohit Sharma was lbw to Nathan Lyon, missing a sweep from a stump-to-stump line, and Cheteshwar Pujara toe-ended an attempted ramp over the slips off a Pat Cummins bouncer.

Both batters will argue, though, that these are shots they usually play well. They will also argue that the same positivity had helped them stitch a second-wicket stand of 51 in 77 balls. The two wickets, however, fell in the space of five balls, turning 92 for 1 to 93 for 3.

It was the perfect opening for Australia to bulldoze through, but Virat Kohli and Ajinkya Rahane were having none of it. They ended the day reprising the same positivity that had gone before, putting on an unbroken 71 for the fourth wicket, with both batters looking in excellent ball-striking rhythm. Conditions, too, didn't seem to test them, with the pitch showing far less tendency to produce inconsistent bounce than it had done through the first three innings of the match. Kohli and Rahane ended the day with control percentages of 93 and 97 respectively.

As they safely negotiated the last over of the day, a largely India-supporting crowd was in fine voice, a section of them belting out this number from the 1975 blockbuster Sholay: "yeh dosti, hum nahin todenge [we'll never break this friendship]." Australia will want to break it as soon as possible when day five dawns.

The crowd had been far less pleased some two hours earlier, though, after India lost their first wicket off what ended up as the last ball before tea, following a near-run-a-ball opening partnership of 41. Scott Boland got one to straighten and kick in the corridor, Shubman Gill pushed at it with hard hands, and Cameron Green dived low to his left to pluck out a superlative gully catch, his second of the match. Gill stood his ground, though, and the decision went up to the third umpire. As is often the case with these low grabs, replays seemed inconclusive, but the decision went in Australia's favour.

Chants of "Cheat! Cheat! Cheat!" continued to follow Green through the rest of the evening, particularly when he bowled. A World Test Championship that had been full of quality cricket now had the one ingredient it had been missing: controversy and needle.

During the first session of the day, Green had had a far different effect on the crowd, keeping them quiet as he added 18 runs in 87 balls to his overnight score of 7. His dismissal was in keeping with the tone of his innings: he attempted to pad away a Ravindra Jadeja delivery from over the wicket only for the ball to hit his pad and roll onto the wicket.

By then, Australia had added 44 to their overnight 123 for 4 while losing two wickets in 19 overs - Marnus Labuschagne the other batter dismissed, nicking Umesh Yadav to first slip. India had bowled with discipline while extracting just enough from the surface to keep the batters vigilant; with Australia's lead just 340, they may have hoped to wrap their innings up before it got to 400.

Alex Carey, however, ensured that it swelled well beyond that figure, scoring an opportunistic 66 to go with his 48 in the first innings, and putting on 93 for the seventh wicket with Mitchell Starc. Both batters began cautiously and had their moments of discomfort, particularly against Jadeja finding sharp turn and bounce from the footmarks outside the left-handers' off stump, but grew increasingly confident as India's quicks tired.

Mohammed Shami, who had bowled frugally and beaten the bat multiple times without any reward in his previous spells, came back when India took the second new ball and dismissed Starc and Pat Cummins when they were looking to slog for quick runs. Australia declared at the stroke of Cummins' dismissal, setting India a never-before-achieved 444 to win.

It may have been a nostalgia-inducing moment among old-timers at the ground. In 1979, a Sunil Gavaskar double-hundred had inspired India to a thrilling draw at The Oval; they finished on 429 for 8 after being set 438 by England. There's still a chance that Sunday may bring similar levels of excitement.

Karthik Krishnaswamy is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo

Tweeting a front-on angle photograph of Cameron Green taking the catch down to his left at gully, Gill captioned it with two magnifying glass emojis followed by a facepalm emoji. That sentiment was echoed somewhat by Mohammed Shami later, who suggested the occasion of this final warranted more rigour in the decision-making.
Gill was on 18 as India began their pursuit of 444 when he edged Scott Boland low to Green's left. Green - who said he thought the catch was clean - celebrated immediately but Gill did not walk off immediately. The on-field umpires went up to the TV umpire Richard Kettleborough, with a new protocol in place now without giving a soft signal. The need for a soft signal in these kinds of decisions was scrapped recently by the ICC's cricket committee and this was the first occasion the protocol was required.

After viewing a number of replays from different angles and zooming in, Kettleborough gave the decision as out, much to the visible disappointment of both Gill and his partner, captain Rohit Sharma, as well as the thousands of Indian fans at the ground. The entire process took less than three minutes.

"Yes, definitely, more time could have been taken [to verify if it was a clean catch] because it is a World Test Championship final and not just a normal match," Shami said later. "You could have checked more and zoomed in more. But it's okay, it's part of the game." That was a sentiment - that it is part of the game - that Shami would repeat later.

It was Green's second outstanding grab of the Test, after the spectacular one he took stretching to his right at gully to dismiss Ajinkya Rahane in the first innings, though he did also drop a far simpler chance earlier in the game. "At the time I definitely thought I caught it," Green said of the Gill catch. "I think in the heat of the moment I thought it was clean. It was left up to the third umpire and he agreed."

The Australia wicketkeeper Alex Carey, one of the players close enough to the catch, also thought the correct decision had been made. "It looked good from where I was," Carey told BBC's Test Match Special. "I thought he caught it fair and square. He was pretty happy with it, so yeah, the right decision was made."

Green was the recipient of boos from a sizeable and vociferous crowd of India supporters through the rest of the day, as well as chants of "cheat" each time he was involved with the action. It didn't, however, seem to faze him. "Obviously, the Indian crowd are so passionate and obviously one of their favourite guys Shubman Gill got out and I think that's what they were all kind of looking forward to watching, so it is what it is and we move on," Green said.

Only time will tell whether Gill faces any consequences for his tweet. Clause 2.7 of the ICC's code of conduct is clear that social media posts come within the jurisdiction of what constitutes a breach of the code.

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