Top Ad
I DIG Radio
www.idigradio.com
Listen live to the best music from around the world!
I DIG Style
www.idigstyle.com
Learn about the latest fashion styles and more...
I Dig Sports

I Dig Sports

Clevinger's return to Padres rotation short-lived

Published in Baseball
Wednesday, 07 October 2020 00:12

ARLINGTON, Texas -- San Diego Padres right-hander Mike Clevinger was removed in the second inning of his National League Division Series Game 1 start against the Los Angeles Dodgers after a precipitous drop in velocity appeared to indicate an injury to his pitching arm Tuesday night.

Clevinger, who had thrown only one inning since Sept. 13 and missed the Padres' wild-card series against the St. Louis Cardinals because of an elbow injury, was added to the Padres' roster Tuesday and given the Game 1 start after throwing bullpen sessions without incident.

After Clevinger struggled with control but made it through the first inning without yielding a run, his first pitch in the second inning was a 91 mph fastball -- 5 mph off from his top-end velocity early in the game. Following Clevinger's second pitch of the inning -- a 77 mph slider that was 5 mph off his standard velocity for the offering -- manager Jayce Tingler and the Padres training staff came to the mound, and Clevinger soon walked to the dugout.

Clevinger, who threw only 24 pitches, said after the game he felt discomfort in his elbow while facing Corey Seager, the game's second batter, in the first inning. Tingler said Clevinger "tightened up a bit and never loosened back up," and that the pitcher is being evaluated and is day-to-day.

"Yeah, I'm not giving up and I don't think anyone on that training staff is either," Clevinger said.

The Padres acquired the 29-year-old Clevinger at the trade deadline to bolster a rotation that was fronted by right-hander Dinelson Lamet. With Lamet also out of the NLDS due to arm issues, the Padres' pitching depth will be greatly tested in the best-of-five series, which is scheduled to be played over five days. Reliever Pierce Johnson replaced Clevinger and was followed by Ryan Weathers, a 20-year-old left-hander who was making his major league debut after being drafted seventh overall in the 2018 draft.

Clevinger was removed from his Sept. 23 start against the Los Angeles Angels because of an elbow impingement; and before the wild-card series, sources told ESPN there was significant concern he would miss the entire postseason.

His return seemed to embolden the Padres, who in the wild-card series patched together wins by leaning heavily on their bullpen.

Should San Diego replace Clevinger on its division series roster, he would be ineligible to pitch in the NL Championship Series, as well.

The Padres have two more years of control with Clevinger, who is eligible for free agency after the 2022 season.

It has been another busy day in the MLB playoffs, with all four division series in action: two series openers in the National League and two Game 2s in the American League.

Here are the stars, turning points and takeaways from each of Tuesday's games as they conclude.

Key links: Ranking the remaining teams | Guide to bubble ballparks | Schedule, bracket

Jump to: HOU-OAK | MIA-ATL | NYY-TB | SD-LAD


Houston Astros 5, Oakland A's 2

What it means: Here's a statement that's sure to enrage, oh, 99% of America: The Astros are one win from the American League Championship Series. Here's something that should scare what remains of the postseason field: The Astros' offense looks locked in, and in Framber Valdez, who provided seven innings of two-run ball on another homer-happy afternoon at Dodger Stadium, the Astros have what appears to be the equivalent of a top-of-the-rotation starter.

George Springer homered twice and has six hits in nine at-bats in this series, igniting an offense that is more closely resembling recent history. But it's the Astros' pitching that has been particularly impressive. One of the major keys to this series for the A's is to make Dusty Baker deploy relievers not named Ryan Pressly as often as possible. But in Game 1, Blake Taylor, Enoli Paredes and Cristian Javier stepped up. In Game 2, Valdez made the approach irrelevant.

The A's are 1-for-24 in the sixth inning or later in this series. -- Alden Gonzalez

Next up: Game 3, 3:35 p.m. ET Wednesday


play
1:20

Acuna, d'Arnaud and Swanson all go yard in Braves' win

Ronald Acuna gets things started with a first-inning home run. In the seventh, Travis d'Arnaud and Dansby Swanson crank home runs, helping the Braves to a Game 1 win.

Atlanta Braves 9, Miami Marlins 5

What it means: It was an action-packed Game 1 between the Braves and Marlins, but Atlanta rolled six runs in the seventh inning to grab the series opener. Ronald Acuna Jr. homered to lead off the bottom of the first, then was hit by a Sandy Alcantara pitch in his next at-bat to heat things up in the early innings. Remember, there is history between the Marlins and Acuna.

The Marlins put up four runs on Atlanta ace Max Fried, but things unraveled after the teams got into their respective bullpens. The Braves hold a massive advantage in that area and have a much more dynamic offensive attack. The margin is thin in this series for the Marlins, but they've been as resilient as a team can be. That will be put to the test in Game 2, when Pablo Lopez will try to even things for Miami against Atlanta's Ian Anderson.

For the Braves, that they got a subpar outing from Fried and still won a playoff game going away tells you all you need to know about how well-rounded this Atlanta squad is. -- Bradford Doolittle

Next up: Game 2, 2:08 p.m. ET Wednesday


play
1:41

Rays take charge with four homers in Game 2 win over Yankees

Randy Arozarena, Mike Zunino, Manuel Margot and Austin Meadow go yard as the Rays defeat the Yankees 7-5 to win Game 2 of the ALDS.

Tampa Bay Rays 7, New York Yankees 5

What it means: The game that started with a bait-and-switch ended with a bang.

The Rays evened the American League Division Series at a game apiece by giving the Yankees a big dose of their own home run medicine. Homers by Randy Arozarena, Mike Zunino and Manuel Margot and another solo shot by Austin Meadows, who the Rays thought might be finished for the season after he suffered an oblique strain in mid-September, wrapped the 7-5 win. Tyler Glasnow struck out 10 of the 18 Yankees fanned by the Rays' pitching staff, a new MLB postseason record for a nine-inning game. Glasnow's Achilles' heel was slugger Giancarlo Stanton, who had two of the three hits given up by the hard-throwing righty, both of them home runs, including a 118.3 mph blast in the fourth. Stanton became the first player to hit five home runs and record 10 RBIs in a four-game span in one postseason.

The Yankees sent rookie right-hander Deivi García to the mound to start Tuesday night's game but allowed him to pitch only one inning in what appeared to be a strategy to control the Rays' lineup composition. That backfired when New York brought in J.A. Happ in the second inning, and the veteran lefty gave up four runs on five hits (two home runs) over 2 2/3 innings.

The Yankees will stay away from gimmicks and send playoff ace Masahiro Tanaka to take on the AL East champions in Game 3. Tanaka, who had a 1.76 postseason ERA before his weather-tainted start in Cleveland, is the Yankees' only hope of avoiding going down 2-1 in a no-days-off, best-of-five series against one of the deepest pitching staffs in the majors. -- Marly Rivera

Next up: Game 3, 7:10 p.m. ET Wednesday


play
0:28

Cronenworth's error proves costly for Padres

Jake Cronenworth misplays the throw to first base, and the Dodgers take advantage, tying the game at one run apiece in the fifth inning.

Los Angeles Dodgers 5, San Diego Padres 1

What it means: On the 115th pitch they saw, the Dodgers finally registered a hit. For 5 1/3 innings, a panoply of Padres pitchers were crafting what might have been the ugliest no-hitter of all time -- a walk-fattened, reliever-stuffed, caterpillar crawl to the end. Mookie Betts ended it with a double, Justin Turner, Max Muncy and Cody Bellinger followed with hits of their own, and just like that, the Dodgers were on their way to a 5-1 win and a 1-0 NLDS lead. It happens quickly with them, and now that Mike Clevinger is shelved after he couldn't make it to 25 pitches in his Game 1 start, San Diego faces a scary reality: Without either of their best starters, with a bullpen that got taxed heavily in the first game and with games scheduled the next four days, the Padres need to beat the best team in baseball three times before it beats them twice. -- Jeff Passan

Next up: Game 2, 9:08 p.m. ET Wednesday

Bettman: NHL targeting Jan. 1 start to season

Published in Hockey
Tuesday, 06 October 2020 18:18

The NHL is targeting a Jan. 1 start date for next season, commissioner Gary Bettman said Tuesday.

In an interview with NHL Network, Bettman reiterated that the league hopes to play a full 82-game season and have fans in arenas. Bettman said planning discussions with the NHL Players' Association will begin shortly after the free-agency period, which begins Friday.

When the NHL and NHLPA revealed their return-to-play initiatives in July, they targeted Dec. 1 to begin next season, though that date was fluid. The NHL completed its 2019-20 season last month, when the Tampa Bay Lightning won the Stanley Cup, defeating the Dallas Stars in the Edmonton, Alberta, bubble.

The NHL draft is being held virtually Tuesday and Wednesday.

Among the items the NHL and NHLPA must discuss for next season are the format and the schedule, as well as health and safety initiatives. Although the players agreed that bubbles were necessary to complete the 2020 postseason -- a two-month tournament that took place in Edmonton and Toronto -- their preference is to avoid them for next season.

The bubble postseason was a success from a health and safety perspective. The NHL conducted daily COVID-19 testing for all players and staffers for two months, and it reported zero confirmed cases. Players, however, were less than pleased with the amenities and were frustrated that their family members were largely unable to join them later in the tournament, counter to what was originally promised.

The NHL is a gate-driven league, and it would take a significant financial hit if fans were not allowed in buildings next season.

"If there's an option to consider, believe me, we're considering it," Bettman said in September. "It's conceivable that we start without fans, that we move to socially distant fans at some point, and by some point in time, maybe our buildings are open."

The NHL will face a serious roadblock if the Canada-United States border does not open for nonessential business. Sources told ESPN that the league is considering, among many other options, an all-Canadian division of teams if the border remains closed.

Teams are allowed to open their facilities for offseason training on Oct. 15. The NHL and NHLPA agreed on a 19-page document of training protocols, which include that a maximum of 12 players can be on the ice at one time and that participants must be tested at least twice weekly for COVID-19. Any player who has had COVID-19 also must undergo a cardiac screening before participation.

Byfield the highest-drafted Black player in NHL

Published in Hockey
Tuesday, 06 October 2020 18:31

Center Quinton Byfield of the Sudbury Wolves was taken No. 2 overall by the Los Angeles Kings on Tuesday night, making him the highest-drafted Black player in NHL history.

"Quinton is an exceptional young man and talented player with a very bright future," Kings general manager Rob Blake said. "We're proud to be adding him to our organization and look forward to the next stages of his development and a promising career in L.A."

Byfield, 18, is a native of Newmarket, Ontario, Canada. His father, Clinton, is originally from Jamaica.

"Being on top for something is always cool and being the top pick among players of color would definitely be something really special to me," Byfield told NHL.com earlier this year. "I think the game is changing, and the NHL is becoming more diverse. Definitely that would get kids motivated to start playing hockey, knowing that they can play and that hockey is for everyone."

San Jose Sharks forward Evander Kane (2009, Atlanta Thrashers) and Columbus Blue Jackets defenseman Seth Jones (2103, Nashville Predators) shared the previous record for highest-drafted Black player in the NHL, at No. 4.

After Byfield was selected, Kane tweeted, "Congratulations to @byfield55 on his 2nd Overall selection and becoming the highest drafted black player in history."

The 6-foot-4, 215-pound center has posted 143 points and a plus-38 rating in 109 regular-season games in his two seasons in the Ontario Hockey League. He was the No. 2-ranked North American skater behind Alexis Lafreniere, who was selected first overall by the New York Rangers.

Alex Trebek announces Senators' first draft pick

Published in Hockey
Tuesday, 06 October 2020 19:39

With three first-round selections on their to-do list, the Ottawa Senators were already a team to watch heading into Tuesday's NHL draft.

They leapt even further into spotlight, right off the bat, by introducing "Jeopardy!" host Alex Trebek to announce their first choice.

The draft, similar to the NFL, is being held at team sites with league executives stationed at the NHL Network in New Jersey. From his television setup there, commissioner Gary Bettman welcomed Trebek, a graduate of the University of Ottawa, into the broadcast as a "special guest."

Trebek, standing at his traditional "Jeopardy!" dais, took it from there and announced "The NHL" as the topic. He eventually selected German center Tim Stutzle with the third overall pick, as the "Jeopardy!" theme music played in the background.

It was an unexpected moment for a non-descript franchise that traditionally doesn't make many headlines. But Trebek, 80, currently battling stage 4 pancreatic cancer and a recipient of the Order of Canada, performed a key moment for the team with his traditional, stoic delivery that "Jeopardy" viewers have been familiar with since 1984.

At No. 5, the Senators selected Jake Sanderson, the first American player to be drafted this year. A defenseman, from the University of North Dakota, he is the son of former NHL forward Geoff Sanderson. The second pick was announced by Ottawa general manager Pierre Dorion, who thanked Trebek for the first selection.

Ottawa also held the rights to the No. 28 pick. In a rare draft oddity, the Senators joined the New Jersey Devils as two franchises with three first-round picks on the same night. New Jersey opened their run, at No. 7, selecting Swedish forward Alexander Holtz, and chose Canadian center Dawson Mercer at No. 18, followed by Russian defenseman Shakir Mukhamadullin at No. 20.

Also in the first round, the Winnipeg Jets selected No. 10 overall. A key number in their franchise history -- 10 was the number worn Hall of Fame forward Dale Hawerchuk, who died in August after battling stomach cancer -- the Jets introduced Hawerchuk's wife, Crystal, to make the pick.

After thanking the hockey community for its well wishes to the family, Hawerchuk announced the Jets' choice of Canadian forward Cole Perfetti.

The draft, originally scheduled to be held in Montreal, began with the New York Rangers selecting the consensus No. 1 prospect, Canadian forward Alexis Lafreniere.

Lafreniere, from suburban Montreal, was the first Canadian to go No. 1 since Connor McDavid was chosen by Edmonton in 2015.

Bettman began the broadcast with an announcement that the league is planning to begin next season on Jan. 1, 2021.

NEWTOWN SQUARE, Pa. – The October move of the KPMG Women's PGA Championship means less daylight and more improvising.

Kerry Haigh, the chief championships officer for the PGA, said on Tuesday at Aronimink Golf Club that players will be going out as early as possible on Thursday and Friday, and finishing up as late as will be allowed.

"We do have 132 players in the field, which we are proud of. But having said that, we're actually going to tee off, I believe, it's three minutes after sunrise on Thursday and Friday, and we will be finishing well after sunset," Haigh said. "The hope is to finish, but we would not be surprised if we were not able to finish due to the challenges and the difficulty of the golf course and the amount of daylight. But we felt it extremely important to provide the playing opportunity for all the best players to just feel what is a true major championship."

Carryovers are nothing unusual, but this weekend's schedule is unique.

The event was originally slated for June, but because of the COVID-19 pandemic, was shifted to this week. Not only are there daylight concerns, but showcasing a major championship on network television also means competing against other sports, in this case, NASCAR on NBC.

Saturday's third-round coverage is scheduled to conclude at 3 p.m. ET, with the final round slated to end at 2 p.m. ET. If all goes well, the third round will play out normally, with the leaders going out last. That, however, won't be the case on Sunday.

From TV times to purse and payout, here's what you need to know ahead of this week's KPMG Women's PGA Championship.

In order for fans to see the contenders compete, the leading threesome would go out in the final round roughly 45 minutes ahead of the final tee time.

"If you have the opportunity to see a three-hour telecast and see the leaders all through that three hours, to me as a spectator, that is a lot more appealing than watching everyone but the leaders tee off and you never get to the leaders to see a shot,'' Haigh said.

But as Haigh mentioned, getting everyone out (7:10 a.m. first tee time) and in (sunset around 6:30 p.m.) will be a challenge over the first two days. Should Round 2 spill over into Saturday, provisions will have to be made.

"In some ways, we could be making history this week because we will have the leaders not teeing off at the end of the wave on Sunday. And if we don't finish on Friday, they will not be teeing off last on Saturday, either," Haigh said.

"And although it's a little different and out of the box, we as partners with the LPGA and KPMG are prepared to make those changes for what we think will be a greater and a better championship for everyone to observe."

Rangers select Lafreniere with No. 1 overall pick

Published in Breaking News
Tuesday, 06 October 2020 18:57

The New York Rangers selected left wing Alexis Lafreniere of the QMJHL's Rimouski Oceanic with the first pick in the 2020 NHL draft on Tuesday. The Rangers had never previously selected with the first overall pick in the entry draft era, which began in 1979.

Lafreniere, who will turn 19 on Sunday, was the consensus top prospect in this draft class after putting together a remarkable and decorated season between his efforts with Rimouski in a shortened season and for Team Canada at the 2020 IIHF World Junior Championship. He led the QMJHL in scoring with 112 points in just 52 games, earning league MVP honors for the second straight season. His 2.15 points per game average was the highest across Canada's top three junior leagues since Connor McDavid had 2.50 in his final season in the OHL in 2014-15.

Additionally, Lafreniere was named the Canadian Hockey League Player of the Year for the second straight season, joining Sidney Crosby as the only other player to win that award twice. The 6-foot-1, 192-pound winger overcame a mid-tournament injury to lead Canada to the gold medal at the World Junior Championship, scoring 10 points in just five games on the way to earning MVP honors.

A forward with an uncommon combination of elite skill and physicality, Lafreniere has been among the most prized prospects of the 2001 birth year for some time. He was the QMJHL's rookie of the year in his first season in 2017-18, and he will finish his career in Quebec's top junior circuit with 297 points in 173 games.

Lafreniere represents one of the final pieces to the rebuild puzzle for the Rangers, who have assembled one of the strongest prospect pools in the NHL over the past three seasons. He will join a roster that includes a Hart Trophy finalist in Artemi Panarin, one of the most promising goalies in the game in Igor Shesterkin and last year's No. 2 overall pick on the opposite wing, Kaapo Kakko.

The Rangers earned the top pick in the draft after the Carolina Hurricanes swept them out of the qualification round of the NHL's unique postseason setup. New York was among eight eliminated teams with a 12.5% chance to earn the No. 1 overall pick.

At No. 2, the Los Angeles Kings selected center Quinton Byfield of the Ontario Hockey League. And at No. 3, the Ottawa Senators chose forward Tim Stutzle of Germany.

Stewart named Finals MVP as Storm win 4th title

Published in Breaking News
Tuesday, 06 October 2020 19:37

Seattle Storm forward Breanna Stewart added to her extensive trophy collection Tuesday with her second WNBA title and WNBA Finals MVP award -- all by age 26, which she turned in August.

Stewart had 26 points and four rebounds Tuesday as the No. 2-seeded Storm completed a sweep of the No. 1-seeded Las Vegas Aces with a 92-59 victory at IMG Academy in Bradenton, Florida. The 33-point margin of victory was the largest in WNBA Finals history.

Stewart was the unanimous choice for MVP. Only four other players besides Stewart have won two Finals MVP awards: Houston's Cynthia Cooper, Los Angeles' Lisa Leslie, Phoenix's Diana Taurasi and Minnesota's Sylvia Fowles.

Stewart, who shot 10-of-14 from the floor Tuesday, had her sixth consecutive WNBA Finals game with at least 20 points. That is the longest such streak in history, passing Cynthia Cooper, who had five in a row for Houston between 1997-99, and Angel McCoughtry, who had five straight for Atlanta from 2010 to 2011.

The 6-foot-4 forward Stewart averaged 19.7 points, 8.3 rebounds and 3.6 assists in the regular season. In the postseason, those numbers were 25.7 points, 7.8 rebounds and 4.0 assists.

Stewart was the No. 1 draft pick out of UConn in 2016 after winning four consecutive NCAA titles for the Huskies. She was Rookie of the Year that WNBA season, and she was a league champion in 2018, her third year.

A year ago, though, Stewart was watching the WNBA Finals while rehabbing an Achilles tendon injury she sustained in April 2019 while playing overseas. It was the first serious injury of her career, which at that point included not just her success in college and the WNBA, but also gold medals in the 2016 Olympics and 2018 FIBA Women's World Cup.

Stewart first returned to action in late January 2020 in an exhibition with the U.S. national team. Then she went back overseas to play until the COVID-19 pandemic cut short her European season. Stewart was ready to go for the 2020 WNBA season. Earlier this year, she said she would give herself an A-minus or B-plus for this season, but then acknowledged she was being a tough grader.

Seattle joined Houston, a now-defunct franchise, and Minnesota in winning its fourth title, tying for the most in the history of the WNBA, which began in 1997. The Comets' titles came at the league's start, from 1997-2000, while Minnesota won in 2011, '13, '15 and '17. The Storm's championships came in 2004, 2010 and 2018; point guard Sue Bird has started on all of those teams.

This year, the 24th WNBA campaign had a regular season shortened to 22 games because of the coronavirus pandemic. The Storm finished 18-4, as did Las Vegas. But the Aces won both regular-season games -- Bird didn't play in either game and Stewart only played in one -- and that gave Las Vegas the top seed. Aces forward A'ja Wilson won the league's regular-season MVP award, with Stewart coming in second.

But by the postseason, the Storm ruled. They swept Minnesota in the semifinals with only one close win: The opener, 88-86, on a last-second putback by Alysha Clark. The Storm won their other five playoff games by double-digits.

"The city of Seattle has always had our back," Stewart said after Tuesday's win. "We had the utmost support from everybody, and we're bringing another [title] back.

"I think the greatest challenge was just all the adversity. Everybody bought in. We're a chill team, and we kind of rolled with the punches and continued to do what we do. Now, we're the champs."

Source: Gentry joining Kings as associate coach

Published in Basketball
Tuesday, 06 October 2020 18:05

Former New Orleans Pelicans coach Alvin Gentry has agreed to a deal to become associate coach with the Sacramento Kings under Luke Walton, a source told ESPN's Adrian Wojnarowski.

Gentry will join the Kings less than two months after he was dismissed following a five-season run leading the Pelicans. His New Orleans teams went 175-225 but were often beset by injuries.

Gentry's 175 victories with the Pelicans are the second most in Hornets/Pelicans franchise history, trailing the total of Byron Scott. Gentry left as the only coach in franchise history with a winning record (5-4) in the playoffs.

He'll join a Kings team coming off a 21-31 season in Walton's first year with the team.

Biden references Doc Rivers quote in speech

Published in Basketball
Tuesday, 06 October 2020 18:05

Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden quoted new Philadelphia 76ers coach Doc Rivers in a speech Tuesday in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.

In calling for national unity, the former vice president referenced Jacob Blake, a Black man who was left paralyzed from the waist down after he was shot in the back by a white police officer on Aug. 23 in Kenosha, Wisconsin.

Rivers, who was coaching the LA Clippers in the NBA bubble when the shooting occurred, spoke emotionally about the incident and the current state of racial affairs in the country after a Clips win on Aug. 24.

His words were recalled Tuesday by Biden: "Doc Rivers, the basketball coach, choking back tears when he said, 'We're the ones getting killed. We're the ones getting shot. We've been hung. It's amazing how we keep loving this country, and this country does not love us back.'

"I think about that. I think about what it takes for a Black person to love America. That is a deep love for this country that has for far too long never been recognized."

Rivers was introduced as the Sixers' new coach on Monday. He was fired by the Clippers last week after seven seasons.

Soccer

Klopp rules out quick return after Liverpool exit

Klopp rules out quick return after Liverpool exit

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsJürgen Klopp said he may not return to management after ending his...

Small margins: The story of Arsenal's season, and where they can still improve

Small margins: The story of Arsenal's season, and where they can still improve

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsLONDON -- When the pain passes, only pride will remain. Arsenal ult...

Man Utd wrap up worst ever Premier League spot

Man Utd wrap up worst ever Premier League spot

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsManchester United's miserable season ended with confirmation of the...

2026 FIFA


2028 LOS ANGELES OLYMPIC

UEFA

2024 PARIS OLYMPIC


Basketball

Injuries catch up to Knicks: 'Nothing left to give'

Injuries catch up to Knicks: 'Nothing left to give'

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsNEW YORK -- Pretty much all season, even as his team was without it...

Brunson, nursing broken hand, laments end of run

Brunson, nursing broken hand, laments end of run

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsNEW YORK -- As he sat at the podium, his left hand and wrist immobi...

Baseball

Pillar, 'always ready,' posts 1,000th career hit

Pillar, 'always ready,' posts 1,000th career hit

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsARLINGTON, Texas -- Kevin Pillar tucked a keepsake ball into his ba...

Darvish ups scoreless IP streak to 25 in 200th win

Darvish ups scoreless IP streak to 25 in 200th win

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsATLANTA -- Yu Darvish dominated a slumping Braves offense and exten...

Sports Leagues

  • FIFA

    Fédération Internationale de Football Association
  • NBA

    National Basketball Association
  • ATP

    Association of Tennis Professionals
  • MLB

    Major League Baseball
  • ITTF

    International Table Tennis Federation
  • NFL

    Nactional Football Leagues
  • FISB

    Federation Internationale de Speedball

About Us

I Dig® is a leading global brand that makes it more enjoyable to surf the internet, conduct transactions and access, share, and create information.  Today I Dig® attracts millions of users every month.r

 

Phone: (800) 737. 6040
Fax: (800) 825 5558
Website: www.idig.com
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Affiliated