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Mendis falls as Ajaz gives New Zealand a foothold

Published in Cricket
Thursday, 15 August 2019 02:58

Tea Sri Lanka 143 for 3 (Mathews 41*, Ajaz 3-37) trail New Zealand 249 (Taylor 86, Dananjaya 5-80, Lakmal 4-29) by 106 runs

It wasn't the most exciting session of Test cricket for most parts, neither was it one where both sides conceded the advantage to the other. New Zealand kept plugging away in the hope of building pressure and keeping the scoring down to frustrate batsmen, while Sri Lanka were happy to bide their time and not commit the kind of mistakes New Zealand did on the opening day against spin, Akila Dananjaya in particular.

Then, with the tea interval four minutes away and with the confidence of a half-century behind him, Kusal Mendis did something that he so often has in his career: eliciting frustration among the fans and cricket faithfuls alike, looking to blast a delivery he just couldn't hold back, only to edge Ajaz Patel to slip. And just like that, an hour's consolidation and stonewalling that appeared to give Sri Lanka a semblance of control just crashed as they went into tea on 143 for 3, still trailing by 106 runs.

In a 20-minute passage on either side of drinks, Sri Lanka found scoring tough, scoring just eight runs in 10 overs. Mathews was meeting the ball with his full forward stride, but there was a sense that he may have been going into his shell. Then came two long-hops off Tim Southee, which he crashed for boundaries to break the shackles. The first of the two was a short ball thumped through point and the second a neat little tuck off his hips to the fine-leg boundary.

Now, all revved up, he turned ultra-aggressive when he lofted Mitchell Santner over long-off, and cleared the ropes despite not hitting it well. But by then, the stranglehold New Zealand seemed to have built around the Sri Lankans had eased.

Kusal Mendis, technically solid but often with a tendency of playing a shot too many at inopportune moments, shelved his flamboyance to dig in. He didn't score a single boundary after drinks and significantly slowed down, but at no stage showing frustration of playing a shot or two in anger, considering he started like a bullet train before lunch.

Towards the end of the session, Kane Williamson, perhaps realising the importance of this stand, brought back Trent Boult for a crack after a first spell of five overs that went for just seven. This didn't make much of a difference as he struggled to move the ball or cause much ruffle, forcing Williamson to alternate between William Somerville and Ajaz to end the session, and the move worked.

New Zealand burnt a review along the way with Kusal on 29 for an lbw appeal off Santner, with the ball appearing to have struck him outside leg. It was a review out of desperation from a side that had packed their starting XI with three spinners in the hope of the ball jumping and fizzing. While there was turn and bounce, it was consistent bounce. Their only wicket in the session was Dimuth Karunaratne, when he went back and was beaten by drift to be trapped in front by Ajaz after doing all the hard work to make 39.

In the morning, however, New Zealand unravelled dramatically in the face of an excellent Suranga Lakmal spell,. Lakmal claimed the prize wicket of Ross Taylor for 86 with his first ball of the morning, then went on to deliver a spell of 5.2 overs that yielded 4 for 15, as New Zealand lost their last five wickets for 46 runs.

Attempting a cut to a short-of-a-length Lakmal ball close to his body, Taylor supplied a straightforward edge to the wicketkeeper. Santner didn't last the first half hour either, shouldering arms to a Lakmal indipper that would have gone on to clip the stumps had it not struck pad.

With both recognised batsmen out early in the day it was up to New Zealand's tail to provide some sort of resistance, but only Boult succeeded for any reasonable length of time, hitting a six and a four on his way to 18 off 22 balls. He eventually holed out trying to hit Lakmal for another six down the ground, before No. 11 Ajaz was out lbw first ball, attempting a legside flick. New Zealand's innings was wrapped up soon after drinks.

Sri Lanka had 13 overs to bat out before lunch and, in that time, lost opener Lahiru Thirimanne, and should have lost Karuanarate as well, had Taylor held a sharp chance at slip. That chance, however, didn't prove too costly for the New Zealanders.

Brendon McCullum named KKR head coach

Published in Cricket
Thursday, 15 August 2019 03:23

Brendon McCullum is set to take over as head coach at Kolkata Knight Riders for the upcoming season, to go with his appointment as the head coach of Trinbago Knight Riders, the other team owned by the same group.

Less than a week ago, it had been learnt that McCullum would take over as head coach at Trinbago but only as assistant coach with the IPL franchise, following his retirement from all forms of the game earlier in the month. That's changed since, with the top job at the Kolkata franchise going to the former New Zealand captain, too.

ESPNcricinfo understands that McCullum, whose appearance for Toronto Nationals against Brampton Wolves in the Global T20 Canada league was his last representative match, has been signed up by the Knight Riders franchise - which owns both teams - for at least the upcoming seasons of the Caribbean Premier League (CPL) and the IPL.

McCullum, 37, was expected to play in the Euro T20 Slam from August 30 as an icon player for Glasgow Giants but instead announced his retirement as a freelance cricketer. It's understood that the decision to skip the new tournament was because Trinbago wanted him to helm the team at the CPL this year itself, and the dates of the two competitions clashed; the CPL starts from September 5.

Indeed, in his message on Instagram at the time of announcing his retirement, McCullum had mentioned that "the next chapter, in both media and coaching, will challenge me further".

Kolkata recently announced that they were parting ways with Jacques Kallis, their head coach, and Simon Katich, the assistant coach who was also the head coach at Trinbago.

McCullum had retired from international cricket in 2016, after the Christchurch Test against Australia, but continued to turn out in franchise-cricket leagues around the world, with stints in the IPL with Chennai Super Kings and Royal Challengers Bangalore, as well as Brisbane Heat in the Big Bash, Lahore Qalandars in the PSL and Trinbago in the CPL.

His association with the Knight Riders goes way back. An early pathbreaker of sorts in T20 cricket, McCullum's best was the unbeaten 158 he made for the Kolkata team against Royal Challengers in the inaugural IPL game, in 2008.

In December 2018, McCullum went unsold at the IPL auction. In February, he called time on his BBL career with Heat after a relatively strong season in which he made 302 runs in 13 innings. At the time, he expressed his desire to continue playing T20 cricket worldwide.

Only two weeks ago in London, McCullum was signed by Glasgow for the inaugural edition of the Euro T20 Slam, where he was to team up with Dale Steyn, among others. However, the desire to "plough on regardless" didn't appeal to him.

"I owe it to myself and the teams I represent to close that chapter rather than just plough on regardless of what I know to be true," he wrote. "In T20 cricket, I've enjoyed so many varied challenges, I can leave the game knowing I left no stone unturned."

NFLPA issues 'work stoppage guide' to players

Published in Breaking News
Wednesday, 14 August 2019 22:42

As collective bargaining agreement negotiations between the NFL and the NFLPA continue to make little progress, the NFLPA has issued a "work stoppage guide" to its players to help them prepare in case of a strike or lockout following the 2020 season.

Sources on both sides continue to insist a work stoppage is unlikely. But the NFLPA has said all along that its mission is to "negotiate for the best while preparing for the worst." So while the current CBA doesn't expire until March 2021, the players' union is trying to make sure its members are prepared in case negotiations go sideways.

Much of the guide, a copy of which was obtained by ESPN, is focused on helping players manage their money in advance of -- or in case of -- a strike or lockout. The specific suggestions include:

  • Save at least half of each paycheck, if not more. If your current expenses are too high to save this much, you should look at ways to change your spending habits and reduce financial commitments.

  • Try cooking at home instead of eating out as much.

  • Designate one day a week as "no spending day."

  • Take care of major home repairs now.

  • If you're in the market for a new home, consider renting instead of buying for now.

  • Find renters for your unoccupied homes or bedrooms.

  • Consider selling a car you have not driven in the past six months.

  • Avoid signing a long-term lease on any rental property that you rarely use.

  • Learn to say "no" -- or at least, "not now" -- to friends and family asking for money.

  • Consider selling clothes you have not worn in a year on Poshmark, Thredup or Tradesy.

Other parts of the guide address specifics of what the rules might be during a work stoppage, in terms of access to team facilities (none), whether the league would conduct a draft (it did in 2011 while players were locked out) and whether players would still be subject to drug testing during a work stoppage (they don't know).

Players and owners have conducted a handful of negotiating sessions this summer, and commissioner Roger Goodell has said publicly that the league would like a new CBA in place before the start of the 2019 season. But sources say little progress has been made in talks so far, as the main issue remains the revenue split between players and owners. Currently, the players' share of all league revenue can't fall below 47% in a given year, and the players want that figure to go up.

More negotiating sessions between players and owners are tentatively scheduled for next week, sources say, though the key word there is "tentatively." Talks between staff members for each side have been ongoing, and the two sides figure to decide in the coming days whether there's likely to be enough progress to warrant formal negotiating sessions next week.

In the sixth over of India's chase in the third ODI in Port of Spain, Virat Kohli, batting on 11, was surprised by a Keemo Paul delivery that went past him as he tried to make room to play on the leg side and caught an inside edge. Behind the stumps, Shai Hope couldn't get enough of his gloves on the ball and dropped it. Kohli went on to score an unbeaten 114 and clinch the match for India. It was a chance that Jason Holder rued at the end of the match.

"We have got to hold our chances and we didn't hold them today. [Kohli] made us pay for it," Holder said at the press conference. "Credit to him he batted really well and he won the game for India in the end.

"They got off to a really good start and so did we. I think it was a really, really good wicket for cricket. Conditions got a little tougher in the afternoon after the rain fell. The ball was a bit wet and the outfield was obviously very wet, too. It didn't work for us today."

Before the match, Carlos Brathwaite had said that the team wasn't playing as badly as results suggested and the problem for the side came down to executing the critical moments. That held true in the third ODI, too. There were times, with bat and ball, when West Indies looked like they had the upper hand. Like that opening stand of 115 in nearly 11 overs between Chris Gayle and Evin Lewis, and Fabien Allen's double-strike in the 13th over to dismiss Rishabh Pant and Shikhar Dhawan. But they failed to build on the big moments.

"From T20s to the last ODI here, we have played some pretty decent cricket in patches, it is just a matter for us to put it together more often than not and that's where we continue to let ourselves down," Holder said.

"It's just a matter for us to continue to build, you know. I keep saying it's a matter for us to really seize the key moments of the game and play those key moments a little bit better than we have been in the past."

Holder said there were a lot of individual performances - positives - that the team could build on going into the Test series and beyond.

"The way Chris played today, Evin Lewis too showed a lot of form. The bowlers had a reasonable time too. The last game I thought we bowled really, really well," he said. "Today we were off a little bit, but generally our bowling has led us in the last couple of games.

"Nicholas Pooran continues to show what he can produce here at this level. Every single batter today really put their hands up today. I was really, really pleased how we batted in the situation after the rain break. In the past we lost too many wickets and not being able to - or struggled to - bat, and I think we handled the situation very well today and put ourselves in a really good situation in the halfway stage, you know. Just unfortunate we weren't able to defend it but when you don't hold your chances these things happen."

With the Test series beginning on August 22, Holder urged the side to carry the momentum from their 2-1 series win over England earlier this year. An additional incentive for the side will be the points in the World Test Championship.

"We've got a few days off. This is a fresh group, different faces coming in to the Test squad. It's a matter for us to continue doing the good work we have been doing in Test cricket in the last two-three years," he said. "The first series we had this year was a success. I know the guys would be ready to go against India here in this second series of the year.

"Obviously with the Test championship around it's something I look forward to play. I think the guys are up for it. We started really well this year beating England at home and you know we had some brilliant individual performances. It's just a matter for us to build. The Test championships are two years away, we have a lot of cricket to play in the next two years, I think every series will be important. Each and every moment in the series will be important."

Pujols sets record for hits by foreign-born player

Published in Baseball
Wednesday, 14 August 2019 21:50

ANAHEIM, Calif. -- Albert Pujols had two hits and three RBIs Wednesday and set the major league record for career hits by a foreign-born player, leading the Los Angeles Angels to a 7-4 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Pujols had an RBI single in the 4th inning. His 3,167th hit moved him past fellow Dominican Republic native Adrian Beltre (3,166) and into sole possession of 15th place for career hits.

Luis Rengifo also drove in two runs for the Angels, who snapped a three-game home losing streak. Dillon Peters (3-1) allowed two runs in six innings while striking out six after an erratic start.

Melky Cabrera and Elias Diaz each had an RBI for the Pirates, who failed to complete a three-game sweep of the Angels. Pittsburgh has not won three in a row since July 1-3, against the Chicago Cubs.

Chris Archer (3-9) allowed four runs, three earned, in five innings, and his streak of starts without a win reached 12 games. It is the longest such span in Archer's eight-year career.

The Angels scored four runs in the fourth inning to erase a two-run deficit. Los Angeles moved in front on Rengifo's double to left field. The Pirates' Bryan Reynolds overran the ball when it dropped in, and it bounced all the way to warning track. Rengifo kept running, rounding third and sliding headfirst into home to give the Angels a two-run lead.

The 39-year-old Pujols drove in Los Angeles' first run with his record-setting single. David Fletcher followed with an RBI double that tied the game at 2-all.

Pittsburgh pulled within 4-3 in the seventh inning. Diaz scored from third when Erik Gonzalez hit into a double play.

Pujols put the Angels ahead 6-3 with a two-run single in the eighth inning. Rengifo drove in Pujols to make it 7-3.

Diaz had an RBI single in the ninth inning for the final margin of victory.

The Pirates jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the first inning. Peters loaded the bases with no outs with a walk and hitting two batters. Josh Bell hit into a double play that scored Kevin Newman, and Cabrera had an RBI single to right that made it 2-0.

STILL WAITING

The Pirates' last series sweep came June 21-23 against San Diego, and they have not won every game in a road series since May 17-19 at the Padres. They have swept two road series this season, the other coming when they took two games at Detroit on April 15-16.

TRAINER'S ROOM

Pirates: C Jacob Stallings was scratched from the starting lineup because of a migraine. ... RHP Jameson Taillon will miss the 2020 season after undergoing Tommy John surgery for the second time.

Angels: RHP Noe Ramirez (viral infection) was recalled from the injured list Wednesday and served the first game of a three-game suspension for hitting Astros OF Jake Marsinick with a pitch on July 16.

UP NEXT

Pirates: RHP Joe Musgrove (8-11, 4.71 ERA) will start in the opener of a three-game series against the Cubs at home on Friday. Musgrove is 0-1 in two starts against the Cubs this season, but has not allowed an earned run in 9 1/3 innings.

Angels: LHP Andrew Heaney (1-3, 4.89) gets the nod in the first game of a four-game series against the Chicago White Sox on Thursday. Heaney is 1-2 with a 5.13 ERA in five home starts this season.

Reports: Harvey joining A's on minor league deal

Published in Baseball
Wednesday, 14 August 2019 21:02

Veteran right-handed pitcher Matt Harvey has agreed to a minor league deal with the Oakland Athletics, according to multiple reports.

Harvey, 30, was designated for assignment last month by the Los Angeles Angels, with whom he signed a one-year, $11 million deal before the season.

Harvey was 3-5 with a 7.09 ERA in 12 starts for the Angels in 2019.

Once dubbed "The Dark Knight," Harvey was among baseball's most dominant starters for a time with the New York Mets. He started the 2013 All-Star Game at Citi Field but hurt his elbow later that summer and never consistently regained his 98 mph fastball or command following Tommy John surgery.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

Hamels rocked as Manuel's return spurs Phils

Published in Baseball
Wednesday, 14 August 2019 22:14

PHILADELPHIA -- One reunion got off to a great start, while another was anything but impressive, as new Philadelphia Phillies hitting coach Charlie Manuel saw his lineup score 11 runs on Wednesday -- eight of them against former Phillies star Cole Hamels.

Hamels got a hero's welcome back to Philadelphia then promptly got rocked, failing to record an out in the bottom of the third inning while giving up nine hits and two walks as the Phils beat the Chicago Cubs, 11-1. The standing ovation he received when he came to the plate in the top of the third didn't feel so great after giving up four runs.

"I'm thankful to the fans for their support but when you get your butt kicked, for two straight innings, I'm a little focused on that," Hamels said. "You can't keep putting up games like I've done the last two games. That's not the person I am and those aren't the expectations I hold on myself."

Hamels has totaled five innings and 12 runs over his last two starts, not long after coming off the injured list for an oblique issue. He says his mechanics are off, but perhaps Manuel's familiarity with his former ace had something to do with it. The 75 year old former World Series winning manager was hired by his old team on Tuesday to be their hitting coach for the playoff push.

"It's surprising," Hamels said of Manuel's return to the dugout. "He loves baseball and he's pretty good at it.

"He has a really good perspective. I have the utmost respect for him ... he was like a dad to us. You never want to disappoint him. He was such a good inspiration, even when you give up eight runs, or when you're 0 for 5 with 5 punch outs, he knew how to get you right the next day."

Whether or not Manuel had a chance to suggest any changes to players who'd been struggling at the plate, his mere presence in the dugout sparked a crowd that has long had a soft spot for the man who manged the 2008 championship team. The fans could be heard chanting "Charlie! Charlie! Charlie!" chants throughout the game at Citizens Bank Park.

"There was an incredible energy in the ballpark and rightfully so," Phillies manager Gabe Kapler said of Manuel, who replaced John Mallee after the team let him go on Tuesday. "Charlie has earned that kind of adulation over a long period of time.

"He certainly adds to that loose, relaxed vibe. He's laid back, he believes in our hitters. I think he's going to make sure that our hitters know that. And our hitters looked like they believed in themselves today. It's no surprise. He's a great influence on our group."

Hamels was certainly thinking of his own situation in praising Manuel. Ironically, it's what he learned under Manuel that might help the lefthander moving forward.

"It takes the tough love, from Philly, is what taught me how to do it," Hamels said of overcoming adversity.

Wednesday's loss dropped the Cubs into a tie for first place with the St. Louis Cardinals but technically they're the second wild card team right now, just .001 percentage point behind St. Louis. The Phillies are two games back of the wild card and have taken the first two games of the series -- which means no matter what happens in the finale on Thursday the Cubs have gone winless over their last 12 road series.

Manuel's Phillies helped continue a woeful trend for the visitors as now their starting pitching is showing leaks. Righty Kyle Hendricks gave up seven in his last start and veteran lefty Jon Lester is just one start removed from giving up nine earned runs - one more than Hamels' performance.

"I guess we're both competing who can suck the most," Hamels said sarcastically. "We don't expect to put up these type of numbers, especially every five days. These are the types of numbers you might put up once a season."

Bryce Harper homered twice for Philadelphia, but said Manuel wasn't responsible for the toe-tap he added while in the batter's box to help improve his timing at the plate. Harper said he didn't really interact with Manuel much during the game.

"I took him a cup of water because he was working so hard and everyone was [chanting] his name," Harper said. "But that was about it. I think Charlie's never seen a homer that he didn't like. It's fun to have him."

This has been the Dream Team versus Angola, the 49ers versus the Broncos, Pujols versus Lidge, Reagan versus Mondale.

The Yankees beat the Orioles 6-5 on Wednesday, finishing their season showdown with 16 consecutive victories and a 17-2 overall record. Along the way, the Yankees hit .303 against the Orioles, averaged 7.95 runs and mashed 61 home runs -- shattering the previous record for home runs against one team in a season.

Yes, it was a trouncing. Since teams started playing 19 intradivision games in 2001, this matches the best record for one team against another:

2019 Yankees vs. Orioles: 17-2
2013 Indians vs. White Sox: 17-2
2013 Rangers vs. Astros: 17-2
2006 Athletics vs. Mariners: 17-2

(In an earlier era, the 1986 Mets went 17-1 against the Pirates and the 1974 Braves went 17-1 against the Padres.)

The Yankees outscored the Orioles by 68 runs, their largest run differential against one opponent since 1956 (when they outscored the Washington Senators by 68 runs). Their total of 151 runs is the second highest for one team against an opponent in the divisional era (since 1969):

2017 Yankees vs. Orioles: 154 runs
2019 Yankees vs. Orioles: 151 runs
2002 Diamondbacks vs. Rockies: 146 runs
2016 Cubs vs. Reds: 143 runs

(Thanks to Michael Bonzagni of ESPN Stats & Information for research help.)

With the season series mercifully over, I thought it would be fun to look back at 10 of the top highlights (not so much fun for Orioles fans):

April 4: Gleyber Torres went 4-for-4 with two home runs, a double and four RBIs in an 8-4 Yankees victory. The Orioles actually jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the first inning off James Paxton, but the Yankees would rally behind four home runs. Torres homered off Alex Cobb in the third and hit a three-run shot off Mike Wright in the sixth.

April 6: Clint Frazier hit a three-run homer with two outs in the eighth inning to lift the Yankees to a 6-4 victory. Aaron Judge mashed two home runs off Dylan Bundy. Frazier's winner came off a 2-2 slider from Miguel Castro and dropped the Orioles to 4-4 on the season. "I just love the fight in our guys," Orioles manager Brandon Hyde said. "We've just had a couple tough pitches out of the pen recently." Oh, Brandon, little do you know what would unfold the rest of the season.

April 7: The Yankees mashed seven home runs in a 15-3 victory. Gary Sanchez hit three of them and Frazier had two more. The Yankees had not hit seven home runs in a road game since May 30, 1961, when Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris both went deep twice at Fenway Park.

May 15: The Yankees swept a doubleheader by scores of 5-3 and 3-1, hitting four home runs in the opener and one in the nightcap. All four in Game 1 came off David Hess, including two from Torres, who added another homer in the second game. "It's too many home runs. It's embarrassing," Orioles catcher Austin Wynns said. Hess would end up going 0-3 against the Yankees while serving up 13 home runs in 20 innings.

May 20: The Orioles led 7-6 entering the top of the ninth, but after a tying sacrifice fly, Sanchez belted a three-run home run off Mychal Givens to give the Yankees a 10-7 victory. It was a comedy of errors for the Orioles leading up to Sanchez's home run. Dwight Smith Jr. made a bad throw in the seventh when he fell for a fake tag-up, Joey Rickard threw to the wrong base in the ninth inning, Smith chucked the ball past the plate on the sac fly and catcher Pedro Severino misplayed a foul pop that preceded Luke Voit's two-out walk ahead of Sanchez's home run. Good times. "We are Yankees," Torres explained after the game. "We have a history, you know what I mean?"

(Maybe this is a good time to point out that the Orioles have won an AL East title more recently than the Yankees. Baltimore won in 2014 and the Yankees haven't won since 2012.)

May 22: The Yankees hit five home runs, including four off Dan Straily, in a 7-5 win. Torres went deep twice. At this point in the season, Torres had 12 home runs -- 10 against the Orioles. "There's definitely a pitching plan," Hyde said of his team's approach with Torres. "It's definitely not to throw the ball in the middle part of the plate."

Aug. 5: The score was tied 6-6 in the top of the eighth when Mike Ford hit a go-ahead home run off Paul Fry. Three batters later, Mike Tauchman hit a two-run blast, his second of the game, as the Yankees went yard five times in a 9-6 win. All the home runs overshadowed Jonathan Villar's hitting for the cycle for the Orioles. At this point, the Yankees had hit 32 home runs at Camden Yards -- a major league record for a visiting team. They would hit six more the next day and five more the day after that, finishing with 43.

Aug. 7: Kyle Higashioka went deep twice, Gio Urshela went deep twice and Cameron Maybin added a fifth home run in 14-2 rout. The two-homer games by Higashioka and Urshela made it 11 Yankees who had homered at least twice in a game against the Orioles. (Yes, that's another record for one team against another.) "We've had a lot of guys coming through for us here," Aaron Boone said in the understatement of the year.

Aug. 12: The Yankees swept another doubleheader, winning 8-5 (four home runs) and 11-8 (three home runs). Torres hit one in the first game and two more in the second. When he came up with runners at first and second in the eighth inning, the Orioles simply issued an intentional walk. Hey, you can see the reasoning: Torres had hit 13 home runs against the Orioles. "I just kind of had enough," Hyde said. "We're making him look like a first-ballot Hall of Famer." Torres would finish .394/.467/1.045 in 18 games against the Orioles with those 13 home runs and 20 RBIs, leaving Orioles announcer Gary Thorne at a loss for words:

Aug. 14: Sanchez hit the only home run in the final game between the teams, and the Yankees held on for the victory. Sanchez finished with 10 home runs in 14 games against Baltimore. "The funny thing is that we're not thinking about records or anything like that," Sanchez said. "We're trying to go out there and have good at-bats." Bundy summed up how the Orioles felt about things: "We don't have to play them anymore, so I guess that's a good thing."

Jamie Murray could face brother Andy in the men's doubles quarter-finals at the Cincinnati Masters after he and Neal Skupski defeated French pair Nicolas Mahut and Pierre-Hugues Herbert.

British duo Murray and Skupski beat the fifth-seeded Australian Open champions 6-3 6-3 in the second-round match.

Andy and Feliciano Lopez must defeat Americans Ryan Harrison and Jack Sock on Thursday to reach the last eight.

The Murray brothers played together at the Washington Open earlier in August.

Three-time Grand Slam winner Andy, 32, and Spanish partner Lopez were crowned champions at Queen's Club in June and beat fourth seeds Jean-Julien Rojer and Horia Tecau in the first round.

The two-time Wimbledon champion made his singles comeback from hip surgery in Cincinnati on Monday, losing to Richard Gasquet.

Endeavour rewarded, Ma Te the immovable force

Published in Table Tennis
Wednesday, 14 August 2019 16:10

However, if any player gained just reward for keeping mind, body and soul together it was China’s Ma Te, a player very different from the vast majority of the modern era, he is a defender.

Men’s Singles

…………Ma Te prevailed in the match of the day; after one hour and six minutes, eventually he overcame Pavel Platonov of Belarus (9-11, 9-11, 11-3, 12-10, 15-13, 9-11, 13-11). One round later he beat Spain’s Alvaro Robles (7-11, 12-10, 7-11, 11-3, 11-6, 11-5) to book his place in the main draw.

…………Success for Japan: Takuya Jin, Asuka Machi, Masataka Morizono, Kazuhiro Yoshimura and Yuta Tanaka all booked main draw places.

…………China’s Zhao Zihao prevented Japan’s Kenta Matsudaira from reaching a fourth possible men’s singles final in five years; he beat the now 28 year old in five games (11-7, 12-10, 3-11, 11-9, 11-9), before accounting for a further Japanese player in the guise of Taimu Arinobu (10-12, 11-6, 11-6, 11-7, 11-8) to reserve his main draw place.

…………Winner just under one year ago in the Czech Republic, China’s Zheng Peifeng progressed but he was tested. In the final preliminary round he needed the full seven games to beat England’s Paul Drinkhall (14-12, 12-10, 10-12, 11-7, 1-11, 5-11, 11-7).

…………Highest rated name in the qualification stage, Portugal’s Marcos Freitas enjoyed success; in the final qualification he beat the Czech Republic’s Lubomir Jancarik (7-11, 11-6, 11-8, 11-7, 11-6).

Women’s Singles

…………All former winners on the ITTF World Tour, China’s Mu Zi and Wu Yang, alongside Portugal’s Shao Jieni and Germany’s Han Ying progressed safely to the main event.

…………The Japanese duo of Miyuu Kihara, 15 years old and Haruna Ojio, one year younger, both advanced to the second stage as did colleagues Airi Abe and Minami Ando.

…………Japanese players in form, the most impressive was Hina Hayata. She beat Feng Yalan (11-8, 11-9, 11-8, 11-7), three times a winner of the ITTF World Tour, before ousting a second Chinese player in the guise of Zhang Qiang (10-12, 11-3, 12-10, 11-9, 9-11, 15-13) to reserve her main draw place.

…………Korea Republic’s Kim Byeolnim emerged arguably the most surprise name to secure a main draw berth; in the decisive preliminary round she overcame Slovakia’s Barbora Balazova (6-11, 11-8, 4-11, 10-12, 11-7, 11-9, 11-8).

…………Chinese Taipei’s Chen Szu-Yu, the leading name on qualification duty, resisted a brave recovery by Ukraine’s Ganna Gaponova (11-7, 11-9, 11-3, 3-11, 13-15, 8-11, 11-7) to advance to the next stage.

Men’s Doubles

…………Iranian brothers Nima Alamian and Noshad Alamiyan provided the performance of the final qualification round; they beat Serbia’s Marko Jevtovic and Zsolt Pete (11-9, 11-2, 11-4), the runners up earlier this year on home soil at the ITTF Challenge Series tournament in Belgrade

Women’s Doubles

…………Winners on the ITTF World Tour in Budapest in 2017, China’s Chen Xingtong and Li Jiayi underlined the fact that they are candidates for honours; in the crucial preliminary round, they accounted for the Czech Republic’s Karin Adamkova and Dana Cechova (11-2, 11-8, 11-5).

Mixed Doubles

…………Korea Republic’s Cho Daeseong, 16 years old and Shin Yubin, one year younger, provided the performance of the final qualification round; they beat Romania’s Cristian Pletea and Eizabeta Samara (11-8, 5-11, 11-9, 6-11, 11-6).

Soccer

Lauren, Jrue Holiday invest in NWSL's Courage

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Arena: Poch doesn't understand culture of USMNT

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Wrexham a 'circus,' says rival boss before clash

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2026 FIFA


2028 LOS ANGELES OLYMPIC

UEFA

2024 PARIS OLYMPIC


Basketball

Fredette, BYU great to 2024 Olympian, retires

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Source: Pelicans hire Wizards' Weaver as VP

Source: Pelicans hire Wizards' Weaver as VP

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsThe New Orleans Pelicans have hired Troy Weaver as their senior vic...

Baseball

Mets targeting Alvarez, McNeil returns on Friday

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Phillies DFA Clemens, say no MRI for Sanchez

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EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsNEW YORK -- Kody Clemens, a son of seven-time Cy Young Award winner...

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

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