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Originally scheduled to take place in October, the ITTF Men’s World Cup will now be one of the final events of what is shaping up to be an epic end to 2019.

As requested by the local organising committee, the new dates of 29 November until 1 December mean that the ITTF Men’s World Cup will now be the last of this year’s three World Cup competitions:

  • ITTF Women’s World Cup: 18-20 October 2019 (Chengdu, China)
  • ITTF Team World Cup: 6-10 November 2019 (Tokyo, Japan)
  • ITTF Men’s World Cup: 29 November – 1 December 2019 (Chengdu, China)

The ITTF World Cups represent the second most prestigious events on the international table tennis calendar, after the ITTF World Championships, and they count towards the Grand Slam (Olympic Games, World Championships, World Cups).

This will be the 40th edition of the ITTF Men’s World Cup, which has been held every year since its inauguration in 1980 in Hong Kong.

The 2019 ITTF Men’s World Cup, as with the Women’s World Cup, will feature 20 of the globe’s top table tennis players, 18 of which will have qualified through their respective Continental Cups, together with the ITTF World Champion and a wildcard.

Here are the players who have qualified so far for the 2019 ITTF World Cups:

  • Liebherr 2019 ITTF World Table Tennis Championships: MA Long (CHN);  LIU Shiwen (CHN).
  • China Construction Bank 2019 ITTF Europe Top 16 Cup: Dimitrij OVTCHAROV (GER), Vladimir SAMSONOV (BLR), Timo BOLL (GER); Petrissa SOLJA (GER), Bernadette SZOCS (ROU), Sofia POLCANOVA (AUT).
  • Universal 2019 ITTF Pan American Cup: Hugo CALDERANO (BRA), Kanak JHA (USA); Adriana DIAZ (PUR), ZHANG Mo (CAN).
  • Lion 2019 ITTF-ATTU Asian Cup: FAN Zhendong (CHN), Koki NIWA (JPN), Tomokazu HARIMOTO (JPN); ZHU Yuling (CHN), Kasumi ISHIKAWA (JPN), FENG Tianwei (SGP).
  • 2019 ITTF Oceania Cup: Heming HU (AUS); Jian Fang LAY (AUS).

Further names will book their places at the 2019 ITTF World Cups via the ITTF Africa Cup (3-5 August in Lagos, Nigeria) and the full list of qualified players for the Women’s and Men’s World Cups will be announced by the end of August 2019.

Click here for the full 2019 event schedule.

Click here for more information on the World Cups.

NHL players' solutions to replay review controversies

Published in Hockey
Tuesday, 28 May 2019 05:56

BOSTON -- After a postseason beset by officiating controversies, NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said the league will explore expanding replay review.

Considering how candidly Bettman vented on Monday -- "It would be good if I kept my head from exploding," the commissioner said of his reaction to the uncalled hand pass that led to a game-winning goal in the Western Conference final -- it would be shocking if change isn't implemented for the 2019-20 season.

Though general managers and the competition committee will meet next month to discuss any alterations, Bettman said the league will gather ideas and feedback "from all the constituent groups." That should include players. To take the pulse of how they've felt about the controversies, ESPN asked several players in the Stanley Cup Final for their preferred solution.


"Get rid of video reviews, that's the problem," Bruins winger Brad Marchand said, sternly. "When you start bringing in all the video reviews, the refs are getting crucified. They're out there to do a job. Start taking it away from them, little by little, then it's going to escalate. Now they're going to want video reviews for pucks hitting the net or hand passes, so how much are you going to take away from the refs? The only way to do it is to do all of it with video review or none of it."

When asked which side he leaned toward, Marchand said: "I don't care either way. Just pick one. We're in between right now."

Indeed, a large issue for players is the gray area in which they're currently living. Some plays can be reviewed, such as goalie interference or offside. Others -- such as the hand pass in the Sharks-Blues game, or the uncalled puck off the netting that led to a goal in the Bruins-Blue Jackets game in the second round -- cannot. Frankly, it feels arbitrary.

"We've all talked about it, being such a hot-button topic," Bruins defenseman John Moore said. "The issue with video replay is: Where do you draw the line? If you allow it, and you don't allow certain things, then you have situations like we've seen all throughout the playoffs. You look at certain sports like tennis, right? It feels like they've really perfected the video review. You know the technology is there, so it's frustrating. It's a conversation that needs to take place with the powers that be moving forward. It is an imperfect system."

Moore went further.

"If there are individuals seeing this happen and they're stuck in a neutral location, then it's frustrating they can't step in and make a wrong call right," Moore said.

That leads to one popular player suggestion: an off-ice official who can see things from a different vantage point and interject. During the Eastern Conference final, Carolina Hurricanes coach Rod Brind'Amour suggested taking a referee off the ice and putting him in the penalty box. St. Louis Blues winger Chris Thorburn thought the press box would be better.

"People have brought up having someone upstairs," Thorburn said. "It's a fast game. It's tough to keep up. Even I'm sitting there, watching stuff, and I miss things -- and I'm sitting where I can see everything. So for them to get it right all the time is almost impossible. Maybe have an eye in the sky. Whether it's baseball, football, basketball, it's part of the game. There's calls that are going to be missed, we understand that."

Uniformly, players expressed their respect for officials and praised them for doing the best they can. Officials are typically not allowed to speak with the media, though it should be noted they have made great efforts over the past few years to keep up with the faster, more skilled NHL, including new fitness mandates.

"It's a hard job, especially when they don't have the video replays," St. Louis defenseman Joel Edmundson said. "So many moving bodies on the ice, they don't always see everything."

"Obviously the refs are the best at what they do in the world," Blues center Brayden Schenn said. "But they also have it tough."

Added Thorburn: "You almost wish there was an element of a safety net because we're hanging them out to dry."

Bruins defenseman Torey Krug also sympathized with the refs, saying: "As athletes, we make mistakes, that's why goals are scored in the first place. Officials make mistakes too."

Players don't get the luxury of do-overs. Officials -- in theory -- can.

"My only suggestion would be to be able to review anything that immediately affects a scoring play," Krug said. "So if, for example, a hand pass was part of the scoring play, as a secondary assist or a primary assist, that should be reviewable. If it's outside the primary scoring event, then I don't think that should be reviewed."

On if it would slow down the game too much, Krug said: "I don't think it matters. We play such a fast game, I think it's more important for the guys to get things right."

While the NHL has made conscious decisions to keep the length of games palatable, some NHL players interviewed said they wouldn't mind a few more breaks, for accuracy's sake.

"I think there could be more video replays," Edmundson said. "Not to slow down the game, but maybe just to go over to the penalty box and check it out for a minute. It's not that hard if you see it on video."

Though it's hard to exactly nail down in a rule, what mattered to players most was controversies that directly affect the outcome of the game.

"There's been some ideas tossed around, and it's not really up to me, but I think for a game-winning goal, like what happened to San Jose, that should be overturned," Schenn said. "You just want the game to be officiated right."

Added Bruins center David Krejci: "Maybe the league should look in to have some other plays reviewable. We got scored on in Columbus, where the puck hits the net. There's the play in Vegas-San Jose. Those things can change games, they can change series, like for Vegas. Those type of game-changing, series-changing moments, they should be reviewable. I don't think as refs they can make the call on the spot. I think the league should look into it -- I'm sure they will at some point."

BOSTON -- Imagine dedicating your life to a single objective for 10 years. You sweat for it and you suffer for it and you bleed for it. Then you walk away from it, taking care to set up your successors to continue that pursuit, because you consider that responsibility as part of your legacy. Finally, the conditions are right for them to achieve that dream ... and it turns out you're now the one trying to prevent its realization.

This is the scenario that David Backes, current Boston Bruins forward and former captain of their Stanley Cup Final opponents, the St. Louis Blues, has been wrestling with for the past week. The hero has played long enough to become the villain, in the eyes of his former team.

"The part of me that's regretful is that we didn't get to a Final or win a Cup in my time that I was there. That's a huge regret," Backes told ESPN on the eve of Game 1 in Boston. "They're the opponent now. I have to think of them as such. But I had about six days to wrap my head around that and to say that, 'It's us or them.' And that's really helped me."

It can't be overemphasized how much bringing the Stanley Cup to St. Louis for the first time in the franchise's history -- or, failing that, at least making the Final for the first time since 1970 -- meant to David Backes for most of his adult life. He bled blue: Drafted by St. Louis 62nd overall in 2003. Debuted with the Blues in 2006. Earned the team captaincy in 2011. Helped it grow from a basement dweller back to a perennial playoff contender.

The closest he came to achieving the dream was in his final season before signing with Boston as a free agent in 2016. The Blues won seven-game series in their first two rounds, then lost in six games to the San Jose Sharks in the Western Conference final.

"The buzz in town was extraordinary. If we had made that next step, I don't know what would have happened. We would have blown the roof off the arena," recalled Backes, 35.

Instead, it ended with him weeping in the St. Louis dressing room. It wasn't so much the loss as it was an anecdote he shared at the time about Steve Ott, who is now an assistant coach with the Blues.

"He'll kill me for telling you this story, but in Game 5 [against San Jose], I'm not feeling well. And Steve Ott brings me something to make me feel better, knowing that he's the guy coming out of the lineup if I can play," he said after Game 6 in 2016, his voice quivering. "That's the kind of guys we have in here. Just stories like that. Guys blocking shots. Sacrificing their bodies. The heart's in there. The ability's in there. It's just that we came up short."

There are 11 players from that 2016 conference finalist on this edition of the Blues. They didn't come up short this time, beating the Sharks in six games to advance to the Final.

The only thing standing in their way now are the Boston Bruins -- and David Backes.

"I remember the feelings I had. It was a little bit of sadness, a little bit of regret, because I thought that was a group that could have won a Cup," Backes said on Sunday. "I wish it was alternating years, so I could cheer for the Blues one year and they could win a Cup, and we could have our opportunity and they could cheer me on, and we could all have one to our names. But it's come to this: Them or us."

Among "them" is one of Backes' best friends and his protégé on the Blues, Alex Pietrangelo. Which has made this all the more awkward, for both of them.


"Oh, here we go," Pietrangelo said with a sarcastic eye roll.

About three questions into his scrum at Stanley Cup Final media day, someone brought up David Backes to the man who replaced him as captain. Pietrangelo had been answering some variation of this question -- about personal feelings being put aside, about the surreal nature of having to go through Backes to win the Stanley Cup -- since the end of Game 6 against San Jose. His answer hasn't wavered.

"We both have a job to do. And we both have the same goal at the end. We're going to go out there and do what we have to do," Pietrangelo said.

Backes was a few years into his career when Pietrangelo, 29, arrived as a full-time player in 2010. The two became fast friends, to the point that Backes was in Pietrangelo's wedding party in 2016. It was that weekend when Backes told Pietrangelo that he was leaving for Boston, and it felt as though one chapter of his life was beginning as another was ending.

Some weeks later, Pietrangelo discovered a note from Backes that he had tucked into the sunshade of Pietrangelo's car. It was a letter about being a captain, about being a Blue, about being an adult. They laughed about how long it look Pietrangelo to discover what Backes assumed would be a letter he would read that weekend. But Pietrangelo eventually found it, and he read it, and it meant everything.

"When I got there, we were dead last in the league with the first overall pick, not doing too well. In the last five years of my time there, we were potential Stanley Cup finalists each of the years. We ran into hot Chicago teams or L.A. teams that were winning Cups on a regular basis and didn't allow us to reach that goal," Backes said. "So, any advice I could give to him that would be able to continue that work that I believe I had some fingerprints on, I wanted [Pietrangelo] to continue that, no question."

Blue general manager Doug Armstrong believes this friendship benefited Pietrangelo as a captain.

"Oh, I would say that they have a great friendship. They're both great men off the ice, great family men; they shared a lot of the same values away from the rink. I think that as David came in, we made him captain when we got there, he grew into it. Thrusting Alex into it too was a team in transition," Armstrong said. "I thought Alex -- every day he's becoming more comfortable and better at what he's going through. Going through what he went through this year, having -- for the people that don't know, he had triplets in the summer and then got off to a bad start, there was a lot on his plate. But he was able to put it all in its proper perspective and lead us at the most important time of the year."

Evelyn, Oliver and Theodore were born to Pietrangelo and his wife, Jayne Cox, on July 21, 2018.

"I think everyone that's a parent will say it's the best thing that's ever happened. That's the case for me. I guess you gotta grow up pretty quick when you have kids, right?" Pietrangelo said.

For Backes and his wife, Kelly, it was a joyous moment too, having seen what their friends had experienced in trying to start a family, which Pietrangelo chronicled in an emotional essay for The Players' Tribune.

"That's another part of this game. The wives grow friendships. When they had some issues with pregnancies before [the triplets], my wife was supporting Jayne in different ways. Now, they've got three kids at once," Backes said. "The issues they had getting pregnant, staying pregnant, it's a big blessing all at once. Three amazing kids, and a great mom and dad to raise them."

As their husbands draw their battle lines in the Stanley Cup Final, the wives have remained in contact.

"They've exchanged texts seeing what's going on with each team and how things are being run. Outside of that, I don't want to know about it. They can make however many wagers or friendly bets they want to make," Backes said.

But when it comes to texts between the Blues and Backes, it's radio silence.

"Friends on the St. Louis Blues are now cut off, officially. If they text me, it's going to fall on deaf ears," Backes said. "If they get a text back, it might be from my daughter and it will be very incoherent."

Backes said he and Kelly "grew up" in St. Louis. They had their first daughters there. They started their Athletes For Animals foundation there and were a visible part of the community. Backes said that, like so many other former Blues players, he could see his family settling there after his playing days are over.

His emotional ties to the Blues and St. Louis remain intense, but not nearly as much as when he initially left as a free agent.

"I'm very fortunate that this didn't happen my first year out of there. I'm not going to lie: My first time back in St. Louis, I think I was numb from the emotions. Going around, seeing security guards I haven't seen all year or people in town. Man, I thought this is a place that really touched me in my life," Backes recalled.

"From age 22 to 32, there's a lot of growth as a person. I feel like I made a little impression on the city. But the city made a huge impression on us. Thankfully, it's not that first season back there. You kind of get those warm and fuzzy feelings out of your system. Not that they're gone, but they're just not experienced like the first time."

Pietrangelo agrees that enough time has passed so that this is all slightly less surreal.

"If you had asked me that before he signed his contract, maybe. But it's been a few years now. We've played a lot against each other in the last couple of years. We've both gotten our heads in a different spot," Pietrangelo said.

At the end of this series, Pietrangelo and Backes will shake hands. One of them will skate off to the dressing room for the last time this season. The other will remain on the ice to hoist the Stanley Cup for the first time in his career.

Win or lose, there will always be the lingering bit of regret for David Backes that he couldn't help the Blues achieve that dream when he was there.

"But the truth is that there's been 52 years of groups of guys that probably have that same regret," Backes said of St. Louis.

"It would have been a great city to win a Cup in. That said, I don't know if there's a bad city to win a Cup in."

Which Lexi Thompson will it be at this week’s U.S. Women’s Open?

The one who has missed the cut in two of her last four starts? Or the one who has top-4 finishes in the other two starts during that stretch?

“It's been a little bit of an up-and-down season so far. I've had some really good tournaments where my game has fallen in together, and some off weeks,” Thompson said Tuesday. “I didn't play so good last week in Virginia, but I got to go home for two days and really work hard on my game with my dad. So my game feels like it's in a good spot.”

Thompson is making her 13th start in the U.S. Women’s Open, contested this year at the Country Club of Charleston (S.C.). Considering she is only 24 years old, that’s quite a stat.

Thompson made her USWO debut in 2007, missing the cut as a 12-year-old. She remembers well how distance – not an issue in her current game – was a big factor as a pre-teen competing in the national championship.

“I can reach the fairways now. When I was 12, I couldn't reach the fairways,” she said. “I was aiming for the mowed strips walking up to them.”

Though Thompson has competed in this event more so than any other in her decorated career, she hasn’t had a great deal of success. Thompson has only three top-10s. Her best result, however, came last year at Shoal Creek Golf Club (T-5).

Thompson addressed the media on Tuesday in Charleston and one of the topics centered on her return to social media, following a brief break.

“Honestly, I mean, I love social media in a way that I get to reach out to my fans, give them an inside look of what my training's like, what my practicing is like, or even my life off the golf course – that I'm a normal 24-year-old girl. I love giving an insight of my life to fans that look up to me or just are interested. So that way, I love social media,” she said.

“But the break was definitely needed. I think now I'm just posting and not really looking at the comments and everything. Just trying to look at the positive of everything.

“It wasn't really one thing [that led to the hiatus]. It was just a matter of people not looking so much at the positive that was going on or how hard I was working. I think that's what people don't really realize, how much we sacrifice, how much we put into the game as athletes in general. We're not perfect. We're human beings, and we're going to have bad weeks, bad seasons. We're not robots. They can't expect that much from us.”

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – On the first hole of his NCAA semifinal match Tuesday at Blessings Golf Club, Stanford freshman Daulet Tuleubayev cracked his driver. On his final hole, he drained a clutch birdie putt to send the Cardinal to Wednesday’s final.

“It was just an absolute roller coaster,” Stanford head coach Conrad Ray said.

That may be an understatement.

As soon as Tuleubayev hit his opening tee shot in his match opposite Vanderbilt’s Harrison Ott, something didn’t sound right. He looked down at the clubhead and saw a thin crack along the top.

Ray called over a rules official and asked about replacing the club. The official referred to Local Rule G-9, which modifies Rule 4.1b(3): “If a player’s club is broken or significantly damaged during the round by the player or caddie, except in cases of abuse, the player may replace the club with any club under Rule 4.1b(4).”

However, a club is not considered broken simply because it is cracked. So Tuleubayev kept it in play, hitting it again on Nos. 2 and 5.

By the third strike, the top of the driver had caved in. Ray immediately called the official back over and Tuleubayev was cleared to replace the club. After the pro shop didn’t have an exact replacement head, Ray’s friend, who is an equipment rep, got in touch with a local rep, who delivered a similar head to the course.

The new head arrived to Tuleubayev on the 13th hole. Ray screwed it on and Tuleubayev was able to hit driver on the par-4 14th hole.

Right before that, Tuleubayev had walked off the 13th green after a winning par to go 4 up. As he did so, he put his hand to his ear, gesturing similarly to what Rory McIlroy did at the 2016 Ryder Cup.

“I believe if you hit a good shot, you should celebrate,” Tuleubayev said. “I’d do it again.”

He then lost three of his next four holes, fanning his second shot at the par-5 15th deep into the right woods and following Ott into the left hazard off the tee at the par-3 17th hole. On the penultimate hole, both players actually hit incredible recovery shots out of the rocks, but Ott won the hole after Tuleubayev incurred a penalty while accidentally hitting his ball on a practice stroke from the fringe.

But the freshman from Kazakhstan, now leading just 1 up, didn’t give up. After all, he navigated an improbable path to Stanford.

He grew up in a country with just two proper golf courses before moving to the U.S. permanently at age 15 to attend Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire.

With a childhood dream to play at Stanford, just like Tiger Woods, Tuleubayev traveled to the campus as a high school freshman and walked right into Ray’s office to ask, in broken English, how he could accomplish that dream.

Shortly after, Tuleubayev moved to San Jose, Calif., to attend the Harker School – the same school that Stanford great Maverick McNealy went to – and started working with Butch Harmon.

Less than four years later, he found himself standing in the middle of Blessings’ 18th fairway with a chance to punch Stanford’s ticket to the NCAA final. He stepped on a 5-iron, hitting it to 24 feet, before draining the clinching putt.

“When that putt went in, it was nice to release that burst of emotion,” Tuleubayev said.

Added Ray: “It was just one of those wild matches. It was all over the place, but it’s in the books.”

Cowboy down: Texas shocks 'best ever' OSU in NCAA semis

Published in Golf
Tuesday, 28 May 2019 15:43

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – Oklahoma State sophomore Matthew Wolff sat on the Golf Channel set Monday night after winning the NCAA individual title and delivered a bold statement.

“We are trying to be the best college golf team that has ever lived,” Wolff exclaimed.

By Tuesday evening, that goal had flatlined.

The top-ranked Cowboys entered Tuesday afternoon’s semifinal tilt with fifth-seeded Texas as the undisputed favorites. Not only were they the defending national champions but they had won six times this season, including the Big 12 Championship and NCAA Louisville Regional, and cruised to the top seed by 31 shots in the stroke-play portion of the NCAA Championship.

“People have been talking about Oklahoma State all year,” Texas head coach John Fields said. “Somebody asked me out on the range the other day if I thought that we had been overlooked. I thought this entire field had been overlooked this year.”

But with Oklahoma State a point away from a repeat trip to the NCAA final and a meeting with Stanford on Wednesday, Texas senior Steven Chervony had other plans. He sunk a clutch 20-footer for birdie on Blessings Golf Club’s par-4 finishing hole and then watched as Cowboys senior Zach Bauchou’s 4-foot par bid on the first extra hole horseshoed out of the cup.

Texas, not Oklahoma State as everyone expected, was the one living to see another day at this championship after a 3-2 victory.

“We had nothing to lose,” Texas freshman Cole Hammer said. “OSU killed everybody in stroke play, and [the title] was theirs to win, so we just came out and fired at pins.”

Chervony may have earned the clinching point, but Hammer’s 4-and-3 defeat of Wolff set the tone for the upset. Hammer, who is 18-2 in match play since the beginning of the 2018 U.S. Junior Amateur, birdied six of his first eight holes to take a 3-up lead on the likely Haskins Award winner. Wolff made three birdie putts of his own, including two of more than 25 feet, during that run but miraculously only won one hole.

“I didn’t really miss a shot today,” said Hammer, who finished with eight birdies to Wolff’s six and closed out the match by nearly chipping in for eagle at the par-5 15th hole.  “It was almost perfect golf.”

Freshman Pierceson Coody was the other Texas player to earn a point, beating Hayden Wood, 5 and 4. Viktor Hovland and Austin Eckroat won their matches for Oklahoma State, which will enter next season with almost a completely different lineup after failing to win an NCAA title as the top match-play seed for the third time (2009, '10).

Bauchou and Wood are graduating while Wolff and Hovland are set to turn pro and forgo the remainder of their college eligibility. Eckroat will be the only returning starter.

In other words, the run of dominance is over – for now.

“We had a fantastic year,” Oklahoma State head coach Alan Bratton said. “What good theater that was right there. Hate to see it end that way. You don’t see lip-outs like that very often, but there was no one on our team I’d want to end that spot other than Zach; that’s why he was in that spot. He has been a star for us.

“We had a fantastic week. It’s not hard to find positives at all. That is not the way we wanted to week to end, but you’ve got to give Texas credit. They got three points and that is what it takes to win.”

Best team that has ever lived? Texas had something to say about that.

Sarri storms out of training before UEL final

Published in Soccer
Wednesday, 29 May 2019 01:27

BAKU -- Maurizio Sarri overshadowed Chelsea's preparations for the Europa League final by storming out of an open training session on the eve of the match against Arsenal.

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Chelsea's head coach furiously threw his hat to the ground and kicked it away twice on his way down the tunnel before the scheduled hour-long session had ended at Baku Olympic Stadium, in full view of the assembled media.

Gonzalo Higuain had earlier angered David Luiz with a late challenge during a small-sided training game, though Chelsea officials subsequently insisted that this was not the reason for Sarri's sudden outburst.

A Chelsea spokesman said: "Maurizio's frustration displayed at the end of training was not related to any of his players, but was due to not being able to practise set-plays in the final 15 minutes of the hour-long training session as it remained open to media."

Sarri's fury came less than two hours after a news conference in which he appeared in good spirits, revealing that he will have to consider his love for Chelsea's players and his affection for English football when weighing up his future at Stamford Bridge after the Europa League final.

Sources have told ESPN FC that Chelsea are not inclined to sack Sarri even if he loses to Arsenal on Wednesday, but are prepared to negotiate with Juventus -- or any other interested club -- if the Italian makes it clear he wants to leave.

Chelsea's open training session had been relatively unremarkable until Sarri's outburst, with N'Golo Kante's cautious participation the main talking point.

Kante did light exercises on his own under the watchful eye of a Chelsea fitness coach and was seen in discussion with the club's medical director Paco Biosca, before leaving the session before the small-sided training game began.

Sarri rated Kante as "50/50" to start against Arsenal as the France international attempts to recover from a twisted knee sustained at Cobham on Saturday.

Sabbir v Mosaddek and other Bangladesh selection issues

Published in Cricket
Wednesday, 29 May 2019 00:34

Ahead of their opening game against South Africa on June 2, Bangladesh will have to consider the conditions at The Oval when picking their playing XI, but there is stiff competition within the squad too. ESPNcricinfo looks at five areas that need to be addressed before their first match in this World Cup.

Will they break the grand plan for Mosaddek?

The first big question that will be posed in front of captain Mashrafe Mortaza, coach Steve Rhodes, chief selector Minhajul Abedin and BCB president Nazmul Hassan, ahead of their game against South Africa, is whether they should break their long-term plan to bat Sabbir Rahman at No. 7 in order to accommodate Mosaddek Hossain.

The long-term plan was so ingrained into their thinking that the BCB reduced Sabbir's ban for abusing a fan on Facebook to ensure he played the three ODIs against New Zealand back in February. But even though he struck his maiden ODI hundred during that series, Sabbir's form of late hasn't been as encouraging.

And then came Mosaddek's blinder against West Indies in the tri-series final, especially his sudden six surge during a chase. Bangladesh have been searching for years for at least one lower-order batsman to be able to do something similar. Sabbir was their marked man for this role but now Mosaddek's case looks stronger ahead of their World Cup opener.

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Rubel or Saifuddin, or both?

Mohammad Saifuddin's all-round abilities give him the edge over Rubel Hossain, who will call upon the experience of playing two previous World Cups and having been a match-winner for Bangladesh. It is not quite a secret that captain Mashrafe has considerable faith in him and has said often that he prefers Rubel in the death overs.

Saifuddin hasn't had enough performances to warrant the same unflinching faith but the general habit in Bangladesh cricket is to risk a youngster on a big occasion.

Given the conditions they could also play both Rubel and Saifuddin, if they feel picking Mehidy Hasan would be too many spinners. But Mehidy's accuracy with the ball, and his batting, suggests that he is a likely starter.

Does Liton's fifties give him an outside chance?

Suddenly, Liton Das has also thrown himself in the mix, especially after his fifties against India in the practice match and against Ireland two weeks ago. It is unlikely that they would break the Tamim Iqbal-Soumya Sarkar opening combination, and Liton has largely been picked as their back-up. However, in the two chances he has been given so far he has looked in good touch. If he hadn't been struck on the throat a hundred was in the offing in Cardiff.

In the event of the team management seriously considering including Liton they would have to reshuffle the batting order again. It would mean Shakib Al Hasan being sent to No. 5 after he has established himself at No. 3 since the start of 2018. And it would also mean Mohammad Mithun, who was the only notable performer in the ODI series against New Zealand back in February, would have to make way for Liton.

Who will take the new ball?

Bangladesh haven't done too well with the new ball this year. Mashrafe has been the only constant during the first Powerplay, with Saifuddin and Mustafizur Rahman at times giving him company. Rubel is said to be more comfortable bowling in the middle and death over while Saifuddin is still developing. They tried Abu Jayed for a couple of game but he is only going to play if the conditions are conducive to swing. Mashrafe and Mustafizur therefore seem to be the most likely pairing but if that isn't working, Mashrafe has also not been shy to bring Shakib and Mehidy into the attack early.

KL Rahul's century the biggest positive - Kohli

Published in Cricket
Tuesday, 28 May 2019 19:11

Regardless of it coming in a warm-up match, KL Rahul's century against Bangladesh has likely put him in the front of the queue for the No. 4 slot in the India middle order after captain Virat Kohli said his form was the "biggest positive" India would take into their first match of the World Cup against South Africa on June 5.

Although Vijay Shankar was nominated by MSK Prasad, the chairman of selectors, as a suitable choice for the No. 4 slot, Kohli hinted that the team management would be open to thinking of Rahul for that position.

"The biggest positive to come out of this game was the way KL batted at four," Kohli said after the outing in Cardiff. "All the other people know their role pretty well, so it was important that KL gets runs because he is such a sound player. He can get the scoreboard ticking and you saw that - a great example of the skillset that he has."

Although Vijay would have been the favourite to bat at No. 4 he hurt his right forearm on the eve of the first warm-up match against New Zealand and sat out that match. He recovered quickly and played the whole match against Bangladesh, but did not get a start and went wicketless. He is bound to feel unlucky if Rahul trumps him for a slot in the middle order in India's first match next week.

PLAY: Who will win the World Cup? Play Cricket Picks to have your say

Rahul himself was more composed, albeit happy that he might be in contention to play his first World Cup match. Asked if he was ready to bat at No. 4, Rahul chose to be diplomatic, saying he was flexible with any role the team gave him.

"It is a team game and you need to be flexible and be ready to bat wherever, or as a player you need to be ready to take up whatever role is given to you," Rahul said. "Every batsman who has played at this level knows how to handle pressure and knows how to handle the roles and responsibilities given to him.

"And it is a team game and everybody has been prepared for the last couple of years in a way where anything, any role can be given come a big game. All of us are prepared that way and nothing that is given to any individual now will come off as a surprise. Everybody has been tried and tested in different positions. As individuals, we have got a fair hit and know how to perform if a different role is given to us."

It has been a challenging 18 months for Rahul who has struggled in Test cricket since the South Africa tour last year. Even in ODIs, the team think tank had preferred the likes of Ambati Rayudu for the No. 4 slot until as recently as March.

ALSO READ: KL Rahul stakes his claim for the No. 4 slot

Rahul then had to endure the embarrassment of being recalled from the T20 series in Australia in January after the BCCI suspended him along with team-mate Hardik Pandya for breaching the code of conduct after the pair made offensive and derogatory remarks on an Indian television chat show. Both players accepted their guilt allowing the board's ethics officer to let them off with a monetary fine.

Rahul accepted that he was humbled by the incident. Rahul Dravid, the former India captain and now India A coach, provided help when Rahul was part of the A series against England Lions where he struck good form. He carried that forward in the IPL where he was the best batsman for his franchise Kings XI Punjab. And then, in April he was picked for the World Cup squad.

"Time-out from the game gives a player an opportunity and time to reflect on himself and his cricket. It wasn't any different for me. I got some time to spend with friends and family which was so important because I've been on the road for a long time. Given the situation, that's not what I wanted to get some time off. Anyway I tried to make the best use of it, I felt like there were a few things with my batting and technique I needed to fix.

"I worked with my coach back home in Bangalore and the India A games gave me a little time with Rahul Dravid to just speak to him about mental preparation and how to handle pressure and how to handle low confidence and low form. The best way to get back to scoring runs is to find that form in the middle and I got that opportunity. So from there I just carried on and I knew that my batting was fine and I was very hungry to come back and score runs for whatever teams I played."

Gavin Robertson battling aggressive brain cancer

Published in Cricket
Tuesday, 28 May 2019 22:51

Gavin Robertson, the former Australian spin bowler, is facing a protracted course of treatment for aggressive brain cancer after a recent diagnosis.

A little more than 20 years after the last of his four Test matches Robertson sought medical advice after reportedly feeling unwell and was found to be suffering from primary brain cancer, otherwise known as gliobastoma.

He has undergone surgery to remove a brain tumour and is now set to begin an intensive course of chemo and radiation therapy over the next 18 months in an effort to contain the cancer in his body.

Since his retirement, Robertson has been well-known and liked as a commentator while also working as community liaison officer for the Greater Western Sydney Giants AFL team. In a statement released on Wednesday he thanked the outpouring of support.

"My family and I have been overwhelmed by the incredible show of love and support from so many friends and well-wishers over the past week," Robertson said. "It has been an emotional roller coaster, consuming each and every minute of my day, and now I am ready and able to meet this challenge that confronts me.

"Thank you again for your positive messages sending me best wishes. It reminds me how fortunate I am to have made so many enduring and genuine friendships over the past 50 years. I really appreciate your support, and just can't answer all these messages right now, and kindly request that we have some privacy in the first phase of the battle ahead."

His spin bowling for New South Wales and Australia earned respect for its resourcefulness and accuracy, while he learned a great deal about how to tackle subcontinental conditions more than a decade before Nathan Lyon finally mastered the task in 2017.

Mark Taylor, who was Robertson's Test captain, praised his character and fighting spirit. "The first thing that comes to mind is him being a very vibrant person," Taylor told Wide World of Sports. "He brought that to NSW and Australian cricket. Always chin up, with a smile on his face, enjoying life; as a cricketer and as a person. That vibrancy, that always looking for the positive; that was what Gav was very good at. I hope that will hold him in good stead in the weeks, months and maybe years ahead for him."

"I want to wish our mate Gavin Robertson a happy birthday. I know he's had happier birthdays than the one he's experiencing right now," reporter Mat Thompson said on Macquarie Sports Radio. "But he has a wonderfully supporting family, great friends and many wellwishers among the supporting public.

"Sadly, the news for Gav is not great. I told you a couple weeks back that he'd been feeling unwell with a variety of symptoms, which prompted him to go and seek advice from the great professor Dr Charlie Teo and within hours he'd been diagnosed with a brain tumour and was in surgery.

"Robbo is facing a very long fight. When one of the good guys is faced with a struggle like Gavin is, it's absolutely heartbreaking. When I heard the news of his diagnosis last night I was numb. He's a man who I've respected enormously for many years. He's in for the fight of his life."

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