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I Dig Sports
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The third highest rated outfit in their initial stage group, Iker Sastre and Miguel Angel Toledo remained unbeaten. They ended the day ahead of the no.2 seeds, Rafal Czuper and Poland’s Tomasz Jakimczuk; the Brazilian combination of Guilherme Marcio da Costa and Iranildo Espindola finishing in third place.
Problems for Rafal Czuper and Poland’s Tomasz Jakimczuk, not for the French pairing of Fabien Lamirault and Stéphane Molliens; top spot and like the Spaniards, progress to the semi-finals was their lot.
First place for the highest seeded outfit, in the remaining men’s team wheelchair classes it was the same.
In class 1, the Korea Republic was dominant, Joo Youngdae and Kim Hyeonuk secured first place in their group, a feat achieved somewhat against expectations by their colleagues, Na Kiwon and Park Sungjoo.
They finished ahead of the combination formed by Switzerland’s Sylvio Keller and Alan Papirer of France, on what was not a good day for Great Britain. The second seeded trio of Paul Davies, Rob Davies and Tom Matthews had to settle for fourth spot.
Meanwhile, in the remaining men’s team wheelchair classes, the top two seeds progressed to the semi-finals.
In class 3, China’s Feng Panfeng, Zhai Xiang and Guo Fei duly progressed as did Ukraine’s Vasyl Petruniv and Oleksandr Yezyk. Likewise, in class 4, Turkey’s Abdullah Ozturk, Nesim Turan and Suleyman alongside the Korea Republic pairing formed by Kim Younggun and Kim Junggil reserved penultimate round positions.
Progress, the situation also applied in class 5 to the leading outfits. Germany’s Thomas Schmidberger and Valentin Baus ended matters in first place in their group as did the trio formed by Great Britain’s Jack Hunter-Spivey who joined forces with Norway’s Tommy Urhaug and Sebastian Vegsund.
Play concludes in Lasko on Saturday 11th May.
Thermana Lasko Slovenia Para Open 2019: Latest results and main draws
Korea Republic pair in form, upset top seeds to book semi-final place
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A full distance 2-1 defeat at the hands of Chile’s Matias Pino Lorca and Cristian Dettoni, the no.4 seeds, had been the outcome earlier in the day; runners up spot was their lot, thus progress to the quarter-finals.
It was at that stage Park Hongkyu and Lee Seho excelled; they recorded a 2-0 win against the top seeds, the Great Britain trio comprising Paul Karabardak, Martin Perry and David Wetherill. At the semi-final stage they now meet the no.4 seeds, the partnership comprising Romania’s Bobi Simion and Italy’s Matteo Parenzan, the no.3 seeds. In the opposite half of the draw Matias Pino Lorca and Cristian Dettoni confront the no.2 seeds, China’s Huang Jiaxin and Chen Chao.
Problems for the top seeds, in the remaining men’s team standing classes, as with the second seeds, it was progress to the semi-final round.
In class 7, Spain’s Alvaro Valera, Jordi Morales and Alberto Seone Alcazar duly progressed as did China’s Yan Shuo and Liao Keli. Likewise, in class 8, Ukraine’s Viktor Didukh, Ivan Mai and Maksym Nikolenko reserved a penultimate round place. Likewise the next outfit in the order of merit, the Chinese combination of Zhao Shuai, Ye Chao Qun and Peng Weinan, advanced.
Success for the favourites, in class 9 life was just the same. Sweden’s Emil Andersson and Daniel Gustafsson secured a semi-final place, an achievement matched by Great Britain’s Ashley Facey Thompson and Josh Stacey. A medal guaranteed for Great Britain, it is the same class 10; Kim Daybell alongside Montenegro’s Filip Radovic duly reached to the penultimate round as did the Spanish trio of José Manuel Ruiz, Juan Bautista Perez and Jorge Cardona.
Meanwhile, in class 11, for players with a learning disability, the top seeded combination of Belgium’s Florian Van Acker and Hungary’s Peter Palos advanced to the semi-final round, a situation that applies also to the second seeds, Japan’s Takeshi Takemori and Koya Kato.
Play at the Para Thermana Lasko Slovenia Open 2019 concludes on Saturday 11th May.
Thermana Lasko Slovenia Para Open 2019: Latest results and main draws
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Notably in class 1-2, Russia’s Nadejda Pushpasheva and China’s Liu Jing joined forces; in a group organised event, the top seeds, they ended the day unbeaten.
A day without defeat; it was the same for the Brazilian combination of Catia da Silva Oliveira and Maia Limp de Azevedo but their unblemished record was somewhat of a surprise. The no.3 seeds, they upset the pecking order by recording a 2-0 win in opposition to the no.2 seeds, the partnership comprising Florence Gossiaux-Sireau of France and Argentina’s Maria Costanza Garrone.
Success for Liu Jing in the remaining women’s wheelchair classes it was the same for her compatriots.
In class 3, a competition that witnessed two groups in the initial stage, the top seeded Chinese trio of Xue Juan, Li Qian and Yang Zhonghui remained unbeaten as in the corresponding group did the no.2 seeds, the Korea Republic partnership of Yoon Jiyu and Lee Mugyu.
Similarly, in class 4, two groups in the initial phase; it was top spot for the principal outfits and more success for China. Zhou Ying and Gu Xiaodan reserved first position in their group, a situation which in the corresponding group also applied to the Serbian pairing of Borislava Peric-Rankovic and Nada Matic.
Meanwhile, not to be overlooked, in a group administered event, China’s top seeded trio of Zhang Jian, Zhang Miao and Pan Jiamin ended the day without a defeat against their name, an outcome that was also the lot of the no.2 seeds, the international combination comprising Sweden’s Anna-Carin Ahlqhuist and Israel’s Caroline Tabib.
Play in Lasko concludes on Saturday 11th May.
Thermana Lasko Slovenia Para Open 2019: Latest results and main draws
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KANSAS CITY, Kan. – Kevin Harvick got his quest to reach victory lane at one of his favorite tracks off to a fast start Friday evening by capturing the Busch Pole Award for the Digital Ally 400 at Kansas Speedway.
Harvick, a three-time Kansas winner, led a Stewart-Haas Racing sweep of the top four starting spots with a lap of 30.131 seconds (179.217 mph) around the 1.5-mile oval in his No. 4 Busch Beer Ford Mustang.
It marked the second time in team history that Stewart-Haas cars have locked out the first two rows of the starting grid, following a similar occurrence at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway in October of 2018.
Friday’s qualifying effort marked Harvick’s record-extending fifth pole at Kansas, third of the season and the 28th of his Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series career.
Harvick has sat on the front row in his last four Kansas Cup races, but admits he wants to erase his goose egg in the wins column with a victory on Saturday night under the lights.
“The car definitely told me it was fast on that run,” noted Harvick. “I really want to start off by thanking everyone at Stewart-Haas Racing and Roush-Yates Engines because the mile-and-a-half tracks have really been a handful for us, as we’ve gone through the beginning of the season … from new cars and different engines to different headers and body builds. They’ve done a great job, though. Everyone knew we were a little bit behind, but we saw some light at Texas and that’s carried over to here today.
“Our Busch Beer Ford is really fast and drives well in traffic, so hopefully when we get to the race tomorrow we can have another good night here at Kansas and finally get that monkey off our back this year,” Harvick added. “Poles are nice, but wins are what we really want here.”
Aric Almirola will join his Stewart-Haas teammate on the front row after turning a lap of 30.214 seconds (178.725 mph) with the No. 10 Smithfield Ford Mustang during his qualifying run.
Though it was his fourth front-row start of the season, Almirola wasn’t satisfied with starting second to his teammate after climbing from his race car.
“Four front row starts is a positive, but when you show up here on qualifying day, you want to be first,” Almirola said. “Wow, though. We’ve felt like we’ve been a little bit behind and playing catch up at Stewart-Haas Racing, so I’m really proud of the effort by everyone at the shop and it’s paying off, as everyone can see today.
“I felt like our car was good in practice. Kevin was first on average, and I was second. Now he’s first in qualifying, and I’m second again,” he continued. “I’m tired of being second to him. Hopefully we can change that tomorrow night.”
The remaining Stewart-Haas Fords of Clint Bowyer and Daniel Suarez will line up on the second row in third and fourth, respectively, with Chase Elliott’s Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 completing the top five.
Martin Truex Jr. was the fastest Toyota driver in sixth, followed by William Byron, Kyle Larson, Brad Keselowski and Alex Bowman.
Notable drivers starting deeper in the field include Bubba Wallace (12th), Kyle Busch (13th), three-time Kansas winner and seven-time Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson (18th) and defending Cup Series titlist Joey Logano (20th).
To view complete qualifying results, advance to the next page.
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ST. LOUIS, Mo. – Mike Mittler, a veteran team owner in the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series, has died after a battle with cancer. He was 67 years old.
Mittler and his MB Motorsports team served as starting point for many of NASCAR’s biggest stars. Among those who have driven for Mittler included Carl Edwards, Brad Keselowski and Jamie McMurray.
Despite 301 starts as an owner in the Truck Series, Mittler never found victory lane. He came close in 2015 at Ohio’s Eldora Speedway as dirt late model driver Bobby Pierce nearly put the team in victory lane with a runner-up finish. Pierce won two-straight poles at Eldora in Mittler’s No. 63 truck.
Besides owning a team in the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series, Mittler also owned Mittler Brothers, a metal working tools and metal fabrication equipment business.
“It is with heavy heart that we say goodbye to Mike Mittler,” said Curtis Francois, owner and CEO of World Wide Technology Raceway. “In the earliest days of my ownership of Gateway, Mike was there, offering to help however he could. He was selfless, loyal, honest and as fine of a man as I’ve ever met. My thoughts and prayers go out to his family. I will miss him; the racetrack will miss him – but our lives are all the better for knowing him.”
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KANSAS CITY, Kan. – After a NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series win at Dover (Del.) Int’l Speedway a week ago, all was right in Johnny Sauter’s world.
Fast forward to Friday night at Kansas Speedway, and Sauter had little to smile about in regards to his run in the Digital Ally 250.
Sauter was running inside the top 10 and appeared to be a threat during the first stage of the race when he suddenly slowed to a crawl down the backstretch on the 21st of 167 laps.
The 2016 Truck Series champion, in his first season back with ThorSport Racing after a three-year stint with GMS Racing, limped to the garage area in frustration, the victim of a major mechanical failure.
With parts and pieces spread across their garage stall, Sauter’s crew was eventually able to repair the No. 13 Tenda Heal Ford F-150 and get him back on track, but the damage was done at that point.
Sauter finished 22nd, 70 laps down, after thinking early he might have a race-winning truck under him.
“I don’t know if the input shaft broke off the front of the transmission or the clutch went out, but this was definitely not what we needed with our Tenda Ford F-150 tonight,” said Sauter. “We had decent speed and I figured we were going to be alright. I felt like if we came in and made one or two adjustments, we were going to have something that we could race with, but we didn’t get that far.
“We’ll just dig harder (next time). … I can’t thank everyone at ThorSport enough for all they do.”
With Friday night’s disappointment, Sauter plummeted from second in driver points and just four behind leader Grant Enfinger to fifth in the rankings, 35 points adrift.
The good news? He’s already locked into the playoffs by virtue of his Dover win from seven days earlier.
“That’s where winning comes in handy (with this system),” Sauter noted.
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MALTA, N.Y. – Peter Britten, the 2017 Albany-Saratoga DIRTcar modified champion, was absent from the New York track last season because of back problems.
He returned to the speedway with a vengeance Friday night, winning the thrice-delayed season opener over fifth-starting Anthony Perrego by a razor thin margin. Keith Flach, who traded the lead with polesitter Britten early on, was third.
Britten and Flach started on the front row by virtue of their heat wins, with Brett Hearn and Marc Johnson right behind them. Britten got a good jump on the green, but Flach ran him down to lead lap two, setting the stage for a back and forth battle that would last for most of the 35-lap feature.
By lap 10 the popular Australian hit lapped traffic and promptly got squeezed into the frontstretch wall, though apparently it had no effect on his fleet Troyer modified.
At halfway the lead duo had a healthy lead over Hearn and Perrego, with Flach repeatedly getting a nose under the leader in turn two but never quite putting him away.
By lap 30 Perrego had caught fire, dispatching Hearn and running down the leaders. He shot to second with three to go when a scramble with a lapped car slowed Flach and got even with Britten in the final corner but didn’t have the steam off the turn and had to settle for second.
“I always have trouble drawing here but we finally got a good draw to start up front in our heat,” offered Britten. “That really helped. Flach gave me a real battle there and starting further back would have been tough. After missing last year, I’m really enjoying this.”
Marc Johnson was fifth ahead of Kenny Tremont Jr., Ronnie Johnson, Bobby Hackel, Matt DeLorenzo and Jack Lehner.
Josh Coonradt won the crowd pleasing pro stock feature after swapping the lead with Brandon Emigh a few times. Chuckie Dumblewski was third.
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KANSAS CITY, Kan. – Less than a year after shocking the NASCAR world with his maiden Xfinity Series victory at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Ross Chastain broke through in the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series on Friday night with a thrilling win in the Digital Ally 250 at Kansas Speedway.
Chastain appeared to be out of the running with 21 to go, after a huge slide off turn two while running second, but fought back from fifth to second and found himself in the right place at the right time when Stewart Friesen ran out of fuel with three laps to go.
That moment of heartbreak for Friesen allowed Chastain to shoot past into the race lead, a position the Florida watermelon farmer wouldn’t relinquish en route to another memorable and emotional moment in his NASCAR career.
Chastain appeared to be on top of the world last fall, after his Las Vegas win led to a full-time Xfinity Series ride with Chip Ganassi Racing. However, that deal fell through during the winter when sponsor DC Solar pulled out following an FBI raid and investigation into the company, leaving Chastain scrambling just to stay in the sport.
Friday night, after scratching and clawing to stay afloat and landing with United States veteran Al Niece in the Truck Series, Chastain found himself back on top again.
“This is what sports is all about!” Chastain exclaimed in victory lane. “Comebacks, man, comebacks.
“We had the world by the tail last fall and everything got taken away from us. We didn’t quit though,” added Chastain, whose win was the first for Niece’s organization. “Let me just say, I’m going to celebrate this one more than I did the last one. I thought they were going to come easier, but they just don’t. And for Niece Motorsports … this is such a small group. We get a lot of stuff from GMS and they were our biggest competition tonight.
“I hate to see Stewie (Stewart Friesen) lose one like that. I know he’s been trying to win, but we got it.”
Friesen dominated the majority of Friday night’s event, leading eight times for a race-high 87 laps, but the turning point in his race came with 41 laps left, when miscommunication between Friesen and crew chief Trip Bruce led Friesen to leave his pit stall with only two tires instead of a planned four-tire stop.
While the tire differential didn’t ultimately come back to haunt Friesen, who moved from a tight battle for the lead out to a five-second advantage after the stops cycled out the lack of fuel in his gas tank did.
Cautions with 29 and 20 laps to go – for a spinning Brett Moffitt and a stalled Josh Reaume, respectively – allowed Friesen to conserve some precious gas, but it wasn’t enough to keep him on-track in the end.
As the field crossed the line to take three laps to go, Friesen suddenly dropped to the apron, his No. 52 Chevrolet Silverado sputtering as Chastain rocketed past on the banking.
In that moment, the die was cast, as Chastain held off Ben Rhodes to notch his first Truck Series victory and second in one of NASCAR’s three national series.
Todd Gilliland finally had a trouble-free race and came home third, with two more Toyota Tundras in Austin Hill and Brandon Jones – who rallied back from a lap-26 spin – completing the top five.
Meanwhile, Friesen faded back to 15th in the final results, one lap down and ruing yet another near-miss in his pursuit of an elusive Truck Series victory.
“I don’t know what more we could have done,” Friesen lamented. “There was just a lot of miscommunication between me and Trip (Bruce) and it goes back a couple of weeks. We’ll work on it and get better. We had a fast hot rod tonight. … We just have to keep working at it.”
To view complete race results, advance to the next page.
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KOSICE, Slovakia -- Matus Sukel scored early in the first period and Slovakia went on to beat the United States 4-1 on home ice Friday night, a stunning result on the opening day of the world hockey championship.
Alex DeBrincat had a goal off assists from Patrick Kane and Jack Eichel to pull the Americans into a tie midway through the period in the Group A game, but they couldn't score again against Patrik Rybar.
Erik Cernak and Tomas Tatar put the Slovaks up 3-1 in the second period and Michal Kristof gave them a three-goal cushion in the third.
Corey Schneider made 32 saves for the Americans. They will face France on Sunday.
In Group B play in Bratislava, the Czech Republic beat Sweden 5-2. Jakub Vrana scored twice for the Czechs against the two-time defending champion Swedes.
Patric Hornqvist and Oskar Lindblom scored in the second period to give Sweden a 2-1 lead. The Czech Republic responded with four straight goals, including one into an empty net after Henrik Lundqvist was pulled to add an extra skater.
Czech goaltender Patrik Bartosak kept the Swedes scoreless in two of three periods in his world championship debut.
Earlier in Group A in Kosice, Kaapo Kakko scored twice, including an empty-net goal with 34 seconds left, to lift Finland to a 3-1 victory over Canada. Arttu Ilomaki had a tiebreaking goal early in the third period, and Kevin Lankinen finished with 20 saves for the Finns.
Canada's Jonathan Marchessault tied the game midway through the first period and Matt Murray stopped 24 shots. The Canadians, who won the world championship in 2016 and 2015, opened the tournament a day after Hockey Canada and the Toronto Maple Leafs agreed to hold John Tavares out because of his oblique injury.
In the Group B opener in Bratislava, The Russians got off to a strong start with Evgenii Dadonov scoring twice and Nikita Kucherov adding one in a 5-2 victory over Norway.
There have been 5 Game 7s highlighted by Patrick Maroon's 2OT goal
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There have been 5 Game 7s highlighted by Patrick Maroon's 2OT goal