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

I Dig Sports

OPAP Limassol Marathon GSO – runner’s review

Published in Athletics
Tuesday, 23 July 2019 08:54

Promotion: Harrow runner Gill Bland shares her thoughts and experiences of the 2019 OPAP Limassol Marathon GSO

Taking place at the beginning of spring, for many runners the OPAP Limassol Marathon GSO offers the ideal warm-up for events including the Virgin Money London Marathon.

That was the case earlier this year for Gill Bland who was among the British runners to take to the flat and fast streets of the Cypriot city to test her training after having a baby.

She ran an impressive time of 2:58:58 to finish fourth in the Limassol Marathon women’s race, before clocking 2:57:14 in the UK capital.

Here she shares her Limassol experience.

“As a keen marathoner who had a couple of years off hard training to get pregnant, I was keen to find the right race to test where I was at one year after having my boy. It was important that the event I chose should tick all the boxes whilst ideally being the right amount of time before the London Marathon to race it properly but also act as a tune-up.

“The Limassol Marathon looked like it had everything I was looking for – flat, wide and smooth roads, enough competition to make me want to try hard and yet chilled out enough to make it low stress, plus it had the added benefits of sunshine, seaside and great food for afterwards. It certainly delivered.

“On an increasingly warm Sunday in March I set off with the Mediterranean at my side before looping in-land and then doubling back into the city. As with all marathons there were some no-man’s-land sections but the organisers went to the trouble of shipping drumming groups out to some of the more remote spots.

“I liked the fact that this route was easily split into quarters in my mind and no point was ever very far from the finish. A wide-ranging field with both international standard athletes and community groups meant that there were people to chase as well as great company along the way.

“The second half of the race headed out along the coast where I was lucky enough to run alongside a local champion and her coach, benefitting from their support before returning to the start point in the city for a triumphant home straight and a very happy fourth place and sub-three finish just next to the Marina – the perfect spot to dip those post-run toes in the sea.

“Yes Limassol, you certainly gave me everything I hoped for. I’ll be back with my eyes on that podium next year!”

Key details

What: the OPAP Limassol Marathon GSO offers a full marathon as well as a half-marathon, 10km, 5km, corporate race and children’s races.

When: the 2020 race weekend takes place from March 21-22.

Race package: the #RunLimassolPlus race weekend package has always been extremely popular with overseas athletes wanting to visit Cyprus for this superb weekend celebration of running. Offering a range of accommodation options, discounted race entry and useful added extras, the package offers a great value and hassle-free way to enjoy a long weekend away.

More info: visit limassolmarathon.com or like the Facebook page and follow @RunLimassol #RunLimassol on Twitter and limassolmarathon on Instagram to keep up-to-date with all the latest news about OPAP Limassol Marathon GSO.

The gold post box that commemorates Andy Murray's Olympic medal win has been knocked down by a car.

A silver Mercedes rolled down the hill into the post box, according to local resident Graham Fleming, who saw the aftermath.

He added the car appeared to have just missed a group of teenagers sitting on a bench less than a metre away.

The post box, in Dunblane, was painted after the Olympic tennis champion's singles win over Roger Federer in 2012.

Police Scotland confirmed they attended the "low speed collision" and that the female driver of the car had sustained a minor injury but did not require medical treatment.

It was unclear whether the woman was in the car at the time or not.

Graham Fleming, the owner of Dunblane's Bennet's Butchers, lives next to the post box. He heard the crash from his lounge, and went to look from his window.

He told the BBC Scotland news website: "I heard a massive thud... I looked out the window and there was a load of kids there who had been sitting on the chair beside the post box.

"Literally the park bench they were sitting on was less than one metre away from post box."

He added that he thought they would have seen the car coming and that none of the people on the pavement appeared to have been hurt.

Mr Fleming said: "A woman came down and drove the car away about a minute later... I think she was a bit embarrassed.

"She parked the car a few metres away and waited for the police."

Mr Fleming added that Royal Mail had later emptied the letters from the post box.

The tennis star's mother Judy Murray tweeted her reaction in two words: "Oh no".

A spokeswoman for Police Scotland confirmed they had been called to Dunblane's High Street at about 19:50 and that they were making inquiries into the circumstances of the collision.

Three is the charm for Ivan and Wee Wern By KNG ZHENG GUAN and ALEX WAN – Squash Mad Asian Correspondents

Three is the magic number for Ivan Yuen and Low Wee Wern at the Ohana National Squash Championships. The pair, who will both turn 29 this year, showed that they are still very much on top of their game after clinching their third national titles at the National Squash Centre, Bukit Jalil on Sunday.

World number 46 Ivan in particular was really impressive as he dug deep to douse national number 1 Ng Eain Yow’s bid for a maiden national crown with an 11-7, 8-11, 12-10, 11-9 win. Ivan, the defending champion, was in his third straight nationals final and he looked right at home as he stormed to the first game 11-7.

The 21-year-old Eain Yow however showed nerves of steel as he battled from 7-2 down in the second game to nick it 11-8.

It was all Eain Yow attacking after that as the world number 38 looked to take charge of the game.Unfortunately for him, Ivan was in his element defensively and he hung on before squeezing past the finish line.

Ivan Yuen returns a shot en route to stunning top seed Ng Eain Yow in the final.

It is Ivan’s third straight national title and it’s a welcomed result for him after struggling to deliver in the first half of the year.

“It’s my first time playing Eain Yow in a final. He’s the future for Malaysia and he’s also higher ranked than me so I knew he’s a tough and dangerous opponent,” said Ivan.

“I’m just glad that I had a great start as it gave me encouragement and motivation to push myself for this third title.

“I think I did well to squeeze in the third and despite being down in the fourth, I’m pleased that I managed to turn it around to win the match.

“My results on the Professional Squash Association (PSA) Tour hasn’t been great this year so hopefully this win will give me the belief once more to train harder for the coming season and to improve on my rankings.”

In the earlier round, Ivan had defeated Darren Rahul Pragasm in four games, while Eain Yow stopped Addeen Idrakie in straight games.

Ivan Yuen clenches his fist after nailing the winning point for his third national title.

Earlier women’s top seed Low Wee Wern also found a way to win despite not playing at her best. The Penangite, who celebrates her 29th birthday on Thursday, really had to bank on her experience to see off the challenge of Rachel Arnold 11-6, 7-11, 11-9, 11-3.

“I think Rachel played really well today. She had a massive win over S. Sivasangari in the semi-finals so she was full of confidence,” said Wee Wern.

“On the other hand I wasn’t at my best all week but I somehow managed to find a way to win and I’m pleased with the way I came back.

“I think the third game was really crucial for me. If Rachel had won that it would have given her more confidence to make her shots,” added Wee Wern.

Low Wee Wern stretches in the final of the Malaysian Nationals against Rachel Arnold (r).

While there was no fairy tale finish for Rachel, it was still a stellar performance from world number 46, who ousted defending champion and close friend Sivasangari Subramaniam in the semi-finals.

“I’m quite pleased with how I played all week. Looking back, it’s the best I’ve ever felt both mentally and physically. I still have lots to work on, but this is definitely a good start for me to go into the new season (on the professional tour). Right now, I am feeling motivated and I plan to bring this onto the new season and have a better start”, said Rachel.
 

2019 Malaysian Nationals (Finals)

(1) Low Wee Wern bt (3/4) Rachel Arnold 11-6, 7-11, 11-9, 11-3

(2) Ivan Yuen bt (1) Ng Eain Yow 11-7, 8-11, 12-10, 11-9

Pictures courtesy of DLL Sports 

Posted on July 23, 2019

Gustin Rules Dirt Knights In Sioux City

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 23 July 2019 03:50

SIOUX CITY, Iowa – Park Jefferson Int’l Speedway hosted the Arnold Motor Supply Dirt Knights Tour Monday night and Richie Gustin won the IMCA modified main event.

A 37-car field on modifieds were part of a four division, 85 car turnout at the three-eighths-mile South Dakota track.  Dirt Knights procedures are passing/finishing points in heats with the top 12 moving directly to the A main.

A pair of B mains elevated an additional six drivers from each to set the 24-car field for 30 laps. Offering a $2,000 check to win, the Tour was racing the first of four consecutive nights.

Josh Most took the lead initially, a three lap stint that ended when Gustin sped past Most on the back stretch on lap four on the inside line.

Most and Jesse Sobbing dueled numerous laps for second while Gustin stretched his lead.  The battle for second was not settled until lap 21 when Sobbing used the low line exit from turn four to edge Most at the line. Gustin successfully dealt with traffic during this long green session.

A yellow with 22 complete offered an additional challenge to Gustin’s lead, and the Gilman, Iowa driver was able to keep the lead and record the win.

Sobbing finished second ahead of Most while Joel Rust and Chris Abelson filled the top-five.

Three divisions ran two main events as makeup races from the July 1 Midwest Madness Tour were completed. Sport mod racing belonged to Cody Thompson with a sweep of the pair of mains, running his streak to 8 straight.

IMCA stock cars had two thrilling mains and Travis Barker won with a last lap pass in a photo finish while earlier Aaron Cain won the $1,500 to win makeup race.

Craig Clift took the night’s hobby stock main and Jesse Sobbing backed up his second place Dirt Knights finish by winning the $1,500 prize for the Madness Tour makeup.

Abreu Pockets Ohsweken Sprint Car Cash

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 23 July 2019 04:00

OHSWEKEN, Ontario – Rico Abreu took top honors in Monday’s Northern Summer Nationals winged 360 sprint car opener at Ohsweken Speedway.

Abreu outran Steve Poirier to the checkered flag to earn the $5,000 payday at the Canadian venue.

Mack DeMan finished third, followed by three-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Tony Stewart and Mitch Brown.

Heats were won by Holly Porter, Christopher Bell, Mark Smith, DeMan and Brown. Davie Franek, Scott Kreutter and Denny Peebles each won a B-Main.

The finish:

Rico Abreu, Steve Poirier, Mack DeMan, Tony Stewart, Mitch Brown, Jason Barney, Jim Huppunen, Max Stambaugh, Scott Kreutter, Davie Franek, Christopher Bell, Jared Zimbardi, Jacob Dykstra, Holly Porter, Shane Ross, Joe Trenca, Jake Brown, Alex Hill, Denny Peebles, Lynton Jeffrey, Mark Smith, Dylan Westbrook, Tom Huppunen, Jordan Thomas.

Rudolph Does It Again At Drummond

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 23 July 2019 04:03

DRUMMONDVILLE, Quebec — The winning driver was anyone’s guess throughout the entire 100 laps of action at Autodrome Drummond but Erick Rudolph saved his best stuff for last.

Stewart Friesen led the most laps but not the one that counted for the win. Jimmy Phelps started on the pole position and stayed in the top five all night to cross the finish line on the final step of the podium.

Five years ago, Erick Rudolph burst on the Super DIRTcar Series scene with his first series win at Autodrome Drummond. Now, holding his pro wrestling style Championship Belt, Rudolph beamed in victory lane, “The track was a pleasure to race on. I had a lot of fun out there. Drummond has always been good to me.”

He may have been having fun out there but Rudolph exercised significant patience in order to save his tires for the end. The top five had a revolving door but the No. 25r stayed in the mix for 80 laps. Then, on the restart with 20 laps to go, Rudolph turned up the dial and outdueled Stewart Friesen for first place.

All the stars were aligned for Rudolph. His tires were right, his racing lines were right, and it was five years ago to the day that he won his first Series race at Autodrome Drummond.

Multi-discipline racer Friesen made the trek North for both rounds of the Quebec doubleheader. Friesen started sixth. The No. 44 was fast in clean air and built a lead up during a long mid-race green-flag period. Unfortunately, Friesen used up his tires in the early going and had a difficult time matching Rudolph’s late-race pace.

Friesen was excited to race in front of his home country’s fans. “Thanks to everybody for coming out and supporting this event. This is awesome,” he said looking out at the standing-room-only-crowd.

Polesitter Jimmy Phelps had a fast race car but Rudolph and Friesen. “Congrats to Erick, Charlie, and the whole group over there. Those guys are working hard and they are on their game right now.”

Phelps had a perfect view of the battle for first place.

“It looked like the No. 9s was going to come in and make it interesting. It looked like Friesen started to get a little free. I know I was starting to get loose about halfway. We were too good too early. We’ve kind of struggled here over the last few years so all-in-all if I can get out of here with a podium, I’m happy.”

As the field’s tires began to wear out late in the race, Canadian hero David Herbert charged to the front of the field. He picked up 16 positions from his twenty-first place starting position to finish fifth.

Race-winner Erick Rudolph picked up his career first Billy Whittaker Cars Fast-Time Award.

The finish:

Feature (100 Laps): 1. 25-Erick Rudolph [4][$7,500]; 2. 44-Stewart Friesen [6][$4,000]; 3. 98H-Jimmy Phelps [1][$2,500]; 4. 54-Steve Bernard [5][$1,800]; 5. ONE-David Hebert [21][$1,600]; 6. 111-Demetrios Drellos [2][$1,400]; 7. 9S-Matt Sheppard [8][$1,300]; 8. 6m-Mat Williamson [10][$1,200]; 9. 91-Billy Decker [7][$1,100]; 10. 44G-Sebastien Gougeon [19][$1,000]; 11. 99L-Larry Wight [3][$800]; 12. 20-Brett Hearn [16][$700]; 13. 21A-Peter Britten [12][$600]; 14. 26-Ryan Godown [9][$575]; 15. 35-Mike Mahaney [11][$550]; 16. 63D-Dominic Dufault [23][$525]; 17. 39x-Alex Therrien [22][$500]; 18. 13-Kevin Hamel [24][$500]; 19. 27J-Danny Johnson [17][$500]; 20. 19m-Jessey Mueller [13][$500]; 21. 2L-Jack Lehner [20][$500]; 22. R2-Rusty Smith [26][$500]; 23. 35B-Francois Bellemare [29][$500]; 24. 37-Paul StSauveur [27][$500]; 25. 22C-Mario Clair [18][$500]; 26. 1MD-Mathieu Desjardins [15][$500]; 27. 96-JF Corriveau [28][$500]; 28. 17-Marcus Dinkins [25][$500]; 29. 21-Yan Bussiere [14][$500]

Lyn St. James Confirmed For Brickyard Invitational

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 23 July 2019 06:29

SOUTHLAKE, Texas – The Sportscar Vintage Racing Ass’n have announced that two of the most popular names of Indianapolis 500 lore have announced plans to be on hand at Indianapolis Motor Speedway for the Brickyard Invitational.

Lyn St. James will race in SVRA’s Vintage Race of Champions (VROC) Charity Pro-Am presented by Chopard Watch, while Dick Simon will be Grand Marshal for the Brickyard Invitational on Aug. 3-4.

“Whenever I am around Lyn and Dick at the speedway, I see how excited fans are to see them, talk to them, and get an autograph or a selfie,” said SVRA President and CEO Tony Parella. “Dick’s racing career dates back 50 years to 1969 and through all that time he earned great praise assisting and mentoring young drivers. That list of drivers included some big names like Arie Luyendyk, and, of course, Lyn St. James.”

St. James, a seven-time starter in the Indianapolis 500 and the event’s rookie of the year in 1992, raced in 15 Indy car races in her career. While many fans know Lyn best for her Indianapolis 500 achievements, she is an accomplished road racer and has earned numerous laurels at the wheel of a variety of racecars. She is a two-time competitor in the 24 Hours of Le Mans (1989 and ’91).

She was even more successful in 62 IMSA GT events, amassing a record of six wins, 17 top-five and 37 top-ten finishes. Her 1985 GT victory at Watkins Glen remains the only time a woman has scored a win in that series driving solo. Lyn raced in the 12 Hours of Sebring nine times, winning the GTO class in 1990, and was a two-time winner in the GTO Class at the 24 Hours of Daytona. Lyn raced in 53 Trans Am races with seven top-five finishes.

She has held 31 international and national closed circuit speed records and is a member of the Florida Sports Hall of Fame and the SCCA Hall of Fame. She has competed in all of the Indy Legends Pro-Am races since 2014 and has raced in a variety of cars on different tracks at SVRA events. Lyn has also authored articles for SVRA’s Speed Tour Magazine.

Simon, who maintains a level of physical fitness that is the envy of many younger drivers, is one of the most colorful characters of Indianapolis 500 history. Brimming with personality he saw the promotional value for his sponsors of being the first car to take to the track when practice opened in May.

A veteran of 17 Indianapolis 500s, he scored a best finish of sixth in 1987. He was a highly respected team leader who helped launch the careers of not only Luyendyk and St. James, but other notables such as Raul Boesel and Scott Brayton. He also managed the team for Eliseo Salazar’s IndyCar victory at Las Vegas Speedway in 1997.

The VROC Charity Pro-Am presented by Chopard Watch is a Saturday, August 3 feature event at the Brickyard Invitational. The cars are 1963 to 1972 vintage Corvettes, Camaros, and Mustangs of SVRA Group 6 A and B Production.  The professionals will be paired with amateur drivers. Amateurs will start the race and be required to drive a maximum of seven laps.

Artemi Panarin walked out of Madison Square Garden with the first New York Rangers jersey bearing his name draped around his shoulders like a cape. The grandeur of his play -- only seven NHL players have amassed more points the past four seasons than Panarin (320) -- had been matched by the enormity of his free-agent contract with the Rangers on July 1, totaling seven years and $81.5 million.

Striding toward Seventh Avenue, Panarin turned and faced the large video board atop Penn Station. His face, Photoshopped into a Rangers uniform, stared back under a message that read: "HE'S A GAME-CHANGER. AND HE'S OURS."

Is this what a rebuild looks like?

It has been just more than one year and five months since "the letter," the one co-signed by Rangers general manager Jeff Gorton and then-president Glen Sather that signaled a youth movement and predicted the losses of "familiar faces." The one that Gorton unabashedly said was a harbinger of a rebuild, a rare admission for the guy in charge of a New York sports franchise.

"When you're a pro team in New York, it's about winning now. That's what it is," said John Davidson, who is back with the Rangers as team president after Sather moved into a senior adviser role. "The reality is that they swung for the fences a few times. Almost hit the grand slam when they lost to Los Angeles [in the 2014 Stanley Cup Final]. Eventually, it's tough to stay in the upper echelon. For them to make a team decision, with everything on the line, honesty is the best way to go. It just is. For them to be that transparent with everyone in that city -- including the media and the fans and the season-ticket holders and large companies that sponsor things -- I think it was the right way to go."

But now Panarin is a Ranger. So is Jacob Trouba, the 25-year-old defenseman acquired from Winnipeg this offseason, who subsequently inked a seven-year deal worth $56 million. That's $137.5 million committed to two players this summer under the headline of a "rebuild."

Davidson said he has heard the rumblings of "same old Rangers!" from those who watched the team throw millions at its problems through the years -- from Bobby Holik to Scott Gomez to Wade Redden -- rather than exhibit patience.

But he isn't buying a word of that critique this time.

"Some people, and I think this is wrong, have said that 'they've gone against their rebuild by signing Panarin.' I don't think so. He's got a lot of years ahead of him. He's part of this build. And he's going to take a lot of pressure off the kids," he said.

"This is how we're going to get it done. If we're ever going to make a serious run at a championship, you can't stickhandle every summer and hope it's going to work. You have to have a dedicated plan.

"But I think you can expedite it a little bit."


Although the rest of the NHL assumed Panarin would join Columbus Blue Jackets teammate Sergei Bobrovsky in Florida, it turns out his heart was always on Broadway.

"He's studied the Rangers through his computer. The Pavel Bure years. Things along those lines. He told us he'd love to win in New York, just like Mark Messier did," Davidson said. "I don't want a guy that wants to be in New York. I want a guy that wants to be in New York and wants to play for the Rangers. That's been something that's important to him."

There was discussion among the brain trust, including Gorton and assistant GM Chris Drury, about where the Rangers were in their rebuild and whether the investment in Panarin would be beneficial. It was a brief discussion because it was clear that when this collection of young players actualizes as a contender, there might not be a player of Panarin's caliber available on the open market.

"That's one of the conversations we had. When we're starting to hit our stride here, who will be there?" Gorton said. "We couldn't count on 'Player X' being there because the best players generally sign [long-term] with their teams. So to get a player of his age and his skill level, it just fit into what we were doing. For the life of the contract, we would have a top player."

Not only that, but the Rangers will have a winger with unparalleled playmaking ability on a team that could be young down the middle with players such as Lias Andersson (20) and Filip Chytil (19). "He's not a center, but he drives a line because he makes so many plays," Gorton said.

Davidson knew Panarin from his time with the Blue Jackets, with whom Davidson served as team president until stepping down this year. "I knew him well, so I was able to talk to the management and give my thoughts and insights. He's a player that can do big things in important spots in games. He's got a twinkle in his eye. He loves the game," he said. "When I was with Columbus, we tried everything we could to keep him there. He's a good player. But he had his sights set on New York."

New York isn't, of course, a one-team town. The New York Islanders were also contenders for Panarin, reportedly outbidding the Rangers for his services. But he chose Broadway over Brooklyn (and Nassau) and gave the Blueshirts a victory in this round of the battle of New York.

"I think it was more about getting the player and what it means for the organization vs. whoever else was trying to get him. We don't spend a lot of time thinking about that," Gorton said.

Of course, there's another team in the market. That's the one over in Jersey, which had a significant influence on Gorton's rebuilding plans.

Did the Rangers ever believe that first overall pick Jack Hughes, taken by the Devils in the draft last month, might fall to them at No. 2, where they ended up selecting right wing Kaapo Kakko?

Not wholeheartedly. But maybe they saw that door crack open just a bit, Gorton admits.

"I think we always thought that Kakko was going to be No. 2. Then you go to the world under-18s, and Hughes lit up the tournament. And then Kakko does what he does," he said.

Hughes had 20 points in seven games for the U.S. in the world U-18 tournament. Kakko then made observers wide-eyed with 11 points in 18 games against NHL players at the IIHF world championships.

"So then you start to think that maybe it's getting tighter," Gorton said. "But the way we looked at it, we were going to get a really good player. There was no reason to lose much sleep over it."

The Finnish phenom joins a Rangers prospect pool filled with whales. Three of them made ESPN's top 50 ranking in March: right wing Vitali Kravtsov, goalie Igor Shestyorkin and defenseman K'Andre Miller. Andersson, Chytil and Brett Howden saw NHL time last season.

Kakko is a cut above them, a physical specimen with a nose for the back of the net and a player expected to make an immediate impact. Gorton said the key for him, and any of the young players, is to not let the limelight blind them.

"It's our job to try to protect him as much as we can. We understand this is an 18-year-old. This is New York City. This is the Rangers. There are things we have to do to protect him and just let him play hockey," he said.

Of course, for Kakko, the good news is that there are going to be other faces of the franchise. For instance, the 27-year-old Russian winger they just signed to a megadeal and the 37-year-old goalie who remains the Rangers' standard-bearer.

Fun fact: Henrik Lundqvist was an All-Star last season, something that speaks more to the event's format -- requiring a representative from each team and goalies from each division -- than his on-ice achievement. Even so, behind a porous young roster, Lundqvist posted the lowest save percentage (.907), goals-against average (3.07) and win total (18) of his illustrious career.

He's signed at $8.5 million against the cap for the next two seasons, wielding a no-move clause with zero desire to leave the market. He turns 38 next March and hasn't been in the Vezina Trophy conversation since 2015. There's an undeniable feeling that his window as an elite goalie is closing right as the Rangers start to swing their ship around and point it at the horizon, toward the Stanley Cup Lundqvist has chased since 2005.

It's a question Gorton has faced since "the letter": Where does Lundqvist fit into a youth movement?

"Of course you think about what Hank's meant to the organization. It would be nice for Hank to win here. You always have those thoughts," Gorton said. "But my job as a general manager is to think big picture about what's best for the organization, not just for Hank. I'd be lying if I said we don't think about Hank and his age and how much longer he has. But last year, he was an All-Star. We had to fix our defense, and we did a good job in doing that. If we can be better in our own zone, Hank can still win a lot of games for us."

Gorton talks about Lundqvist's commitment to excellence and how his age has become a motivating factor for him to work hard in the offseason on conditioning and technique. But there are young goalies pushing him too. Alexandar Georgiev played well in 33 games last season. Shestyorkin is eventually going to be a factor.

As for Lundqvist, he professed disappointment after last season but offered optimism about the rapidity of the rebuild.

"We were not really close in the end to making the playoffs, but does that mean we are far away?" Lundqvist said in April. "You see teams having a tough year add a few pieces, and just like that, you change the dynamic, and you're in the mix."

That was before his team acquired Artemi Panarin and Jacob Trouba.

"When you talk to players around the league right now, they really think that the league changes quickly. You can get better quickly if things go right," Gorton said. "And Hank's always felt that way."

Davidson sees a rebuild in the NHL -- in full disclosure, he prefers the term "build" -- like a football field.

"I've been through it twice already: in St. Louis and in Columbus. There's a lot of pain that you go through," he said. "But when you see the end zone a little bit, you start to get excited. The people that have stayed with you through it, they've seen the team grow right before their eyes. And then it becomes everybody pulling for everybody else to get to that same end zone, that same goal."

Where do the Rangers have the ball right now?

"I don't know yet. I know one thing: When you start a build, you've got the ball on your own 1-yard line, and you've got the whole field ahead of you," he said.

What impressed Davidson even before he returned to the fold with the Rangers was the total buy-in from the organization to this process. They jettisoned veterans. They hired an NCAA coach in David Quinn, rather than a retread, to replace Alain Vigneault. They did all of this with the blessing of controversial owner James Dolan, who isn't particularly known for his patience with mediocrity (which, of course, must make owning the Knicks an arduous ordeal).

"Look, you can't do this stuff unless you have absolute understanding from everybody in the organization. That starts with the ownership," Davidson said. "In talking with Jim before taking this job, he understands where this organization is. He's fully behind the development of young players. He wants to see improvement with everybody, which is what it should be. The commitment from Jim is exactly what you need. If you don't have it, don't do it. You'll just spin your wheels backward. You won't go forward. You'll be stuck."

The path forward for the Rangers is clearer than it is for many teams in the NHL. In the near term, there needs to be some cap maneuvering after Trouba signed and with Brendan Lemieux, Pavel Buchnevich and Tony DeAngelo all needing contracts as RFAs. But next summer, the Rangers have more than $19 million in cap space, with several contracts coming off their books, including forwards Chris Kreider, Vladislav Namestnikov and Jesper Fast, a couple of whom could be on the move well before then. In 2021, defensemen Marc Staal and Kevin Shattenkirk, as well as Lundqvist, are off the books. Meanwhile, the Rangers could have six contributing players on rookie contracts for the next two seasons.

"We spend most of the time thinking about right now, but you always keep an eye on down the road. Two, three, four or five years. But a five-year plan can change a lot. We're not naïve," Gorton said.

It's hard to square the pain of a rebuild with where the Rangers are currently, especially when one sees the zeroes next to names such as Panarin and Trouba on the roster. But the mantra from Davidson, Gorton and the organization remains the same: "We're getting there. Maybe even faster than we thought. But we're not there yet."

"Everyone thinks the Rangers are back in. We aren't anywhere yet. The puck hasn't even been dropped. I caution everyone that if you're going to be very, very young, there are going to be growing pains," Davidson said.

But this summer has been quite a growth spurt.

"We always get asked about the time frame. But it's been what, a year and a half since we came out with the letter?" Gorton said. "I look at it like this: We still have work to do to get to where we need to go. We're still building. Maybe we're further along than we thought we would be."

It's about that point in the summer where the NHL goes into hibernation; yes, it's cottage season. With the dust (mostly) settled on the draft and free agency, here's our rundown of where things stand a little more than two months before the 2019-20 season.

How we rank: The ESPN hockey editorial staff submits polls ranking teams 1-31, and those results are tabulated to the list featured here. For this edition, we're projecting how we think the teams will be rated heading into next season, taking into account recent success and other factors, such as the players added via the draft, free agency and trades. The "previous ranking" for each team refers to the club's spot in our way-too-early power rankings published right after the Stanley Cup Final.

Note: Stanley Cup odds are courtesy of Caesar's.


1. Tampa Bay Lightning

Previous ranking: 1
Stanley Cup odds: 7-1

The Lightning were a regular-season juggernaut who flamed out in the playoffs. They're banking on not letting that mistake happen again, returning with essentially the same roster for 2019-20. Before the season, they need to ink ascending star forward Brayden Point, a restricted free agent, to a new deal, though.

2. Boston Bruins

Previous ranking: 2
Stanley Cup odds: 12-1

Boston's big focus right now is working on new deals for their young RFA defensemen: Brandon Carlo and Charlie McAvoy. There hasn't been much change to last year's Stanley Cup runner-up roster. That said, GM Don Sweeney is still poised to make in-season adjustments, especially around the trade deadline.

3. Toronto Maple Leafs

Previous ranking: 5
Stanley Cup odds: 10-1

Do things ever go quiet in the Maple Leafs world these days? The offseason so far included a massive trade with the Avs (Nazem Kadri is out, while Alexander Kerfoot and Tyson Barrie are in) plus a defenseman swap with the Senators. But the big summer drama revolves RFA Mitch Marner. By all accounts, negotiations are tense -- and the sides are quite far apart.

4. Vegas Golden Knights

Previous ranking: 11
Stanley Cup odds: 10-1

The Golden Knights said goodbye to some regulars (penalty-killing extraordinaire Pierre-Edouard Bellemare, fourth-liner Ryan Carpenter, defensemen Colin Miller and middle-six winger Erik Haula) to shed cap space for their now-pricey roster. The big question hovering: do they unload Nikita Gusev before the season begins?

5. Nashville Predators

Previous ranking: 12
Stanley Cup odds: 20-1

The Preds needed a shakeup after back-to-back years of playoff disappointment. So they took from an area of surplus (the blue line) and added to their biggest area of need (talented forwards outside the top line). The offseason could be summed up as thus: P.K. Subban is out, Matt Duchene is in.

6. St. Louis Blues

Previous ranking: 6
Stanley Cup odds: 14-1

The defending Stanley Cup champs are probably getting a bit disrespected because we all know how hard it is to repeat. With a bunch of RFAs to take care of, St. Louis hasn't made any seismic (or really any) changes to the roster so far this summer. Should be essentially the same cast returning, including coach Craig Berube, who finally shed the interim tag.

7. Washington Capitals

Previous ranking: 4
Stanley Cup odds: 22-1

After spending the summer of 2018 partying and keeping the band together, the Capitals finally had to say goodbye to five regulars from their Stanley Cup-winning team. The Caps are in maintenance mode, knowing they need to shell out big new contracts for Braden Holtby and Nicklas Backstrom next summer.

8. San Jose Sharks

Previous ranking: 8
Stanley Cup odds: 15-1

San Jose leaned into its bet on Erik Karlsson, inking the defenseman to an expensive, long-term deal. GM Doug Wilson better be right about him. The collateral damage for the signing wasn't insignificant: Captain Joe Pavelski is gone, getting the term and money he wanted in Dallas.

9. Calgary Flames

Previous ranking: 3
Stanley Cup odds: 25-1

Everything was status quo for the Flames, a very good regular-season team in 2018-19. Then they made the curious move of swapping James Neal for Milan Lucic, one-for-one. Sure, Neal had a rough go during his first campaign in Calgary (buoyed by a very low shooting percentage), but this trade just felt drastic.

10. Colorado Avalanche

Previous ranking: 14
Stanley Cup odds: 10-1

It feels like the Avs can do no wrong these days. Their loaded defensive prospect pool means they could part with Tyson Barrie to land a terrific second-line center in Nazem Kadri. Trade acquisition Andre Burakovsky and free-agent signing Pierre Edouard-Bellemare fortify the bottom nine.

11. Winnipeg Jets

Previous ranking: 10
Stanley Cup odds: 22-1

It's been an interesting offseason for the Jets, who are strapped by the cap and have to sign to big RFAs to new deals: Patrik Laine and Kyle Connor. In the process, Winnipeg's blue line got worse, as it parted with defensemen Jacob Trouba via trade and Tyler Myers via free agency.

12. Carolina Hurricanes

Previous ranking: 15
Stanley Cup odds: 22-1

After a surprise run to the Eastern Conference final, the Canes inked franchise player Sebastian Aho to a new deal -- thanks, Montreal, for setting the terms! -- then doubled down on middle-six depth with Ryan Dzingel and Erik Haula.

13. Dallas Stars

Previous ranking: 13
Stanley Cup odds: 14-1

It was a sneaky-good offseason for the Stars. Signing Corey Perry (who was bought out by Anaheim) is a low-risk, high-reward move. Adding Joe Pavelski -- who'll potentially skate on the first line alongside Jamie Benn and Tyler Seguin -- could be what transforms this team into a true contender.

14. New York Rangers

Previous ranking: 25
Stanley Cup odds: 22-1

Everyone in the NHL is gushing about the Rangers, who entered and exited rebuild mode in record time. Star Artemi Panarin changes the complexion of the franchise (and he's now the highest-paid winger in the league), but Kappo Kakko and Jacob Trouba will also make huge impacts. New York just needs to clear a little more cap space before October.

15. Pittsburgh Penguins

Previous ranking: 9
Stanley Cup odds: 22-1

Ever since Pittsburgh won back-to-back Cups, it feels like GM Jim Rutherford has been constantly tweaking his roster. The Phil Kessel era (and saga) is over. Alex Galchenyuk, Dominik Kahun and Brandon Tanev (with a questionably long contract term) are the newest depth forwards who get a chance to shine on Sidney Crosby's roster.

16. Florida Panthers

Previous ranking: 18
Stanley Cup odds: 22-1

The Panthers enter 2018-19 with two new faces of the franchise: coach Joel Quenneville and goalie Sergei Bobrovsky. Although they didn't land Artemi Panarin, GM Dale Tallon spent the rest of his ample cap space adding role players who could help make the Panthers a playoff team: That list includes Brett Connolly, Noel Acciari and Anton Stralman.

17. Montreal Canadiens

Previous ranking: 17
Stanley Cup odds: 40-1

This was supposed to be the summer of the offer sheet; thankfully (for fans, at least) Habs GM Marc Bergevin delivered. Not thankfully (for the Canadiens) his bid for Sebastian Aho was easily matched by the Hurricanes. But Bergevin might have been doing the rest of the league a favor, testing the limits of Canes owner (and new league wild card) Tom Dundon.

18. New York Islanders

Previous ranking: 7
Stanley Cup odds: 40-1

The Isles took a swing for Artemi Panarin and Sergei Bobrovsky and whiffed on both. Lou Lamoriello's contingency plan: tapping Semyon Varlamov as their new goalie (over Robin Lehner, a 2019 Vezina Trophy finalist) and re-signing captain Anders Lee. In fairness, we were skeptical of Lamirello's offseason moves in 2018 also, and it all turned out OK.

19. Arizona Coyotes

Previous ranking: 20
Stanley Cup odds: 25-1

The Yotes almost made the playoffs last season, after a boatload of injuries and a strong late push. They'll look for a better start in 2019-20, and have reinforcements to do so. The big addition is top-line winger Phil Kessel, who gets to reunite with one of his favorite coaches, Rick Tocchet, and should boost the scoring at both even strength and on the power play.

20. Philadelphia Flyers

Previous ranking: 19
Stanley Cup odds: 30-1

Now that Philly has its goaltending solidified (the Carter Hart era is here, in earnest!) GM Chuck Fletcher is beginning to put his stamp on the roster. The big move was a mega contract for second-line forward Kevin Hayes. Fletcher made adjustments to the defense too, adding Matt Niskanen and Justin Braun.

21. Chicago Blackhawks

Previous ranking: 22
Stanley Cup odds: 35-1

The Blackhawks' biggest issues last season involved a leaky defense. Chicago made improvements, adding Calvin de Haan and Olli Maatta (while also parting with a top defensive prospect, Henri Jokiharju). Chicago also made one of the best free agency signings of the summer: goalie Robin Lehner on a one-year, $5 million deal.

22. Columbus Blue Jackets

Previous ranking: 16
Stanley Cup odds: 65-1

We knew the Blue Jackets would have a rough offseason since Artemi Panarin and Sergei Bobrovsky -- two of the best players in franchise history -- telegraphed their exit months ago. Adding Gustav Nyquist (new top-line winger?) is the consolation, and we'll likely get a healthy look at many of the Blue Jackets' young prospects this season as well.

23. New Jersey Devils

Previous ranking: 30
Stanley Cup odds: 28-1

After winning the draft lottery and selecting top American center Jack Hughes, the Devils accelerated their build. They made a splash acquiring new franchise defenseman P.K. Subban, added veteran leader Wayne Simmonds for a year, and are making their best case to 2018 MVP Taylor Hall to sign long term. The Trans-Hudson rivalry is back!

24. Vancouver Canucks

Previous ranking: 24
Stanley Cup odds: 60-1

With Elias Pettersson changing the complexion of the franchise, the Canucks filled a big area of need (right side defense) with an expensive contact for Tyler Myers. Vancouver also paid a big price to get J.T. Miller to supplement the top six.

25. Minnesota Wild

Previous ranking: 21
Stanley Cup odds: 70-1

GM Paul Fenton inherited a roster saddled with big, aging contracts. He added one more, inking soon-to-be 32-year-old Mats Zuccarello to a five-year deal. The speedy Norwegian will help right away, but in the long range? That term raises eyebrows.

26. Edmonton Oilers

Previous ranking: 23
Stanley Cup odds: 40-1

GM Ken Holland is in charge now, meaning the Oilers' long-term prospects are already looking up. The priority for Edmonton is still drafting and developing players, although the James Neal addition instantly makes the top six better.

27. Buffalo Sabres

Previous ranking: 29
Stanley Cup odds: 75-1

The Sabres have a new coach in Ralph Krueger, and they desperately needed more roster depth heading into free agency. They sure got it, adding Marcus Johansson, Jimmy Vesey, Colin Miller and Henri Jokiharju. Adding Mike Bales (formerly of the Canes) as goaltending coach is a sneaky big hire.

28. Anaheim Ducks

Previous ranking: 26
Stanley Cup odds: 75-1

The Big Three era is officially over, with Corey Perry being bought out, and Ryan Kesler likely missing the entire 2019-20 season. After a prolonged search, Dallas Eakins was finally tabbed as the new coach. Anaheim will still try to get younger and faster. Perhaps their most interesting offseason addition: Darryl Sutter as a "consultant."

29. Detroit Red Wings

Previous ranking: 27
Stanley Cup odds: 150-1

After months of speculation, the Steve Yzerman era has begun in the Red Wings' front office. But he'll need to wait a little longer to truly shape this roster into a contender. The Red Wings are still shedding bad contracts and waiting for their prospect system to develop.

30. Los Angeles Kings

Previous ranking: 28
Stanley Cup odds: 125-1

The Kings are stuck in rebuild purgatory. They'd like to get younger and faster -- much like the rival Ducks -- but they're strapped by big contracts still on the books. And thus, it's probably another long season for the Kings.

31. Ottawa Senators

Previous ranking: 31
Stanley Cup odds: 400-1

There's no other way to put this: It's going to be another long season in Ottawa. This roster could use an injection of talent. The Senators' summer plan including snatching up a bunch of extraneous Maple Leafs: assistant DJ Smith (the Sens new coach), defenesemen Ron Hainsey and Nikita Zaitseve, plus fourth-liner Tyler Ennis.

Man Utd drop to 6th on Forbes list, down $300m

Published in Soccer
Tuesday, 23 July 2019 04:18

Manchester United have slipped from second to sixth in the Forbes list of the world's most valuable sports clubs released on Tuesday.

United saw their value drop from $4.12 billion to $3.81bn and fell behind La Liga giants Real Madrid and Barcelona who retained their respective positions of third and fourth from last year.

- ESPN fantasy: Sign up now!
- Man United season ruined my holiday - Shaw
- De Gea eager to take Man United captaincy

The Old Trafford club endured a miserable 2018-19 campaign, finishing sixth in the Premier League and missing out on a place in the Champions League for 2019-20.

NFL team Dallas Cowboys topped the list of 50 clubs for a fourth consecutive year, with MLB side New York Yankees, Madrid, Barca and NBA giants New York Knicks completing the top five.

Bayern Munich, Manchester City, Chelsea, Arsenal and Liverpool were the only other football clubs who made the top 50.

Champions League winners Liverpool made the list after missing out last year while Premier League champions City climbed five places to 25th with a value of $2.69bn.

Chelsea jumped 14 places to 32nd on the list after winning the Europa League and Arsenal slipped down three places to 42nd after missing out on Champions League football for a third consecutive season.

The 10 most valuable clubs:

1. Dallas Cowboys ($5bn)

2. New York Yankees ($4.6bn)

3. Real Madrid ($4.24bn)

4. Barcelona ($4.02bn)

5. New York Knicks ($4bn)

6. Manchester United ($3.81bn)

7. New England Patriots ($3.8bn)

8. Los Angeles Lakers ($3.7bn)

9. Golden State Warriors ($3.5bn)

10. Los Angeles Dodgers/New York Giants ($3.3bn)

Soccer

Kane downplays PL return: 'Happy' at Bayern

Kane downplays PL return: 'Happy' at Bayern

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsHarry Kane has downplayed the prospect of a Premier League return i...

Arteta 'worried' as Arsenal's Gabriel limps off

Arteta 'worried' as Arsenal's Gabriel limps off

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsMikel Arteta has admitted he's "worried" about Gabriel after the Ar...

Messi's bodyguard banned from MLS sidelines

Messi's bodyguard banned from MLS sidelines

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsLionel Messi's bodyguard Yassine Cheuko has been banned from protec...

2026 FIFA


2028 LOS ANGELES OLYMPIC

UEFA

2024 PARIS OLYMPIC


Basketball

NBA suspends 5 players for Pistons-Wolves scuffle

NBA suspends 5 players for Pistons-Wolves scuffle

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsThree players from the Detroit Pistons and two from the Minnesota T...

NBA coaching carousel: What's next for the Grizzlies and Kings jobs?

NBA coaching carousel: What's next for the Grizzlies and Kings jobs?

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsWith two weeks to go in the NBA's regular season, there are two ope...

Baseball

Pirates' Harrington gets call, will debut vs. Rays

Pirates' Harrington gets call, will debut vs. Rays

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsThe Pittsburgh Pirates called up right-handed prospect Thomas Harri...

Yanks bring back reliever Ottavino on 1-yr. deal

Yanks bring back reliever Ottavino on 1-yr. deal

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsNEW YORK -- Right-handed reliever Adam Ottavino is returning to the...

Sports Leagues

  • FIFA

    Fédération Internationale de Football Association
  • NBA

    National Basketball Association
  • ATP

    Association of Tennis Professionals
  • MLB

    Major League Baseball
  • ITTF

    International Table Tennis Federation
  • NFL

    Nactional Football Leagues
  • FISB

    Federation Internationale de Speedball

About Us

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

 

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

Affiliated