
I Dig Sports
Thorbjornsen, Bhatia eliminated on upset-filled day at U.S. Junior
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Golf
Thursday, 18 July 2019 12:36

Thursday was a day filled with upsets at the U.S. Junior Amateur. None was more shocking than Palmer Jackson’s victory over defending champion Michael Thorbjornsen.
Jackson held a 1-up lead over Thorbjornsen in their Round-of-32 match when he missed the green at Inverness Club’s par-4 18th hole. But with Thorbjorsen facing a 5-footer for birdie to force extra holes, Jackson chipped in for birdie and the 1-up victory.
“I knew I had to make that chip because he had a 5-footer for birdie and he was making those all day,” Jackson said. “It feels really good to take him out.”
A few hours later, it was Jackson who was on the other end. The incoming Notre Dame freshman led Kelly Chin, 2 up, with four holes to play before Chinn birdied three of his final four holes to force extra holes. Chinn advanced to Friday’s quarterfinals with par on the par-4 first hole.
Match-play craziness defined the day. The Round of 32 included eliminations of co-medalists William Moll, William Mouw and Ricky Castillo. Castillo’s loss was especially shocking as the incoming Florida freshman was routed by Kento Yamawaki, 6 and 5.
That set the stage for the afternoon defeats of Alabama commit Canon Claycomb and top-ranked junior Akshay Bhatia, who was upended by Preston Summerhays, the son of instructor Boyd Summerhays and nephew of Tour pro Daniel Summerhays. Bhatia tied the match entering No. 18 before missing the green and failing to get up-and-down. Summerhays stuffed his approach and two-putted for par to advance.
With Bhatia out, the new favorite becomes England’s Joe Pagdin, who defeated red-hot Maxwell Moldovan, 4 and 3, in the Round of 16.
The quarterfinal matchups are as follows:
Deven Ramachandran vs. Bo Jin
Garrett Martin vs. Kelly Chinn
George Duangmanee vs. Joe Pagdin
Austin Greaser vs. Preston Summerhays
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PERTH, Australia -- Manchester United legend Bryan Robson has told Paul Pogba he should not let super-agent Mino Raiola push him out of the door at Old Trafford -- and teammate Andreas Pereira said he is prepared to steal the Frenchman's phone to stop him talking to others clubs.
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Raiola has publicly declared Pogba wants to leave United this summer amid interest from Real Madrid and Juventus.
The midfielder is with Ole Gunnar Solskjaer's squad for the preseason tour of Australia and the Far East and, speaking in Perth, Robson -- who spent 13 years as a player at the club -- has told Pogba to be his own man.
"He would be in my team all the time," Robson said. "One thing fans should realise is sometimes agents get involved and say things that don't come from the player.
"Players should concentrate on their own careers and make their own decisions rather than rely on agents. It's your career -- you do what you think is right. That's how I see players today. Get on and play how you want to play.
"He's a great player. He should concentrate on that. He's contracted to Manchester United and he should concentrate on playing for Manchester United."
Pereira is one of Pogba's closest friends in the squad having both come through the academy. The Brazilian is keen for him to stay and joked that he is prepared to take extreme measures to make sure they are teammates again next season.
"I might steal his phone so he don't speak to no one!" laughed Pereira. "Just in the group he is a great person. It will be very important if he stays with us, he is a very good player and top class as a person as well.
"I learn from him every day, he is one of my closest friends, have been here with him since 16, so he is like family to me."
Pereira has already seen midfielders Marouane Fellaini and Ander Herrera leave the club in the past six months. Another one, Fred, did not travel with the rest of the squad to Australia after being granted time off to get married. He is set to join up in Singapore or Shanghai.
It is Herrera's departure to Paris Saint-Germain on a free transfer that has caused the most concern among fans. Sources have told ESPN FC United are interested in Sean Longstaff, Bruno Fernandes and Saul Niguez but Solskjaer has also suggested he has a ready-made replacement in Pereira.
"That is what I'm aiming to do," Pereira said. "With the confidence from the manager, the staff, the board with the new contract, that is what I'm aiming to do and get games.
"I feel strong. I feel that I can step up. I feel that I have to take my chance now and I will be ready to take it this season."
After the 4-0 win over Leeds United at Optus Stadium on Wednesday, the players had a recovery session at the WACA on Thursday morning before flying to Singapore in the afternoon ahead of the game with Inter Milan on Saturday.
The club have already taken steps to ensure the pitch on their next stop in Shanghai is up to scratch after the Manchester derby at Beijing's Bird's Nest Stadium was called off in 2016.
Staff have visited the Hongkou Stadium four times since November and have also received weekly reports from ICC organisers, Relevent.
United groundsman Dave Lindop is also set to fly to China ahead of the team to check on the pitch with rain forecast in Shanghai around the game.
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Mauricio Pochettino said he might have ended his five-year spell at Tottenham if he had guided the team to Champions League glory in last season's final against Liverpool.
Spurs were beaten 2-0 by Jurgen Klopp's team in the Madrid, prompting intense speculation over Pochettino's future as manager.
And the Argentine, who has been linked with managerial roles at Manchester United, Real Madrid and Juventus in recent months, admitted ahead of Tottenham's International Champions Cup clash against Juve (live at 7:30 a.m. ET on Sunday on ESPN2) in Singapore that winning the Champions League would have given Spurs "the possibility of a new chapter with a new coaching staff."
"Of course, it's always in your head, you never know," Pochettino said. "With the way I am, I am always going to prioritise the club over myself.
"But maybe if it was a different result after the final you can think, 'OK, maybe this is a moment to step out of the club, leave the club and give them the possibility of a really new chapter with a new coaching staff.'
"But after the final, I felt this was not great to finish like this. I'm not a person that avoids facing problems or a difficult situation.
"I am more on that side -- I love a massive challenge, a difficult challenge and of course now, to rebuild that mentality to make it possible to repeat a similar season, that is exciting and motivates me a lot."
When asked whether beating Liverpool would have prompted him and Spurs to be facing a different scenario ahead of the new season, Pochettino admitted that winning silverware would have influenced his decision.
"For sure, for sure," he said. "You know very much when you touch glory, you behave differently or you feel different or the players feel different and the challenge becomes different.
"It's like Kieran [Trippier] explained to me in private and to the media in Madrid he loved to be at Tottenham and work with us, but, at 28, 29, sometimes a player needs to discover need things and new challenges.
"That is inside yourself and it's only you who knows how you feel - it's not about agreeing or disagreeing, it's about accepting how you feel.
"You are an individual, you have individual challenges and you have to accept if all the parts are happy."
But despite admitting that he endured a tough summer after the Champions League final, Pochettino said that he is now fully focused and motivated for the season ahead.
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"The holidays were so tough for myself, it was difficult to move on from the final," he said. "We prepared for three weeks, fantastic. There was happiness and the mood was the best, so it was a shame to finish with a bad feeling.
"It's still hard and tough and difficult, but we need to move on.
"For the first time in the history of Tottenham, we reached the Champions League final. We came so close to win, we deserved to win and against a great team like Liverpool.
"But of course, last week we started to train, motivate ourselves again and look forward to another season.
"After five years in a difficult project at Tottenham, we talk a lot about perception and reality, how we fight and all the energy we expend trying to get Tottenham fighting with the best teams in Europe and England.
"We can't forget that we came from a period that was to build a stadium and the training ground. We played two seasons at Wembley, played in three grounds last season, so maybe that's a bit unfair [to compare Spurs to Liverpool and Manchester City.]
"Perhaps teams should use Tottenham as an inspiration."
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AB de Villiers provides Lord's with a World Cup encore to remember
Published in
Cricket
Thursday, 18 July 2019 19:55

Middlesex 166 for 3 (de Villiers 88*) beat Essex 164 for 6 (ten Doeschate 74*, Helm 3-27) by seven wickets
"Me, I'm from the Wild West / Guess you'd call it Middlesex" sing The Rhythm Method on their debut album How Would You Know I Was Lonely? Tonight, AB de Villiers played the role of the gunslinging sheriff at Lord's, with the middle of his bat the weapon of choice, as Middlesex cruised to a seven-wicket win in their Vitality Blast opener thanks to his 43-ball 88 not out.
On the same slow pitch that saw so few batsmen manage to time the ball in Sunday's World Cup final, de Villiers took 15 balls to score his first 17 runs before launching a memorable assault on Essex's misfiring attack in partnership with the more sedate Dawid Malan.
Essex had hatched a plan early to bowl spin at de Villiers, as so many sides successfully did in this year's IPL. With Adam Zampa and Simon Harmer at their disposal, it had briefly seemed like a canny move as he struggled to find his rhythm early on.
Then, he flicked the switch - and how. Ravi Bopara's cutter was whacked over extra cover for six; Harmer was launched ten rows back into the Mound Stand; Shane Snater's drag-down was nailed high and mighty into the night sky.
The pick of the bunch came off Dan Lawrence, the part-timer entrusted with the 14th over just as de Villiers had put his right foot all the way to the floor.
He speared in an offbreak, hoping to cramp de Villiers for room; moments later, Lord's fell into momentary silence, as the 28,000 sell-out collectively held its breath while the ball flew into the top tier of the Grandstand some 90 metres away.
Lawrence is a handy bowler on his day, who has had success at this ground in the past, but in such a situation was a lamb to the slaughter; if the unthinkable had happened and he had got the star man out, de Villiers would have been entitled to repeat that infamous W.G. Grace line: "They came to watch me bat, not you bowl."
A six and a four off Harmer to finish the job meant 61 had come from his final 28 deliveries. He finished the night with six sixes - no other Middlesex batsman hit even one.
Statistically, de Villiers sits alongside a bunch of superstars in the top handful of T20 players; aesthetically, he is in a class of one. There is no finer combination of brute force and beauty than a de Villiers assault, and this innings will live long in the memory of those who witnessed it.
It was an innings several years in the making, too.
It is five years since Middlesex first talked about a deal with de Villiers, and they had a gentleman's agreement in place by 2016. Several counties tried their utmost to sign him after his international retirement last year, with Northamptonshire reportedly pulling out all the stops in their bid to secure his signature, but Lord's and London proved too great a pull to resist.
The Blast's bizarre scheduling meant a single net at Merchant Taylor's School was the only practice de Villiers had with his new team-mates before this game; his most recent innings was as long ago as May 5, long before the debacle of his World Cup will-he-won't-he had come to light.
But this was not the innings of a man lacking match practice. Essex bowled too short, and played to his strengths, but that is the mark of the best players.
There is a reason that tennis players double-fault more when they face Roger Federer, and why golfers play worse when Tiger Woods is playing in the same tournament as them. It is the very spectre of de Villiers that throws his opponents off their game.
Things could have been so different. Essex's total of 164 looked like an imposing total at the interval, not least after Ryan ten Doeschate had helped them add 88 in the final eight overs. And after Paul Stirling - having been dropped twice, once comically by Cameron Delport - and Nick Gubbins fell cheaply, they were in some sort of trouble at 39 for 2.
They needn't have worried. De Villiers claimed afterwards that he didn't feel like he was quite at his best, despite his brilliance; if he can reach that level when Middlesex travel to The Oval on Tuesday, it will be another night to remember.
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Tom Banton fires as Somerset gun down target of 181
Published in
Cricket
Thursday, 18 July 2019 13:50

Somerset 181 for 2 (Banton 64) beat Glamorgan 180 for 5 (Lloyd 57, Ingram 50*, van der Merwe 2-17) by eight wickets
Somerset got off to a winning start at Sophia Gardens as they defeated an inexperienced Glamorgan team featuring three T20 debutants by wickets, with two overs to spare.
Despite an excellent start, Glamorgan should have scored in excess of 200, but instead of consolidating they lost three wickets in three overs and were grateful that Colin Ingram enabled them to reach a challenging total.
Needing 181 to win at nine runs an over, Somerset emulated Glamorgan with Tom Banton scoring 22 from Marchant De Lange's opening over and 50 coming from only four overs. On a perfect batting pitch, runs continued to be plundered with Somerset 75 for 0 after six overs, four runs more than Glamorgan.
Banton soon reached fifty with a high proportion of boundaries - five sixes and four fours - as Somerset raced to 100 in the 9th over and well in control. They did lose Pakistan batsman Babar Azam to Dan Douthwaite, and in the following over Banton's excellent innings of 64 ended when Billy Root held on to a fine catch at deep midwicket.
The experience of James Hildreth and Peter Trego saw Somerset reach their target with ease, while Glamorgan will reflect on their failure to capitalise on a good start, while their bowlers need to improve their accuracy.
Earlier, Glamorgan who were put in, made 180 for 5 after a rapid start, reaching 50 in the fourth over and 70 at the end of the six-over Powerplay. Jeremy Lawlor, making his debut in the competition, set the tone by striking early boundaries and lifting Jamie Overton over long-on for six.
Somerset used five bowlers in the first five overs, but apart from Roelof van der Merwe, no one was able to stem the stem of runs. The opening partnership of 82 was broken in the ninth over when Lawlor, who scored 43 from 30 balls, was caught on the long-off boundary off van der Merwe.
After reaching 95 for 1 at the halfway stage, Glamorgan fell away in mid-innings, and had Ingram not blasted a 28-ball half-century, their score would have been well below par.
David Lloyd, was the next to go after scoring 57 from 37 balls when he was deceived by Craig Overton's slower ball, giving short square leg a simple catch. Two wickets then fell for three runs as Chris Cooke became van der Merwe's second victim and Douthwaite fell for 2.
With one over remaining, Glamorgan were 153 for 5 but Ingram, relatively quiet until then, suddenly exploded by hitting Craig Overton for three sixes and two fours, with 27 coming from the over.
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Ed Barnard lifts defending champions Worcestershire beyond Notts' reach
Published in
Cricket
Thursday, 18 July 2019 15:15

Worcestershire 161 for 6 (Barnard 42*) Nottinghamshire 133 for 9 (Hales 52, Moeen 4-18)
Ed Barnard wasted no time in pronouncing himself a Twenty20 cricketer of England potential with vital interventions with bat, ball and in the field as Worcestershire began their defence of their Vitality Blast crown with an emphatic 28-run victory over Notts Outlaws in front of a near-capacity crowd at Trent Bridge.
This was a poor Twenty20 pitch, used, slow and grippy and not remotely in keeping with the sort of batsman-friendly surfaces that have made T20 nights at Trent Bridge one of the heaviest-scoring venues of the Blast.
But Worcestershire assessed it with great intelligence, posting 161 for 6, far more than they had anticipated thanks to Barnard's late intervention with an unbeaten 42 from 19 balls, and then defending it with ease. Three overs from the end of their innings, they were 117 for 6 and vulnerable, but he changed the face of the game.
As Moeen Ali, Worcestershire's captain, back immediately after England's World Cup success, remarked: "It was the performance of a side that won the tournament last year, a side with a lot of confidence."
Notts are rooted to the foot of Division One of the Championship, 38 points adrift with only four matches remaining and seemingly bound for relegation. Any imagining that the arrival of T20 would be a miraculous cure were rudely dispelled. It is a long tournament - 14 group games - but limp dismissals from two high-profile signings, Joe Clarke and Ben Duckett, set the tone on the opening night for a disappointing batting display.
To his credit, at least Alex Hales has returned to county cricket ready for the fray. He was blackballed from England's World Cup squad in the most clinical fashion after his failing of a second drugs test, following other misdemeanours, led those in charge to conclude that he had become a liability.
He has kept a low profile, but the evidence of his 52 from 34 balls suggested he is one Notts batsman in good frame of mind. When he twice slog-swept Brett D'Oliveira for six, he had positioned himself for victory, only to be bowled by Barnard as he made room to cut him through the offside.
That opened the way for Moeen to settle the match with 4 for 6 in his last two overs, by doing little more than hitting consistent areas. His first wicket owed much to Barnard's electric fielding as he dashed 20 yards to his left from long-off to pluck a diving catch to dismiss Jake Libby.
Dan Christian's first-ball nought again emphasised Worcestershire's sharpness in the field as his inside-edge onto his thigh was brilliantly collected to his right by the wicketkeeper, Ben Cox. In Moeen's final over, withy 59 needed off five, Tom Moores and Samit Patel went for broke and both holed out.
As an aside, it was worth wondering whether the racists (because some were) who denounced Moeen on social media for quite cheerfully opting out of England's champagne-shaking celebrations to mark the winning of the World Cup would even know or care that four days later he was back in county cricket, skippering Worcestershire with an air of calm and playing as much as his international commitments allow.
The World Cup has made additional demands on pitches at international venues, and Notts have limited outground options to lighten the load. It is to be hoped this is not a sign of things to come at the bigger venues.
Barnard found an answer to it. At 23, this slender allrounder is of an age where he can convince England of his attributes as a T20 cricketer. His flourish with the bat was a gem, carrying them to 161 for 6 when they must have felt 150 was optimistic; an innings of dexterity and common sense.
Barnard was the dominant partner in a stand of 59 from 30 balls with Ben Cox, rescuing Worcestershire from 102 for 6 after 15.2 overs. They had run aground on a grippy pitch which played into the hands of Harry Gurney, but Barnard dealt with his mix of slower offcutters with intelligence, running him through slips to the boundary as only 15 came off his first three overs. In Gurney's last over he switched mood, 18 runs lost as he struck him over midwicket for six and then added a Buttler-esque scoop to the next ball for good measure.
Martin Guptill would value the taste of victory, too. He had a modest World Cup - 186 runs at 20.66 - but before the match became the latest New Zealand player to respond to their desperately unlucky World Cup final loss in philosophical fashion. The gist of his remarks was that, as the beers went down, New Zealand had found contentment in the recognition that we had shared in one of the greatest one-day games in history.
Guptill's share at Trent Bridge was 22 from 24 balls, in an innings in which he was starved of the strike before he hit a full toss from Luke Wood back to the bowler. It could have been worse; before he had scored, he survived a run-out appeal by about an inch, the first sign for weeks that his luck might be on the turn.
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Sachin Tendulkar, Allan Donald, Cathryn Fitzpatrick inducted in ICC Hall of Fame
Published in
Cricket
Thursday, 18 July 2019 21:38

Former India captain Sachin Tendulkar, former South Africa fast bowler Allan Donald and former Australia Women's fast bowler Cathryn Fitzpatrick have become the newest additions to the ICC Hall of Fame. The trio were inducted in a ceremony in London on Thursday.
Tendulkar, cricket's most prolific run-getter, was inducted immediately after becoming eligible: the ICC rule requires that a player should have played his last international match at least five years before and Tendulkar had retired in November 2013. He is the sixth Indian to be part of the ICC's Hall of Fame, following Sunil Gavaskar, Bishan Singh Bedi, Kapil Dev, Anil Kumble and Rahul Dravid.
The only player to feature in 200 Test matches, Tendulkar scored 15921 runs in the longest format and 18426 runs in ODIs, both run tallies standing as records. He is also the only player to have scored 100 centuries in international cricket (51 in Tests and 49 in ODIs) and was part of India's World Cup winning side in 2011.
"It is an honour to be inducted into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame, which cherishes the contribution of cricketers over generations," Tendulkar said. "They have all contributed to the growth and popularity of the game and I am happy to have done my bit."
Donald, who retired from all formats in 2004, was one of South Africa's greatest fast bowlers, and the first bowler from the side to take 300 Test wickets and 200 ODI wickets. Donald ended with a wickets tally of 602 wickets in an international career that spanned more than a decade.
"The biggest shock when you open an e-mail like that - it says congratulations Allan Donald, you have been inducted in the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame! It hits you, it hits you quite hard because it is a prestigious award and something that you can't take lightly. I thank the ICC for the huge honour."
Fitzpatrick, the eighth woman to be inducted into the Hall of Fame, was the fastest bowler in women's cricket over the course of her 16-year international career. Her tally of 180 ODI wickets was the highest in women's cricket, until it was surpassed by India seamer Jhulan Goswami in May 2017. Fitzpatrick helped Australia lift two Women's World Cups - in 1997 and 2005 - and was coach of the side between May 2012 and May 2015, in which time Australia Women won a World Cup and two World T20 titles.
"To gain recognition alongside many of the games' giants is a huge honour. I look at the list of past inductees and what stands out most is not only their outstanding talent, but that they were game changers. They took the game on and changed the way it was played."
ICC's chief executive Manu Sawhney said the three were among the finest players to have ever graced the game. "It is a great honour for us to announce the 2019 inductees into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame. Sachin, Allan and Cathryn are three of the finest players to ever grace our game and are deserved additions to the Hall of Fame. On behalf of the ICC, I would like to congratulate all three players, who enrich the list of all-time greats already members of this select club."
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'Do we just burn our kits and apply for jobs?' - Sikandar Raza
Published in
Cricket
Thursday, 18 July 2019 21:55

Disappointment, despair and heartbreak. These are the words Sikandar Raza used to describe the mood among his Zimbabwe team-mates, as they frantically called each other and exchanged messages in the minutes following the ICC's decision to suspend Zimbabwe with immediate effect over 'government interference'.
Raza said his team-mates' emotions were similar to the way they felt after the World Cup Qualifier last year, when their defeat to UAE cost them a place in the 2019 World Cup. But the situation was a lot worse, he said, as players remain in the dark over their immediate and foreseeable future. Zimbabwe are scheduled to play a T20 tri-series in September in Bangladesh, against the hosts and Afghanistan, in the lead-up to the Men's World T20 Qualifier in October in the UAE. While Zimbabwe remain suspended, representative teams will not be allowed to participate in any ICC events, making their presence in the Women's T20 World Cup Qualifier in August and Men's World T20 Qualifier highly unlikely.
Effectively, Zimbabwe Cricket has to get its house in order by the next ICC meeting in October. Raza said that the ICC could have applied the same conditions but at least allowed them to play cricket.
"We are all pretty heart-broken at the moment," Raza told ESPNcricinfo. "We are still in shock to be honest, seeing how our international career can come to an end like that. Not just for one player, but for the whole country. I am not coming to terms with it so easily, and I am sure my team-mates feel the same way. Where do we go from here? Is there a way out?
"I don't know what is the way out. We have been told that we have been suspended but not told for how long. [A] two-year [suspension] could basically bring an end to a lot of careers. I don't know the conditions but to totally suspend us from playing cricket, while you allow whoever is responsible to get our house in order, you basically stop cricket in Zimbabwe. I don't know how one can do that but it has happened to us now."
Raza feared it may be time for Zimbabwe players to think of alternative careers. Raza, himself, is a software engineer, and had also attended the Air Force College in Pakistan. Although he picked up cricket as a profession later than most players, he has quickly built himself into a solid batting allrounder in international cricket, and has picked up gigs in many of the T20 leagues around the world .
"If we miss the World T20 qualifiers, we will miss the T20 tri-series in Bangladesh [in September]. What if the house [ZC] is not in order? Is the ICC going to recognise the interim committee or the old committee? What is happening?
"I don't know where we go as international cricketers. Is it club cricket or no cricket for us? Do we just burn our kits and apply for jobs? I don't know what we have to do right now."
Raza said that if the ICC had directly overseen the Zimbabwe Cricket elections in June, they may have quickly recognised why the government's Sports and Recreation Commission dismissed the board in the first place. "I genuinely thought that it would have been ideal if one member of the ICC had come and overseen the election process, for the reasons SRC dismissed the board, while we continued to play cricket. I thought that would have been a very good quick fix."
Last year, while accepting the Player of the Tournament award at the World Cup Qualifier in Harare, Raza had voiced his disappointment at the ICC's decision to limit the number of teams in the 2019 World Cup. He maintained a similar stance regarding cricket's decision-makers
"As much as I want to say, there's nothing to say. Our cricket and livelihoods have been taken away from us," he said. "Whatever I say now will mean nothing. It will fall on deaf ears. I just thought the motto was to grow the game, and it keeps on shrinking."
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Strasburg gets 2 hits in one inning, including HR
Published in
Breaking News
Thursday, 18 July 2019 19:12

Washington Nationals right-hander Stephen Strasburg went 3-for-3 with five RBIs -- including a single and a 420-foot home run in one inning -- in Thursday's 13-4 win over the Braves in Atlanta.
Strasburg became the first Nationals pitcher to drive in five runs in a game and have two hits in one inning. He's the first pitcher in the majors to homer and record an additional base hit in the same inning since Edwin Jackson did it with the Diamondbacks against the Pirates on April 11, 2010.
But Strasburg, who won the Silver Slugger Award in 2012, said he may have been a little lucky at the plate.
"It's just how crazy this game is," he said. "Sometimes you just run into the ball."
Strasburg led off the third inning with a single to center and scored the Nationals' first run, tying the game. The Nationals batted around, and when Strasburg came up the second time with two outs and two on, he drove a 92 mph fastball from Touki Toussaint deep to left for his fourth career homer.
The blast was the longest by a pitcher this season and the longest by a Nationals pitcher since the Statcast era began in 2015. Strasburg celebrated by dancing with his teammates in the dugout, but reviews from his teammates weren't kind.
"Stras isn't much of a dancer," first baseman Ryan Zimmerman said. "Maybe his wedding is the last time he danced."
In his next at-bat in the top of the fifth, Strasburg picked up his third hit of the night, singling to left to drive in two more runs to give him five RBIs on the night. He had one RBI going into the game, and he had one all of last year.
Strasburg was due to lead off in the top of the seventh, but he couldn't get through the bottom of the sixth, as his pitch count surpassed 100. He struck out seven Braves over 5⅓ innings while allowing three runs on eight hits.
"Stephen wasn't as sharp as he could be, but man, he swung the bat really well,'' manager Dave Martinez said. "He might be a pinch hitter coming up here for the rest of these games."
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Everything you need to know for Round 2 of The Open
Published in
Breaking News
Thursday, 18 July 2019 20:26

PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland -- Brooks Koepka briefly had a share of the first-round lead at the 148th Open Championship on Thursday, and he's only 2 shots behind leader J.B. Holmes after firing a 3-under 68.
It has become an all-too-familiar sight for the rest of the field, which can't feel great about seeing Koepka's name on the leaderboard again. He has won four of the past 10 major championships.
Koepka had four birdies in the first round and didn't have a bogey until the 17th.
"I feel like I played pretty solid," Koepka said. "I missed it in the right spots all day. One bad one on 17. That's going to cost you. Didn't really make any putts. Didn't take advantage of anything to really go low. But definitely didn't shoot myself out of it, so I'm OK with that."
It doesn't hurt that Koepka's caddie, Ricky Elliott, grew up in Portrush and played the course quite a few times as an amateur. When Koepka was asked how many shots Elliott made a suggestion on, he responded: "Sixty-eight of them."
It's the 14th time in the past 17 rounds of a major that Koepka has finished in the top six. The only times he didn't were the first round of the 2018 PGA Championship at Bellerive (which he won) and the first round of June's U.S. Open at Pebble Beach (in which he was runner-up).
In the four majors this season, Koepka had a combined score of 18 under in the first round, which is best among active PGA Tour players.
In fact, it's the second-best aggregate score for the first round in the four majors in the past 25 years. Dustin Johnson was 20 under par in the opening round of the majors in 2015.
Koepka feels good about his chances this weekend.
"I've hit it unbelievable the last couple of days," he said. "I'm very pleased with the way I'm striking it. It's nice to get some practice in over the last five, six days. I feel good. I feel very comfortable. It's a major championship. That's what you're trying to peak for."
And no one, at least right now, does that better than him.
Big names headed home for the weekend?
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Can Brooks Koepka win The Open?
Tim Cowlishaw, J.A. Adande and Clinton Yates agree that Brooks Koepka is playing at a championship level after the first day of The Open.
Some of golf's biggest stars have plenty of work to do Friday if they're going to make the cut. For a few of them, it's probably going to be too little, too late, regardless of how well they play in the second round.
The top 70 scores and ties make the 36-hole cut.
Local favorite Rory McIlroy, who grew up in Holywood, Northern Ireland, and set the Royal Portrush course record with a 61 when he was 16, shot 8-over 79. McIlroy had a quadruple-bogey 8 on the first hole and a triple-bogey 7 on the 18th.
"I definitely think if I can put the ball in the fairway [on Friday] I can shoot a good enough score to be around for the weekend," McIlroy said. "Obviously, I'm pretty sure anyone starting with a 79 in this golf tournament doesn't think about winning at this point. But I think I can go out there and shoot something in the mid-60s, be around for the weekend and then try to play good from there."
Things weren't much better for Tiger Woods (7-over 78), five-time major winner Phil Mickelson (5-over 76) or 2013 Masters champion Adam Scott (7-over 78).
For Woods, the 78 was his worst opening round ever at The Open.
"I'm just not moving as well as I'd like," Woods said. "And unfortunately, you've got to be able to move, and especially under these conditions, shape the golf ball. And I didn't do it. I didn't shape the golf ball at all. Everything was left-to-right. And wasn't hitting very solidly."
Scott, meanwhile, never felt comfortable during his round.
"I didn't really have anything going my way," Scott said. "And I got myself in some trouble I couldn't get out of, which was disappointing. I've just got to go and shoot a low one [in the second round]. I feel like I'm playing well enough. Just a few things that cost me at least 5 shots. I don't think there's much in it. They're the errors you can't make."
Reigning U.S. Open champion Gary Woodland, defending Open Championship winner Francesco Molinari, Bryson DeChambeau and Xander Schauffele each shot 3-over 74 and also have some work to do in the second round.
Look who's back in the conversation
While Rickie Fowler (1-under 70) and Matt Kuchar (1-under 70) might currently be considered the best players to have never won a major, England's Lee Westwood held that unenviable title for a long time during the height of his career.
Westwood, 46, has won 43 times as a pro and has come agonizingly close in the majors. He has been second at the Masters (2010 and '16) and The Open (2010) and third at the PGA Championship (2009) and U.S. Open (2008 and '11).
Does Westwood have one more run in him? He fired a 3-under 68 for a tie for third after 18 holes. It's his best first round of The Open since he was tied for eighth at St. Andrews in 2010.
Sergio Garcia got the major monkey off his back by winning the 2017 Masters. But he hasn't done much of anything since; he missed the cut in seven of the previous 10 majors.
Garcia is also among 13 players tied for third at 3-under 68. It's the fifth time he has shot 68 or better in the first round of The Open; he finished in the top five in four of the previous occasions.
"Obviously, I'm very satisfied with the way I played and the way that the day went," Garcia said. "It was a solid day. Like I said, it wasn't easy out there. It was quite windy all day. There were some really tough holes, and obviously on the back nine."
Don't forget about me
The loudest gallery cheers Thursday were for McIlroy and fellow Northern Ireland natives Darren Clarke, who hit the first tee shot, and Graeme McDowell.
But it was Irishman Shane Lowry who is close to the top of the leaderboard after firing a 4-under 67 in the first round.
"If I hit a bad shot, I feel like I can get myself out of trouble," Lowry said. "It's a great place to be in, to be honest. I hope it lasts for another while."
Lowry, 32, won the 2009 Irish Open as an amateur and has won once on the PGA Tour and four times on the European Tour. He missed the cut in his past four appearances in The Open.
The key for Lowry will be stringing together four consecutive good rounds. He shot 68 in the first round at St. Andrews in 2010 but finished 73-71-75. At Hoylake in 2014, Lowry went 68-75-70-65.
McDowell said Lowry is good enough to win the first Open Championship on Irish soil in 68 years.
"Listen, I've always thought Shane had kind of three big things going for him," McDowell said. "Obviously, he's a great driver of the ball; one of the best chippers of the ball I've ever seen; and he's got a lot of guts and determination. To win an Irish Open for an amateur speaks volumes of who he is and what he is.
"He's a good friend out here, and I have a huge amount of respect for his game. He could easily continue this into the weekend and could easily contend here on Sunday afternoon. He has the game."
Mother Nature will have something say
The weather and wind are always big factors at the Open Championship. Thursday's opening round was no exception. At times, there was heavy rain on certain areas of the golf course. At the exact same time, other holes were bathed in sunshine.
The forecast for Friday is much of the same, according to the Met Office, which predicts an increased risk of heavy downpours in the late afternoon and evening, along with winds at 5 to 10 mph from the southeast.
If the weather conditions remain the same, Englishman Paul Casey doesn't expect the winning score to get to 10 under.
"If we get the same periods of sun, couple of squalls, same strength of wind, I'd snap your arm off if anybody got to double digits," Casey said. "Double it, add a couple. Yeah, I don't know.
"But we'll see if the R&A lean on it a little bit. They have a very good grasp of things. That's not their style. Their style is usually to let the elements dictate."
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