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The Wysh List: Offer sheets and character assassinations
Published in
Hockey
Friday, 05 July 2019 04:45

This is the velocity of an offer sheet.
Within a span of 24 hours, Montreal Canadiens general manager Marc Bergevin went from lauded maverick to short-sighted dupe. Sebastian Aho, the 21-year-old Carolina Hurricanes center he signed to a five-year, $42.27 million contract offer sheet, went from traitorous opportunist to naïve soul manipulated by his nefarious agent. The Carolina Hurricanes went from a poaching ground for an Original Six legacy franchise to laughing off this hostile takeover like it was a sneering critique of their victory celebrations from Don Cherry.
"It was so ridiculous in terms of probability of succeeding. If it was a test, it was quite an easy one," said Canes owner Tom Dundon.
Ouch. And you wonder why offer sheets in the NHL happen with the frequency of a unicorn staring at Halley's Comet while eating a McRib.
I have an unpopular opinion -- shocking, I know -- about the Canadiens' failed offer sheet on Aho: it was very much a worthy effort rather than the "waste of time" that Dundon labelled it.
They went fishing, got a bite, but couldn't reel the Aho tuna into the boat. Should they have added some bait to the hook, a.k.a. gone up a level on salary and draft pick compensation to the Hurricanes? Sure, that's a fair argument. But that wasn't really their gambit. They were trying to get Aho in at a certain price, with a certain compensation, and were hoping that a combination of factors -- the $21 million of bonus money in the first 12 months and the term that marches him to unrestricted free agency and the line they were selling about Aho "wanting to play for Montreal" -- would somehow jar him loose. It didn't, but the only real damage here for the Canadiens is not having those draft pick assets available for a week. Otherwise, they took a shot, they missed, and life goes on.
As hockey fans, we've been begging for someone to tender an offer sheet to a player, and to have that player sign one. Literally begging. Then it happens, and most of us are like, "no, wait, we meant a successful offer sheet" while ridiculing Montreal for whiffing.
Sorry, but don't we want to see these fishing expeditions every summer? Don't we want that moment of exhilaration when one team attempts to raid another, even if the effort is foolhardy? Don't we want that one out of, like, a dozen times when this actually works?
(Hint to future offer-sheeters: Go for the third-liner in their early 20s on a cap-strapped team instead.)
Instead, we're reminded why we never see them, which is that they're more trouble than they're worth.
So instead of getting applauded for the effort, Bergevin gets slaughtered by the Montreal Gazette, which called his strategy a "massive fail" and wrote: "This is just one more spin from the cynical Canadiens management team. It's an effort to distract fans from the fact that they were unable to sign the guy they really wanted, Matt Duchene."
No, they weren't. That's because you have to have a player who wants to actually sign with your team. Matt Duchene wanted to play for the Nashville Predators. This was the worst-kept secret in hockey. He has a house there now. They traded P.K. Subban to create cap room to sign him. He was never coming to Montreal. It's a non-starter.
Sebastian Aho, meanwhile? He wanted to play for Montreal. Full stop. You don't sign an offer sheet if you don't want to play for the team that tendered it. So Dundon doth protest too much. "If [Aho] said it, it would be different. But he didn't. The fact that an agent said it means there's no credibility to it," said the Carolina owner. C'mon, man. That's not how this works.
Does that mean he doesn't want to play for the Hurricanes? Of course not. One can be of two minds: 'If they don't match, it's cool, because I get to play for a franchise I fancy; if they do match, it's cool, because I really enjoy playing for my current team as well.'
Which is essentially what Shea Weber said back in 2012.
"We utilized the CBA the best way we could with the way it is. It worked out great. I love in Nashville. The team stepped up," he said at the time.
Oh, his agent said other things, like Aho's did. Mean things. Calling the Predators a rebuilding team, and claiming Weber much preferred the upward trajectory of the Philadelphia Flyers, whose offer sheet he signed. Hoping that the 14-year, $110 million deal with the $52 million dollars in bonus money in the first four seasons would prove too rich for them to match.
It wasn't. The Preds had already lost Ryan Suter as a free agent to the Minnesota Wild. They weren't going to lose Weber too. So they pushed aside four first-round picks to make a statement and bring him back, at great cost. Well, until they traded him four years later.
There have been only two offers sheets signed by a player since then: Ryan O'Reilly in 2013, and then Aho on Monday. As much as we criticize the "old boys" in the general manager's chairs for not utilizing offer sheets, in the end, players still have to sign them. And they don't: Brayden Point wants to stay in Tampa, Kasperi Kapenen wants to be a Leaf (and already signed a new deal), and so on.
Perceptions change for a general manager if they fail to snag a restricted free agent they've offer-sheeted. Do perceptions change for the player?
I asked Scott Barry, the Predators super fan who dresses in a luchador mask as "The Ultimate Predator," about how he remembered the Weber offer sheet.
"I was never upset at Webs for the offer sheet. I don't think many Preds fans were, to be honest. Offer sheets happen. If anything, we were more upset with the team for letting it get that far," he recalled.
"Everyone knew Shea was going to get paid, so why not just pay the man? When the offer sheet hit, I was more worried that Nashville might not match. At that time, we weren't exactly flush with money or making huge contracts. As far as affecting my thoughts on Shea, he had to do what was best for his family, and if Nashville wasn't going to pay, as much as I would have hated it, I'd still be a fan, truly -- I think most of Nashville would. He and Pekka [Rinne] were the faces of the franchise for a long time, it'd take a very heinous act, in my opinion, for Nashville to feel the way about Webs as we do about say, Suter or [Alexander] Radulov."
(Radulov, please recall, took his talents to the KHL after three years in Nashville.)
Things were different with O'Reilly, last seen hoisting the Conn Smythe and the Stanley Cup with the St. Louis Blues. As an RFA of the Colorado Avalanche, he signed an offer sheet in 2013 with the Flames for two years and $10 million.
"The ROR saga was extremely divisive in the fan base," recalled a long-time Avs blogger who goes by the moniker 'Jibblescribbits.' "I was in the minority, but I was glad he flexed his financial muscle a little. At the time, the Avs had gone full-blown cheapskate and were coasting. But I'd say the vast majority of the fan base turned on him and thought he was being greedy. His dad inserted himself via Twitter and it just gave the whole proceeding a weird flavor. I'd say most Avs fans do not like him at all. They see him as being all about the money. I didn't though, but I am more player-sided in contracts than most fans, I think."
So what about Aho?
The smartest thing Dundon did, besides quickly matching an offer sheet for a player that the Hurricanes would spend the next five years trying to replace, was to completely exonerate the player who signed with another team by tossing his agent under the bus. "The question is 'do you think you should believe an agent?' and you guys can figure that out," he said.
But Tom Edwards, a Hurricanes season-ticket holder who contributes to the Section 328 podcast, said he doesn't have any ill will towards agent Gerry Johannson nor to his client.
"They had a number in mind. The negotiation was going to take probably the entire summer at this rate. Montreal's offer was what they were looking for," he told me.
When it comes to offer sheets and perceptions, the most important one to Edwards is that his franchise is no longer one to be taken for granted.
"I think that Dundon's message helped a bit, because after years of [owner Peter] Karmanos, it was nice to be in a position where there wasn't a thought that we'd take the cheap way out. If this happens three or four years ago, I don't know if Aho gets matched."
Heck, maybe next time it'll be the Hurricanes casting the offer sheet line.
Oh and FYI: Canadiens forward Max Domi is a restricted free agent next summer, followed by Jesperi Kotkaniemi in 2021.
Three things about NHL free agency
1. Through 4:51 p.m. on July 1, NHL teams had signed 86 players to 173 contract years and $556,835,000. Meanwhile, in the NBA, the contracts signed by Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving, Kemba Walker and Jimmy Butler totaled $589,000,000, with 16 contract years. Just in case you were wondering how the other half lives.
2. My favorite big signing: Joe Pavelski to the Dallas Stars at three years and $21 million. My favorite little signing: Joonas Donskoi to the Colorado Avalanche for four years and $15.6 million. My least favorite signing: Tyler Myers to the Vancouver Canucks for five years and $30 million (though I'm pleasantly surprised the average annual value wasn't even higher). The signing I can't wrap my brain around no matter how many times I try: Brandon Tanev for six years and $21 million to the Penguins.
3. When the Avalanche win the Stanley Cup sometime in the next three years, the Matt Duchene trade is going to be seen at the turning point of the organization. Another branch on that trade tree: Getting defenseman Samuel Girard from the Predators in that three-way deal, and using the Senators' pick last month to draft another defenseman in Bowen Byram. Having both gave them the flexibility to move defenseman Tyson Barrie to the Maple Leafs for Nazem Kardri, who dramatically upgrades their center depth in a conference that demands it.
Listen to ESPN On Ice
ESPN's prospect and draft analyst Chris Peters joined us in Bristol to analyze the first few hours of free agency in alphabetic team order. Maple Leafs center Auston Matthews talked to me about being an EA Sports NHL 20 cover boy, growing the game of hockey, and expectations for next season (31:22). Aleksander Barkov talked to Emily Kaplan about the new look Panthers (57:45). Listen to the whole thing here.
Puck headlines
Fun look back at the history of the Canucks' jerseys. Can't wait to purchase an Elias Pettersson 'Electric Skate' sweater this season.
What's going to happen with Alabama-Huntsville hockey now that the WCHA is fracturing?
Good piece on Wyatt Russell, a.k.a. the best part of that second "Goon" movie.
The top 10 bounce-back candidates after free agency. Not holding my breath on that Cam Talbot one.
Ryan Lambert was not a fan on that offer sheet from the Canadiens.
Looking forward to the Capitals' tough free-agent calls, like Braden Holtby.
Do the Blackhawks have the best goalie tandem in the NHL?
P.K. Subban plus July 4 equals ... this.
What can I tell you... It's become a 4th of July tradition ??? ??♂️? @lindseyvonn pic.twitter.com/zoyP7zC8JG
— P.K. Subban (@PKSubban1) July 4, 2019
Hockey tl;dr (too long; didn't read)
Women's hockey is thriving on the grassroots level, even as the pros struggle towards a path to the future. ($)
In case you missed this from your friends at ESPN
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Amateur roundup: Stanford's Wu pulls off amazing, rare Open feat
Published in
Golf
Friday, 05 July 2019 03:12

Brandon Wu did something Tuesday that no amateur had done in more than 50 years.
The 22-year-old Stanford grad made it through Final Qualifying for The Open to become the first amateur to qualify for the U.S. Open and The Open in the same summer (without the need of an exemption) since Ireland’s Joe Carr in 1967.
“It’s a tremendous accomplishment, so I’m soaking it all in,” Wu told GolfChannel.com after shooting 64-67 to win medalist honors at Fairmont St. Andrews by three shots. “It’s been so fun to compete at the highest level. I think it also speaks to the growth of the amateur game; if I didn’t do it this year, I’m sure someone was bound to do it within the next few years.”
Wu is coming off a senior season in which he was a second-team All-American and went 3-0 in match play to help the Cardinal to the NCAA team title. He then got through the U.S. Open sectional in Columbus, Ohio, before representing the U.S. at the Arnold Palmer Cup. He then headed to Pebble Beach, where he made the cut and tied for 35th. He even received his Stanford diploma behind Pebble's 18th green after the final round.
“An insane summer, for sure,” Wu said. “You map it all out in your head, but obviously it’s tough getting through these qualifiers, and probably even tougher to win that team title. I know I can compete at the highest level, so it is nice to be able to showcase it a little on the biggest stages this summer. I’m just trying to enjoy the journey.”
Wu’s journey continues as he flew back to the U.S. on July 4. He will attend the U.S. Amateur preview event at Pinehurst next week before heading back to the U.K. He plans on playing Muirfield, North Berwick and Royal County Down before settling in at Royal Portrush by Monday morning.
With his pro plans gladly on hold, Wu is also primed for a Walker Cup invite. With starts in both summer Opens and a strong match-play resume, Wu is considered by many to be a lock for U.S. captain Nathaniel Crosby’s 10-man team, which will compete at Royal Liverpool in September.
“It’s an incredible honor to represent your country and the Walker Cup is definitely the pinnacle of that in amateur golf,” Wu said. “I’m a little superstitious in this regard, but I’m going to just try and keep playing well to add to my resume. More good golf won’t hurt.”
HIGHSMITH TOPS TEAMMATES TO WIN AT SAHALEE
The Sahalee Players turned into the Pepperdine Invitational as four Waves players finished in the top 12, including champion Joe Highsmith.
Highsmith, a rising sophomore from Lakewood, Wash., shot 7 under over four rounds to clip teammate Sahith Theegala by two shots. Theegala, a senior who redshirted last season while recovering from left-wrist surgery in January, was six shots clear of third-place Chris Crisologo.
Sophomore Derek Hitchner, who rounded out Wednesday’s final threesome at Sahalee Country Club in Sammamish, Wash., tied for sixth. Senior Joshua McCarthy was T-12.
Theegala had pulled even with Highsmith after six holes, but a two-shot swing at the par-5 11th hole put Highsmith up for good, by four shots, before the two eventually ended up with matching 2-over 74s in the final round.
“I had a hot putter going all week,” Highsmith said. “Typically, my game is the opposite. I’ll hit the ball really well, but then do nothing on the greens. But this week was really average ball-striking, and fortunately had the putter going well. I made a bunch of 5- to 10-foot par saves, which was the difference.”
The victory marks Highsmith’s first world-ranked amateur title since the 2017 Washington State Amateur. Highsmith entered the week at No. 168 in the WAGR. Theegala was No. 68 and should move into the periphery of the U.S. Walker Cup conversation.
EAST WINS WYNDHAM CUP
The singles session of the Wyndham Cup, the AJGA’s annual Ryder Cup-style competition, was split on Wednesday, but that was enough for the East team to notch a five-point victory over the opposing West side.
Vanderbilt commit Jackson Van Paris earned the clinching point in a 27.5-22.5 win at Old Town Club in Winston-Salem, N.C., as Van Paris beat Alex Yang, 4 and 3.
“We had a lead for almost the entire time, coming down the stretch we knew we needed to play well today even though we had a five-point lead,” Van Paris said. “It was crazy. I made the putt and I heard someone yell East wins. It was really cool not knowing and then making that putt. Walking down the 16 fairway and having the shuttle cart and we all ran and started hugging each other was probably the coolest moment of my golf career. It means everything.”
The West was led by Luci Li, who went 4-0 after winning all six of her matches during her Polo Golf Junior Classic win last month. East’s Maxwell Moldovan, who won the boys title at Polo, went 3-0-1 at the Wyndham Cup to push his recent match-play record to 9-0-1.
WALKER CUP WATCH
If the Walker Cup squads were selected today, solely based on World Amateur Golf Ranking, here’s what they would look like (Note: Ireland’s James Sugrue is ranked No. 72 but likely will make the GB&I team as the British Amateur champion):
GB&I
- Euan Walker (10)
- Conor Purcell (16)
- Caolan Rafferty (24)
- Ben Schmidt (28)
- Tom Sloman (32)
- Ben Jones (37)
- Joe Pagdin (50)
- Sandy Scott (51)
- Alex Fitzpatrick (53)
- Conor Gough (57)
USA
- Cole Hammer (1)
- Akshay Bhatia (4)
- Brandon Wu (6)
- Chandler Phillips (7)
- Stewart Hagestad (8)
- Steven Fisk (9)
- Isaiah Salinda (12)
- Alex Smalley (13)
- John Pak (17)
- Ricky Castillo (19)
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Nemanja Matic is seeking talks with Ole Gunnar Solskjaer over his Manchester United future after being made aware of interest from Inter Milan and AC Milan, sources have told ESPN FC.
Sources have told ESPN FC that Inter, who are also pursuing United forward Romelu Lukaku, have indicated a willingness to offer £10 million plus Belgium midfielder Radja Nainggolan for Matic, who cost United £40m when signed from Chelsea in July 2017.
- Premier League fixtures 2019-20 in full
- Who has qualified for Europe from the Premier League?
- When does the transfer window close?
After making an impressive start to life at United under Jose Mourinho, Matic's form has since dipped and Solsjkaer has identified Newcastle youngster Sean Longstaff as a potential replacement for the 30-year-old Serbia international.
Sources have told ESPN FC that Matic is keen to discuss the Italian interest with Solskjaer in order to assess whether he has a future under the Norwegian at Old Trafford.
The United squad are due to fly to Perth, Australia on Sunday for the first leg of their three week preseason tour, which also involves games in Singapore and China.
Matic is expected to travel with the rest of the team to Perth, but his long term prospects now rest with Solskjaer.
Meanwhile, midfielder Andreas Pereira and defender Axel Tuanzebe signed contract extensions at United until 2023 and 2022 respectively.
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LYON, France -- Alex Morgan hit back at critics of her goal celebration against England in the World Cup semifinal, saying the controversy is proof of a double standard for female athletes.
After Morgan scored what proved to be the decisive goal in a 2-1 win against England on Tuesday, she ran toward a corner flag and mimicked drinking a cup of tea.
Speaking to the media Friday, Morgan said the celebration was partly an homage to English actress Sophie Turner. The former "Game of Thrones" star is known for Instagram stories in which she offers opinions or commentary on current events and signs off with the phrase "And that's the tea," before sipping from a cup.
As Morgan also said immediately after Tuesday's game, she reiterated Friday that the celebration was about telling a story -- in this case, of the team taking everything thrown at it during the tournament.
"I feel that there is some sort of double standard for females in sports," Morgan said, "to feel like we have to be humble in our successes and have to celebrate, but not too much or in a limited fashion. You see men celebrating all over the world in big tournaments, grabbing their sacks or whatever it is. And when I look at sipping a cup of tea, I am a little taken aback by the criticism."
Morgan also said she was disappointed that former NWSL teammate Lianne Sanderson was among those criticizing the American forward. A former England international who is working for beIn Sports during the World Cup, Sanderson said the celebration was "distasteful."
In other stories involving the ongoing theme of English displeasure with the American team, U.S. midfielder Lindsey Horan said she reached out to England captain Steph Houghton to apologize for unintentionally interrupting a postgame interview. Houghton cut short an interview with talkSport after Horan was heard yelling congratulations to U.S. goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher in the background.
Naeher saved Houghton's penalty kick in the 84th minute to preserve the American lead.
"I had no intention of it," Horan said. "Obviously, emotions arise after a game, and I was so excited for Alyssa. It was the biggest save of her life, and I saw [Naeher] doing an interview, and I wanted to rile her up again. I had no idea what was around me, so hopefully Steph knows that."
On the home front, Morgan was also asked about the team's plans for a White House visit. In months-old comments released during the World Cup, Megan Rapinoe said she would not visit the White House if invited. Rapinoe added in a subsequent statement that she would encourage teammates to "think hard" about accepting such an invitation from the current administration.
Morgan and Rapinoe are two of three U.S. captains, along with Carli Lloyd.
"I think we'll make that decision after we finish Sunday's game," Morgan said. "I think there's been a lot of talk prematurely about the White House and [President Donald] Trump, but first we have to do business. But [as far as going], I think you guys know the answer to that anyways."
After Rapinoe's comments were released, President Trump criticized her in a series of tweets and invited the entire team regardless of the tournament outcome.
The U.S. will try to win its fourth World Cup title when it plays the Netherlands in Sunday's final.
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Veljko Paunovic's hot seat in Chicago could become a scorcher with a loss at Sporting Kansas City, while the mystique of Matias Almeyda continues to grow in San Jose, who welcome in Real Salt Lake. Plus, Columbus will look to kick-start their attack against Seattle.
Heat's on for Pauno in Chicago
Only one team in MLS this season is yet to win away from home, and it's not FC Cincinnati or Colorado. Sitting eighth in the Eastern Conference, the Chicago Fire have proved incapable of coming home with three points from a road trip but get a 10th crack at it on Saturday at Sporting Kansas City.
Expectations were high going into the season in the Windy City, especially with the arrival of Nicolas Gaitan, but the Fire continue to stall in the Eastern Conference and coach Veljko Paunovic's job appears to be hanging by a thread.
What is clear is that Chicago have never really clicked playing under the Serbian, outside of the first half of the 2017 season when it was one of the top teams in the East. Otherwise, it has been a middling experience and this season's record reflects that: 5W-7D-7L, 31 goals scored, 28 conceded. Yawn City.
Luckily for Paunovic, Wednesday's 5-1 home win over Atlanta will allow some breathing room, but judging by Chicago's play this season, it's doubtful the team will maintain that level, beginning with Saturday's visit to Sporting Kansas City (8:30 p.m. ET, ESPN+). Peter Vermes's men were humiliated at home by LAFC on Wednesday 5-1 and so a strong reaction will be expected.
Matias the magic man in San Jose
Before the season, if you had said the San Jose Earthquakes would be in the mix for a playoff spot in the Western Conference after 18 games, nobody would have believed it. Yet here they are after overcoming a four-loss start to 2019, and it's all thanks to coach Matias Almeyda.
It's amazing that the Argentine elected to come to MLS over the winter and manage one of the league's worst teams in recent seasons. Last week was another example of how he has completely turned around the Quakes, as they drilled "Cali Clasico" rivals Los Angeles Galaxy 3-0.
They'll only improve once winger Carlos Fierro joins next week, but before then there will be a home date with Real Salt Lake on Saturday (10:30 p.m. ET, ESPN+).
Despite the 3-1 loss in Minnesota on Wednesday, San Jose will be ready. Almeyda is a stickler for fitness, as that was one of the main priorities in preseason. If any team is equipped to handle playing on two days' rest, it is San Jose. Their balance and depth at all positions, plus an insatiable work rate, could well turn them into a title contender, and with a coach who knows a thing or two about winning trophies.
RSL is one of those teams battling the Quakes for a postseason berth, so three points here could well make the difference by week 34.
Columbus attack in search of kick-start
It has been a rough year in Columbus. Key injuries have stripped the Crew of some of their main attacking ingredients: namely flying full-back Milton Valenzuela and playmaker Federico Higuain. The result has been a meagre 16 goals in 19 games, only one better than last-place FC Cincinnati.
Unlike some of his struggling counterparts, Columbus boss Caleb Porter will be afforded more time to right the ship. New arrivals forward Romario Williams and winger Luis Diaz will help, but maybe, just maybe, the time is right for Columbus to make a push for the other Higuain. That is, of course, Federico's younger brother Gonzalo Higuain, 31, who is rumored to be on the way out of Juventus.
It would be a massive get for a team that normally doesn't spend big, but the allure of family could well bring the former River Plate, Real Madrid, Napoli and Chelsea man into the mix. For now, the task at hand is Saturday's home clash with Seattle (7:30 p.m. ET, ESPN+) in which both teams need something positive after poor midweek losses.
This is the time of year when Seattle start to kick things into gear, so perhaps former Portland coach Porter can learn a thing or two from his former nemesis and do the same in Columbus. Adding Gonzalo this summer might lead to a 'Nicolas Lodeiro in 2016' type of push.
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Sky Sports will show World Cup final on free-to-air if England qualify
Published in
Cricket
Friday, 05 July 2019 04:24

The Cricket World Cup final on July 14 could become the first men's international fixture to be televised on free-to-air TV in the UK since the 2005 Ashes, after Sky Sports reneged on its previous stance and announced that it would be lowering its paywall in the event of England making it through next week's semi-final at Edgbaston.
England's victory over New Zealand at Chester-le-Street last week guaranteed Eoin Morgan's men a place in the World Cup semi-finals for the first time since 1992, when they beat South Africa at Sydney but went on to lose in the final against Pakistan at Melbourne.
England have not contested a final on home soil since 1979, when they lost to West Indies at Lord's, and Sky's executives have recognised the historic opportunity that this contest could represent, to spread the sport to as broad an audience as possible.
Sky UK and Ireland Chief Executive Stephen van Rooyen said: "We are proud to be the broadcaster for a home Cricket World Cup - one of the world's biggest and most exciting sporting events.
"Our aim has always been to celebrate what could be a 'once in a generation' moment of a home team in a big final on home soil. So, if England reach the final, we will make the match available to everyone so the whole country can be part of a rare and special big sporting moment."
Sky's decision comes after their coverage of the tournament had been overshadowed in the UK by the women's football World Cup, which has been broadcast throughout by the BBC. England's semi-final against the USA on Tuesday drew 11.7 million viewers, the BBC's biggest television audience of the year. England's World Cup cricket fixtures, by contrast, have drawn an average of 450,000.
The contrast was addressed earlier this week by the England fast bowler, Liam Plunkett, who was asked on BBC 5 Live whether he would support calls for the final to be made more accessible to the English public.
"I'm not sure they're going to do it, but it would great for everybody to be able to watch that," Plunkett said. "Playing for England, you're the pride of the country and you want people to be able to access that and watch that. I'm not sure it's going to happen but for the guys, you want as many people to watch it as possible.
"It's always nice to be on a bigger platform," Plunkett added. "Hopefully people tune in to watch that game. It would obviously be great to have as many people watching as possible, we feel like we've built something special here as a team. It would be nice to go all the way and to have big numbers watching that final if we get through and win, that would be huge."
A proportion of free-to-air cricket access was already set to be reinstated from next year onwards, with the advent of the ECB's new 100-ball competition, after Sky agreed to cede some of its exclusivity to the BBC as part of a new £1.1billion rights deal from 2020-2024.
Tom Harrison, the ECB chief executive who brokered the deal, recently described Sky as "cricket's best friend" - the broadcaster has been involved in cricket since 1990 and has been the exclusive partner for home internationals since 2006 - and Plunkett later tweeted to clarify his remarks.
"Sky Cricket are an incredible partner for the game and have been for the past 20+ years," he wrote. "I was asked a question & I never said that it should be on FTA. My words have been twisted & the headline is misleading. The whole country is behind us. Keep believing."
There are no details yet as to where the match would be broadcast if England did make it through. The BBC and Channel 4, the last two free-to-air channels to broadcast international cricket, would be options, although Sky might also consider making the match available via YouTube, which was the approach taken by BT Sport for the all-English Champions League final between Liverpool and Tottenham Hotspur last month.
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New Zealand to kick off their Test Championship in Sri Lanka
Published in
Cricket
Friday, 05 July 2019 06:26

Sri Lanka Cricket have announced a series of two Tests and three T20Is against New Zealand in August-September, with the visitors set to arrive in Colombo on August 3 and stay in the country till September 7.
The Test matches will count towards the newly launched ICC Test Championship.
That New Zealand have agreed to a normal tour in which they play across four venues in the country will be of some relief to SLC, who had sensed apprehension in touring teams following the Easter Sunday Bombings in April. Although no foreign cricket board had seriously considered cancelling or postponing a tour on security grounds, several had expressed concerns over the situation. The ECB, for example, had raised the possibility of playing their two Tests next March only in Colombo, rather than in Galle and in Colombo, as would normally be the case.
New Zealand's decision to undertake a tour across three cities, however, will better enable SLC to convince other boards to resume touring as usual. The PCB, having sent their Under-19 team for a Sri Lanka tour less than a month after the bombings, is also understood to have helped, even if all those matches were played in far-flung Hambantota. International travel advisories, meanwhile, continue to soften, although visiting teams will almost certainly have a higher level of security in the coming year than they have recently had in Sri Lanka.
The two teams have not played Tests in Sri Lanka since 2012, when New Zealand won the second Test (also at the P Sara Oval) to draw the series following a heavy defeat in Galle. There have been three Sri Lanka Test tours of New Zealand in the interim.
Both sides are currently in England playing the World Cup, where Sri Lanka's campaign has hit a dead-end; they are out of the running for a place in the knockouts, having collected just eight points from eight games. They sign off with a game against India, who are already in the semi-finals, at Headingley tomorrow.
New Zealand, with 11 points from their nine games, should qualify for the semi-finals unless Pakistan pull off an improbably large win over Bangladesh in their last game, currently being played at Lord's, and match New Zealand on points while also hitching their net run-rate (-0.792) above New Zealand's 0.175.
Schedule
August 8 to 10: Three-day warm-up game in Katunayake
August 14 to 18: 1st Test in Galle
August 22 to 26: 2nd Test at P Sara Oval in Colombo
August 29: T20 warm-up game in Katunayake
August 31: 1 st T20I at R Premadasa Stadium in Colombo
September 2: 2nd T20I at R Premadasa Stadium in Colombo
September 6: 3rd T20I in Pallekele
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Last chance for India's middle order to get it right ahead of the knockouts
Published in
Cricket
Friday, 05 July 2019 07:34

Big Picture
Death, taxes… India v Sri Lanka. India are set for their fourth ODI in ten days, but with their ticket to the semi-finals booked and Sri Lanka knocked out, there is a bilateral series feel to the penultimate round-robin game this World Cup. There is nothing on the line and India are purring again after the Edgbaston stutter against England last week. But, as always, count Sri Lanka out at your own peril.
It was Dimuth Karunaratne's men who had raised the World Cup from its stupor with their believe-it-or-not win over England. It was Angelo Mathews' crazy ball that added some excitement to a similar dead rubber against West Indies. And you couldn't have forgotten Champions Trophy 2017, when Sri Lanka hunted down 322 against India.
Saturday's match could well be Lasith Malinga's last in World Cups. He has whipped up everything - whirling yorkers, steep bouncers (slow and fast) and cunning dippers - and will leave as the third-highest wicket-taker in World Cups. Can he rouse himself to produce another vintage performance and help Sri Lanka sign off with their heads held high?
As for India, this is another chance for their rickety middle-order to tune up for the crunch game(s). The team management had spun the wheel again against Bangladesh, recalling Dinesh Karthik at the expense of Kedar Jadhav, who has struck at 80.80 and has bowled just six overs in six matches this tournament. Should they give Karthik another go and see if he can finish the innings better than Jadhav or MS Dhoni?
Rishabh Pant has made 30-plus scores in his two outings at No. 4 and now has the vote of confidence from the team management. KL Rahul, too, has had pretty starts upfront, and India would ideally want both of them to kick on to bigger scores to ease the load on captain Virat Kohli and vice-captain Rohit Sharma.
Form guide
(Last five completed matches, most recent first)
India WLWWW
Sri Lanka: WLLWL
In the spotlight
KL Rahul wasn't in India's first-choice XI in the lead-up to the World Cup. After an injury scare to the designated No. 4 Vijay Shankar, Rahul moved into that spot and cracked a century against Bangladesh in the warm-ups. And later, after first-choice opener Shikhar Dhawan was sidelined from the tournament, Rahul was bumped to the top alongside Rohit and he responded with 57 against Pakistan. He followed it up with scores of 30, 48, 0, and 77. Where's that big 'un? Perhaps, it's just around the corner, as Rahul himself had put it.
His ravishing strokeplay had Kumar Sangakkara gushing in the commentary box and his maiden ton had Mahela Jayawardene tweeting: "Well played young man.. Brilliant 100!! Something special from Avishka." Twenty-one-year-old Avishka Fernando has played only three games in this World Cup, but has made more runs (183 in three matches) than the likes of Angelo Mathews, Kusal Mendis and Dhananjaya de Silva. Can he stand up to the best attack in the tournament as well?
Team news
Headingley offered slow turn for Afghanistan's spin trio on Thursday, and it could tempt India into reuniting the wristspinners. Who will miss the cut in such a scenario: Mohammed Shami or Bhuvneshwar Kumar or Jasprit Bumrah (if they want to rest him)?
India (probable): 1 Rohit Sharma, 2 KL Rahul, 3 Virat Kohli (capt), 4 Rishabh Pant, 5 MS Dhoni (wk), 6 Kedar Jadhav/Dinesh Karthik, 7 Hardik Pandya, 8 Bhuvneshwar Kumar/Mohammed Shami, 9 Kuldeep Yadav, 10 Yuzvendra Chahal, 11 Jasprit Bumrah
Sri Lanka might consider bringing back Thisara Perera for some bowling back-up in place of Lahiru Thirimanne. Legspinner Jeffrey Vandersay was expensive against West Indies, but he provides a more attacking option than Jeevan Mendis or Malinda Siriwardana.
Sri Lanka (probable): 1 Dimuth Karunaratne (capt), 2 Kusal Perera (wk), 3 Avishka Fernando, 4 Kusal Mendis, 5 Angelo Mathews, 6 Lahiru Thirimanne/Thisara Perera, 7 Dhananjaya de Silva, 8 Isuru Udana, 9 Lasith Malinga, 10 Kasun Rajitha, 11 Jeffrey Vandersay
Pitch and conditions
The Headingley track is likely to be flat and slow, with some assistance for the spinners. The forecast is for a bright, sunny day in Leeds.
Strategy punt
Sri Lanka would do well to pick Thisara and ask him to target Dhoni's body with hard lengths and enough cover at midwicket and square leg. Thisara has dismissed Dhoni six times in 12 ODI innings while conceding 144 runs off 142 balls.
Don't give Hardik Pandya pace and, instead, ask him to manufacture it for himself in the end overs. He has been dismissed four times by slower balls in six innings.
Stats and trivia
Dhananjaya has taken five wickets in 37 overs at an economy rate of 4.7 this World Cup. The other Sri Lanka spinners have combined for one wicket in 20.1 overs while conceding 6.9 runs an over.
Bumrah needs one wicket to get to 100 ODI wickets. Should he get there in his this match - his 57th - he will be the second-fastest Indian to the landmark after Shami.
Rohit has already hit four centuries this tournament, matching Sangakkara's achievement in 2015; no batsman has scored more hundreds in a single edition of the World Cup.
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Morgan: Teacup critics part of 'double standard'
Published in
Breaking News
Friday, 05 July 2019 07:06

LYON, France -- Alex Morgan hit back at critics of her goal celebration against England in the World Cup semifinal, saying the controversy is proof of a double standard for female athletes.
After Morgan scored what proved to be the decisive goal in a 2-1 win against England on Tuesday, she ran toward a corner flag and mimicked drinking a cup of tea.
Speaking to the media Friday, Morgan said the celebration was partly an homage to English actress Sophie Turner. The former "Game of Thrones" star is known for Instagram stories in which she offers opinions or commentary on current events and signs off with the phrase "And that's the tea," before sipping from a cup.
As Morgan also said immediately after Tuesday's game, she reiterated Friday that the celebration was about telling a story -- in this case, of the team taking everything thrown at it during the tournament.
"I feel that there is some sort of double standard for females in sports," Morgan said, "to feel like we have to be humble in our successes and have to celebrate, but not too much or in a limited fashion. You see men celebrating all over the world in big tournaments, grabbing their sacks or whatever it is. And when I look at sipping a cup of tea, I am a little taken aback by the criticism."
Morgan also said she was disappointed that former NWSL teammate Lianne Sanderson was among those criticizing the American forward. A former England international who is working for beIn Sports during the World Cup, Sanderson said the celebration was "distasteful."
In other stories involving the ongoing theme of English displeasure with the American team, U.S. midfielder Lindsey Horan said she reached out to England captain Steph Houghton to apologize for unintentionally interrupting a postgame interview. Houghton cut short an interview with talkSport after Horan was heard yelling congratulations to U.S. goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher in the background.
Naeher saved Houghton's penalty kick in the 84th minute to preserve the American lead.
"I had no intention of it," Horan said. "Obviously, emotions arise after a game, and I was so excited for Alyssa. It was the biggest save of her life, and I saw [Naeher] doing an interview, and I wanted to rile her up again. I had no idea what was around me, so hopefully Steph knows that."
On the home front, Morgan was also asked about the team's plans for a White House visit. In months-old comments released during the World Cup, Megan Rapinoe said she would not visit the White House if invited. Rapinoe added in a subsequent statement that she would encourage teammates to "think hard" about accepting such an invitation from the current administration.
Morgan and Rapinoe are two of three U.S. captains, along with Carli Lloyd.
"I think we'll make that decision after we finish Sunday's game," Morgan said. "I think there's been a lot of talk prematurely about the White House and [President Donald] Trump, but first we have to do business. But [as far as going], I think you guys know the answer to that anyways."
After Rapinoe's comments were released, President Trump criticized her in a series of tweets and invited the entire team regardless of the tournament outcome.
The U.S. will try to win its fourth World Cup title when it plays the Netherlands in Sunday's final.
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