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NEW ORLEANS -- Days after agreeing to a blockbuster trade that brought three young players and three draft picks to the New Orleans Pelicans in exchange for Anthony Davis, the team's front office made its next move: securing the leader of the new-look squad.
The Pelicans announced they've picked up the team option of head coach Alvin Gentry's contract for the 2020-21 season.
"We couldn't be happier to extend our relationship with Alvin," David Griffin, the Pelicans' executive vice president of basketball operations, said in a statement. "He is exactly the right coach at the right time for this franchise. As I have mentioned several times previously, the shared vision we have for the future of Pelicans basketball both on and off the floor will enable us to build a roster that fits both culturally and tactically.
"Perhaps more importantly, the relationship we have built over our many years together will enable us to challenge, empower and further one another and our franchise."
Griffin believes that Gentry's offensive focus with be a stylistic fit for the roster he is assembling. In the deal for Davis, the Pelicans acquired Lonzo Ball, Josh Hart and Brandon Ingram from the Los Angeles Lakers.
At many points during last season, drama swirled around the Pelicans. Davis publicly requested a trade ahead of the February deadline, but Feb. 7 passed and Davis remained on the Pelicans' roster. Days later, then-general manager Dell Demps was fired.
Many people within the organization credited Gentry with being a calming presence internally during a turbulent time. As one front office staff member put it, "His personality is like Icy Hot -- eases the pain and tension in a tough time."
On Thursday, the Pelicans are expected to use their No. 1 draft pick to select Zion Williamson -- a prospect they can rebuild their franchise around.
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TORONTO -- Angels outfielder Justin Upton came out swinging in his first game back from injury.
Upton homered on the first pitch he saw in his return from the injured list, Mike Trout had a solo homer among his four hits and Los Angeles used a seven-run second inning to beat the Toronto Blue Jays 10-5 Monday night.
"Upton obviously had an immediate impact," manager Brad Ausmus said.
Shohei Ohtani and Kole Calhoun also connected in the second for the Angels, who have won all four meetings with Toronto this season.
Toronto rookie Cavan Biggio hit two home runs, a solo shot in the first and a two-run drive in the eighth, the second multihomer game of his brief career. Randal Grichuk hit a two-run homer in the seventh, but the Blue Jays lost for the eighth time in 11 games.
Trout finished a triple shy of the cycle. He flied out in the first, doubled in the second, singled in the fourth, homered in the sixth, and singled again in the eighth.
Upton went on the injured list in late March because of turf toe on his left foot. He missed 71 games before returning, then started the seven-run rally with a first-pitch blast off right-hander Edwin Jackson (1-5). Later in the 11-batter frame, he chased Jackson with a single.
"It's huge to get him back," Trout said.
Upton is the first Angels player to homer in his first at-bat of a season since Trout did it against Seattle's Felix Hernandez in 2015. The last Angels player to homer on his first pitch of a season was Jeff Mathis, who did it against Minnesota's Scott Baker in 2010.
"I didn't expect a homer my first at-bat," Upton said. "I was pretty confident that I had prepared myself. I happened to get a good result."
Calhoun went back-to-back with Upton in the second, his 15th. It was the third time this season the Angels have hit consecutive home runs.
Two outs later, Trout hit a two-run double and Ohtani followed with a three-run homer, his ninth.
With sluggers Trout and Upton now flanking him in the lineup, Ohtani has high hopes for the Angels offense.
"As long as the guy hitting in between them does a good job, we should be able to win a lot of ball games," Ohtani joked through a translator.
Jackson, who snapped a five-game winless streak by beating Baltimore in his previous outing, allowed seven runs and six hits, including three home runs, in 2/3 of an inning. He has a 12.43 ERA in seven games with Toronto.
"The execution has been terrible," Jackson said. "I know I'm better than that. That's not who I am."
Trout's homer, his 20th, was an estimated 456-foot drive into the center field party deck.
"Every time I see him, he always does stuff like that," Blue Jays manager Charlie Montoyo said of Trout.
It's the fourth time Trout has hit 20 or more home runs before the All-Star break. He and former slugger Tim Salmon jointly hold the team record with eight seasons of 20 or more home runs.
Luis Garcia opened for the Angels and gave up Biggio's homer in the first.
Felix Pena (5-1) followed and allowed four runs and six hits in six-plus innings.
The Angels have won 16 of their past 22 in Toronto.
TRAINER'S ROOM
Angels: OF Cesar Puello was designated for assignment to make room for Upton.
Blue Jays: Toronto activated RHP David Phelps (elbow surgery) off the 60-day injured list and optioned RHP Justin Shafer to Triple-A Buffalo. To make room for Phelps on the 40-man roster, the Blue Jays transferred RHP Elvis Luciano (elbow) to the 60-day injured list. Phelps made his first appearance since August 2017, when he pitched a scoreless seventh. ... OF Teoscar Hernandez sprained his left wrist crashing into the outfield scoreboard while chasing Justin Bour's double in the third. Hernandez was replaced in the seventh. X-rays were negative.
NORTHERN PRIDE
In their first home game since the Raptors won the NBA championship last Thursday, the Blue Jays honored their sporting neighbors with a `We The North' banner in center field, and the same slogan in chalk behind the batter's box. The Raptors logo was painted on the back of the pitcher's mound.
FOUR SPOT
Trout's four-hit game was the 17th of his career and first this season.
UNHAPPY HOME
Toronto has lost a season-worst five straight at home.
UP NEXT
Angels: LHP Tyler Skaggs (5-6, 5.00) is 3-2 with a 3.93 ERA in six career starts against Toronto.
Blue Jays: RHP Marcus Stroman (4-8, 3.18) is 4-5 with a 3.52 ERA in 11 career games against the Angels.
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NEW YORK -- Edwin Encarnacion went from last place in the American League West to first in the AL East.
Naturally, he was pretty excited about it.
The veteran slugger was hitless during his Yankees debut Monday night against Tampa Bay in the opener of a three-game series. But he received a warm ovation from the crowd of 39,042, and New York won 3-0 to move 1½ games ahead of the Rays.
"He could have picked somewhere else. I'd have been fine with it,'' Tampa Bay manager Kevin Cash joked before the game.
Batting fifth as the designated hitter, Encarnacion went 0-for-4 in pinstripes. He struck out swinging on the 10th pitch of his first at-bat in the second inning against Yonny Chirinos.
"I saw a lot of pitches. I feel good. I'm just missing a couple of pitches that I know I can hit,'' Encarnacion said. "It's part of the game. I'll get them tomorrow.''
Acquired from Seattle in a trade late Saturday night, Encarnacion joined the Yankees on Monday and began the day leading the American League with 21 home runs. He said he expected to be shipped off by the payroll-paring Mariners, but didn't think he'd wind up in New York.
When he got the news, he was surprised and happy to be sent to a first-place team.
"I play the game to win, and it's exciting to come to a team that's battling and doing so well right now,'' Encarnacion said through a translator.
The 36-year-old Encarnacion batted behind catcher Gary Sanchez, who ranked second in the AL with 20 homers. And with fellow sluggers Giancarlo Stanton and Aaron Judge close to returning from the injured list, the Yankees are soon poised to field one of baseball's most powerful lineups.
"I can't wait to see that. It's going to be fun,'' Encarnacion said. "We're going to hit a lot of homers, and we're going to win a lot of games, too.''
General manager Brian Cashman acknowledged some might have been surprised to see the Yankees add another big bat when it's clear they're looking to upgrade an injury-depleted pitching rotation before the July 31 trade deadline. But he said the Encarnacion move won't preclude that.
"I've got more work to do,'' Cashman said. "We'll be aggressive. We're always aggressive. We just want to be smartly aggressive.''
Stanton is due to come off the injured list Tuesday, with Judge potentially to follow in a few days. When they get back, and with Encarnacion now in the fold at designated hitter, Stanton is expected to play left field a lot, making veteran Brett Gardner primarily a fourth outfielder with a part-time role on the bench.
"We have a great lineup, and with those two animals coming back, it will be even more powerful. An even better lineup,'' Sanchez said through a translator. "We just have to stay healthy and keep on playing baseball.''
Cashman pointed out the addition of Encarnacion will give manager Aaron Boone even more opportunities to rest top players and keep them fresh while mixing and matching, something the GM said Boone has done a "masterful job'' with despite all the injuries New York has endured this season.
"It gives us a lot of coverage in a lot of different ways,'' Cashman said.
Encarnacion switched from No. 10 with the Mariners to No. 30 with the Yankees, who retired No. 10 in honor of Hall of Fame shortstop Phil Rizzuto.
"It's very exciting to wear the uniform,'' Encarnacion said through a translator.
The three-time All-Star has 401 career home runs, making him the third player with at least 400 before joining the Bronx Bombers. Jose Canseco had 440 when he arrived in 2000, and Andruw Jones had 407 when he was obtained in 2011.
"We've seen what he's done to us over the course of time,'' Cashman said about Encarnacion. "He's a very patient, powerful, impact bat. His makeup is off the chart, and he's very well-liked by his teammates.''
As a visitor at the new Yankee Stadium, Encarnacion had 18 homers in 69 games.
"When you play here, every game is packed. So that's maybe why,'' he said.
Encarnacion began the night hitting .241 and was among the league leaders with 49 RBIs and 48 runs. He has averaged 37 homers and 109 RBIs in his past seven seasons and tops the majors with 322 long balls this decade.
He moved from Cleveland to Seattle last December in a three-team trade that included Tampa Bay. Cashman said the Yankees knew the Mariners would make Encarnacion available again, so they stayed in touch.
Seattle will send $8,397,849 to the Yankees as part of the trade, leaving them to pay $8 million of the remaining $16,397,849 guaranteed to Encarnacion at the time of the trade -- $11,397,849 of his $20 million salary this year plus a $5 million buyout of a $25 million club option for 2020.
New York sent 19-year-old minor league pitcher Juan Then to the Mariners.
The way the deal is structured, Encarnacion counts only $3 million toward the Yankees' luxury tax payroll this year and $5 million toward 2020.
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SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic -- Dominican authorities on Monday identified the man they believe paid hit men to try to kill David Ortiz, adding that they were closing in on the mastermind and motive behind the shooting of the famous slugger who is recovering at a hospital in Boston.
The man was identified as Alberto Miguel Rodriguez Mota, whom authorities say is a fugitive. The announcement was made as a judge held a hearing closed to the public for another suspect nicknamed "Bone." Officials did not release details, but according to court documents obtained by The Associated Press, the man, whose real name is Gabriel Alexander Perez Vizcaino, is accused of being the liaison between the alleged hit men and the person who paid them.
The documents state that a man who is in prison for an unrelated case reached out to Perez for the alleged job a week before the June 9 shooting at a bar in Santo Domingo and sent him a picture of the target so he could share it with the hit men.
Perez allegedly shared the picture with the other suspects as they gathered at a nearby gas station just minutes before the shooting. Officials have not said whether the picture was of Ortiz.
The documents also state that Perez sold a gold-colored iPhone 6 used to plan the attack to a woman for $180 so he could get rid of the evidence a day after the shooting. Authorities claimed the phone was giving him problems and that's why he sold it.
"He did this upon finding out that police were looking for him," the document states.
An attorney for Perez did not comment upon leaving the courtroom after the hearing as police whisked away the suspect, who was wearing a red T-shirt, a flak jacket and a helmet. He did not speak to reporters.
The 24-year-old suspect is one of 10 that authorities have detained, and they are looking for at least two others mentioned in the court documents, including the man accused of paying the alleged hit men.
Ortiz's attorney, Jose Martinez Hoepelman, said he was satisfied with how the investigation was going.
"Trust the authorities," he said. "They have worked tirelessly to obtain the results that we have so far. We all want more information, but we have to wait."
Police have said the coordinator of the attack was offered 400,000 Dominican pesos, or about $7,800, to orchestrate the shooting of Ortiz, known as Big Papi.
He led the Red Sox to three World Series championships, was a 10-time All-Star and hit 541 home runs.
Ortiz lives in Boston but visits the Dominican Republic several times a year.
Doctors removed his gallbladder and part of his intestines before he was flown to Boston, where he remains in intensive care at Massachusetts General Hospital.
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Real or not? The Braves are ready to run away with the NL East
Published in
Baseball
Monday, 17 June 2019 22:08

The Atlanta Braves pounded out 16 hits and three home runs in a 12-3 victory over the New York Mets on Monday, running their current hot streak to 10 wins in 11 games, a stretch that includes five one-run victories plus blowout wins of 14 runs, nine runs and twice by seven runs. It's a beautiful thing when your baseball team plays like this for an extended period.
I think this stretch of games -- with the caveat that seven of those 11 games came against the Marlins and Pirates -- has finally convinced me that the Braves are the team to beat in the NL East. They've gone from two games behind the Philadelphia Phillies to three games ahead, but those standings may not be an accurate indicator of how far apart the teams actually are.
We can look at the run differential and see the Braves are plus-48 and the Phillies are merely plus-6. But consider the following arguments and the advantages the Braves have over the Phillies:
The Braves' best players are better than the Phillies' best players
Ronald Acuna Jr. led off the bottom of the first inning Monday with a home run off Zack Wheeler, his 17th, and set the game into motion. He had three hits and Freddie Freeman added two. The Braves' offense is built around those two -- much like the Phillies are built around Rhys Hoskins and Bryce Harper.
-- Freeman (.313/.404/.592) versus Hoskins (.271/.395/.522)
It's close, but Freeman clearly rates the edge based on this season, last season and what to expect the rest of the way.
-- Acuna (.301/.380/.519) versus Harper (.247/.356/.464)
Acuna's recent hot streak has pushed his numbers well beyond Harper's. Maybe Harper will eventually go on a big run, but in the meantime he's on pace for 27 home runs and 208 strikeouts.
The Braves' rotation is better
Mike Soroka had another solid outing, improving to 8-1 with a 2.12 ERA. He's a master of pitch efficiency as he threw just 68 pitches in six innings. Phillies ace Aaron Nola got off to a horrendous start, but has been better of late. The season rotation numbers are actually pretty close:
Braves: 4.31 ERA, .325 wOBA allowed, 20.6% SO rate
Phillies: 4.43 ERA, .344 wOBA allowed, 21.2% SO rate
Once you adjust for parks, you can argue the Phillies have been a little better, even as they've struggled to fill the back end of the rotation. That's because Kevin Gausman (6.21 ERA) and Mike Foltynewicz (5.53 ERA) have struggled for Atlanta. But the Braves will soon add Dallas Keuchel to the rotation and Sean Newcomb is back as well (although he may miss his next start after getting hit in the head by a line drive). If Gausman and Foltynewicz can rediscover some semblance of their 2019 form, the Braves will be seven deep in starting pitcher options. The Phillies, meanwhile, will probably have to be active on the trade market. I'll take the Braves moving forward.
Defense
This is closer than I would have guessed:
Braves: plus-12 defensive runs saved
Phillies: minus-7 DRS
Acuna has been the Braves' best defender and he has held his own in center field in place of Gold Glover Ender Inciarte (who is out with a back injury and unlikely to start much when he does return given Austin Riley's production at the plate). They don't really have any major weaknesses other than Brian McCann's inability to throw out runners, and DRS has dinged two of their pitchers (Luke Jackson and Gausman) a total of seven runs for their defense, so they'd be plus-19 otherwise.
The Phillies are much improved from their train-wreck defense of 2018. J.T. Realmuto has been credited with plus-11 DRS, but their second-best defender had been Andrew McCutchen, who is out for the season. They've also received a lot of credit for good pitcher defense (four different pitchers are at plus-2 DRS). That may be a real thing or just a statistical fluke. Anyway, clear edge here to the Braves.
Injuries/depth
The Braves have been mostly healthy while the Phillies are without McCutchen and David Robertson. (Fellow relievers Seranthony Dominguez and Adam Morgan are also on the IL, creating some depth issues in the Phillies bullpen at the moment.) Jay Bruce has been hot since coming over from the Mariners, but the Braves boast maybe the best bench in the NL this side of the Dodgers with McCann, Charlie Culberson, Johan Camargo and Matt Joyce.
I didn't mentions bullpens. That is not a strength for either team -- the Phillies are 15th in the majors in bullpen win probability added and the Braves are 18th. That could end up being the Braves' fatal flaw, I suppose, but the rest of the team looks strong enough to overcome even a mediocre bullpen.
Are the Blue Jays even trying? This will seem like criticism of Edwin Jackson, but it's not. It's criticism of the Blue Jays for continuing to pitch Jackson, who has had a fine and lengthy career and is trying his best, but really shouldn't be in the major leagues.
Jackson was the Toronto's "bulk" guy in a 10-5 loss to the Angels, replacing opener Derek Law. He got two outs in the second inning as the Angels scored seven runs. Cavan Biggio misplayed a fly ball into a Mike Trout double, which didn't help, but Jackson also served up three home runs in the inning.
Jackson has now pitched 25⅓ innings, starting five games and pitching in bulk relief -- or what was supposed to be bulk relief -- three other times. He has given up 41 runs, 46 hits, 12 home runs and has a 12.43 ERA. I mean ... I feel bad for Jackson, who is taking the punishment for a team that isn't trying to win.
So ...
-- Jackson's 12.43 ERA would be the second-worst since 1900 (minimum 25 innings) after Stu Flythe's 13.04 mark for the 1936 A's.
-- He has allowed a .390 average. That would be tied for ninth-worst (minimum 25 innings) since World War II. Denny Stark allowed a .427 average for 2004 Rockies.
-- His rate of 4.30 home runs per nine innings would be the highest since at least World War II (minimum 25 innings). Shawn Kelley allowed 4.15 homers per nine in 2017 (12 HR in 26 IP).
Do better, Blue Jays.
Anyway, Justin Upton made his 2019 debut and homered off Jackson to lead off that second inning. Here's a Trout home run (off Nick Kingham, not Jackson) because it's a Mike Trout home run and he went 4-for-5 to raise his season line to .296/.461/.635:
Mike didn't want to be the only outfielder in the lineup to not go yard today. pic.twitter.com/daa5gcqvSd
— Los Angeles Angels (@Angels) June 18, 2019
Bunt of the day: Matt Carpenter beats the shift with a bunt single, err ... bunt double:
Matt Carpenter just bunted for a double... yes, you read that correctly! pic.twitter.com/mtJUNpG4ji
— St. Louis Cardinals (@Cardinals) June 18, 2019
Carpenter's bunt came with two outs, and he then scored on Starlin Castro's error. The Cardinals beat the Marlins 5-0.
Yes, we have some good pitching! After that ridiculous slugfest of a series in Colorado over the weekend, it was nice to see a few pitching gems on Monday. Two of those came in the AL East as Rick Porcello outdueled Jose Berrios in a 2-0 victory for the Red Sox and Masahiro Tanaka threw a complete game, two-hit shutout to beat the Rays 3-0. A few notes on those games:
-- The AL East became the first division with three 40-win teams.
-- Porcello has a 3.20 ERA over his past 10 starts after opening the season with a 5.52 ERA in his first six starts.
-- Berrios was nearly as brilliant for the Twins, allowing one run in eight innings with 10 K's, retiring 19 in a row at one point.
-- Tanaka became the first Yankee since Mike Mussina in 2002 to throw a shutout with two hits or fewer and 10 strikeouts. He has a 0.43 ERA in three starts against the Rays in 2019. Remember Tanaka's dominance against Tampa if the Yankees win the division by a game or two.
-- Tanaka's Game Score of 92 is tied for third-highest of 2019, behind German Marquez's 94 for the Rockies (a one-hit shutout with nine K's) and Chris Sale's 93 (three-hit shutout with 12 K's). Shane Bieber also had a 92.
The other gem came from Joey Lucchesi of the Padres, who allowed three hits in seven scoreless innings in a 2-0 win over the Brewers. Lucchesi, no doubt, knew he owed the baseball gods a good game after being the lucky guy from San Diego who didn't have to pitch in Colorado.
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Olympic marathon silver medallist tested positive for EPO
Eunice Jepkirui Kirwa has been banned for four years after testing positive for erythropoietin (EPO), the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU) has announced.
The 35-year-old, who was born in Kenya but competes for Bahrain, claimed Olympic marathon silver behind Kenya’s Jemima Sumgong at the Rio 2016 Games.
Sumgong is currently serving an eight-year ban of her own.
Kirwa’s period of ineligibility began on May 7 and she has been provisionally suspended since last month.
According to the AIU decision document, Kirwa underwent an out-of-competition doping control in Kapsabet, Kenya, on April 1 and on May 7 the WADA accredited laboratory in Seibersdorf reported an Adverse Analytical Finding (AAF) for the presence of recombinant EPO in the sample.
“The athlete was requested to provide an explanation for the presence of EPO in the sample and was afforded the opportunity to request analysis of the B Sample,” adds the decision document in part.
“On 13 May 2019, the athlete provided her explanation for the AAF in which she stated that she did not dope intentionally. She could only assume that the EPO entered her body through contamination during a caudal epidural injection she received on 29 March 2019. The Athlete did not request analysis of the B sample.”
Kirwa can appeal her ban at the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
The full Athletics Integrity Unit decision document can be found here.
News of Kirwa’s ban comes the week after the AIU announced that her brother, Felix Kirwa, had been banned for nine months from February 14 after strychnine was found in a sample given by the athlete after the Standard Chartered Singapore Marathon.
The AIU decision document for that case states that: “Following consultation with a scientific expert, the AIU is satisfied that the presence of strychnine in the sample is consistent with the athlete’s ingestion of the herbal medicine products ‘Arthritis Care’ and ‘Goodcare Arthplus’” which he was using to treat arthritis prior to the event.
The document adds: “The AIU is satisfied based on the athlete’s explanation and supporting medical evidence that the athlete used the herbal medicine products for therapeutic reasons.”
The full Athletics Integrity Unit decision document can be found here.
Felix Kirwa can also appeal his ban at the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
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Aussie brothers Nicholas and Thomas Calvert in action against The Philippines
Pilley and Cuskelly lead home charge
By HOWARD HARDING – Squash Mad International Correspondent
Hosts Australia made a perfect start to the WSF World Doubles Squash Championships at the Carrara Squash Centre on the Gold Coast, going through day one of the event undefeated.
Defending men’s doubles champions Cameron Pilley and Ryan Cuskelly from New South Wales, fresh from their exhibition tour around the east coast, were tested against South African pair Jean-Pierre Brits and Christo Potgieter. The Australian pair cruised through the opening game before a change of tactics from Brits and Potgieter saw them level the match. In the third, the Australian duo were too strong, winning 11-5.
Brothers Nicholas and Thomas Calvert, both making their Australian senior debut, defeated the Philippines pairing of Robert Garcia and David Pelino 11-9, 11-5. The Queenslanders won a marathon first game that took 27 minutes, before cruising through the second game to take the match.
In Pool B, Rex Hedrick and Commonwealth Games gold medallist Zac Alexander were too strong for Malaysia’s Darren Chan and Bryan Lim Tze Kang, with the Australian second seeds winning 11-7, 11-9.
The Colombian pairing of Andrés Herrera and Juan Camilo Vargas also are undefeated after day one, proving too strong for Sri Lanka’s top pair of Ravindu Laksiri and Shamil Wakeel 11-5, 11-7.
Christine Nunn and Donna Lobban (left) and in action for Australia
In the women’s event, Australian top seeds Donna Lobban and Christine Nunn (pictured above) cruised past Colombian sisters Laura and Maria Tovar 11-8, 11-5. It was a tougher test for the Australian second seeds, Sarah Cardwell and Jessica Turnbull, who were stretched by Jemyca Aribado and Aysah Dalida of the Philippines. The Australian pairing, with Turnbull making her national senior debut, took the match 11-8, 11-9.
Pilley and Lobban are again together in the mixed doubles competition, with the cousins from Yamba looking to add another gold medal to their mixed doubles success at the 2018 Commonwealth Games. The top seeds didn’t have it all their own way in their opening match though, with Aribado and Garcia (Philippines) proving tough opponents. The Australians took the first game 11-5, before coming from behind to claim the second 11-9.
Colombia’s Catalina Pelaez and Matias Knudsen thrashed the Maltese sibling pairing of Colette and Kijan Sultana 11-1, 11-2. The 17-year-old South Australian Alex Haydon was also a first day winner, joining with Alexander (who backed up immediately after his men’s doubles match) to defeat Aysah Dalida and Reymark Begornia (all pictured below) of the Philippines 11-6, 11-9.
Zac Alexander (about to strike) and Alex Hayden in action
WSF World Doubles Squash Championships, Gold Coast, Australia..
1st Pool round:
Men’s Pool A:
[1] Ryan Cuskelly & Cameron Pilley (AUS) bt [5] Jean-Pierre Brits & Christo Potgieter (RSA) 11-3, 7-11, 11-5
[4] Nicholas Calvert & Thomas Calvert (AUS) bt [9] Robert Garcia & David Pelino (PHI) 11-9, 11-5
Pool B:
[2] Zac Alexander & Rex Hedrick (AUS) bt [6] Darren Chan & Bryan Lim Tze Kang (MAS) 11-7, 11-9
[3] Andrés Herrera & Juan Camilo Vargas (COL) bt [10] Ravindu Laksiri & Shamil Wakeel (SRI) 11-5, 11-7
Women’s Pool:
[1] Donna Lobban & Christine Nunn (AUS) bt [3] Laura Tovar & Maria Tovar (COL) 11-8, 11-5
[2] Sarah Cardwell & Jessica Turnbull (AUS) bt [5] Jemyca Aribado & Aysah Dalida (PHI) 11-8, 11-9
Mixed Pool A:
[1] Donna Lobban & Cameron Pilley (AUS) bt [5] Jemyca Aribado & Robert Garcia (PHI) 11-5, 11-9
Pool B:
[2] Catalina Pelaez & Matias Knudsen (COL) bt [6] Colette Sultana & Kijan Sultana (MLT) 11-1, 11-2
[3] Alex Haydon & Zac Alexander (AUS) bt [7] Aysah Dalida & Reymark Begornia (PHI) 11-6, 11-9
Pictures courtesy of CRAIG STEWART (Brisbane Sports Photography)
Posted on June 17, 2019
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When Justin Suh was a freshman in high school, he bent the shaft of his putter before a Northern California Golf Association junior tournament. He went in the pro shop, grabbed a $50 Nike Method mallet putter off the rack and went back out to the practice green.
“I rolled in every putt,” Suh said. “I was like, ‘Dad, I need this.’”
Suh shot 64 the next day and the rest is history. Suh used the trusty putter to finish off a junior career that included an NCGA-record 11 wins, five more than Bryson DeChambeau. He got Nike to send him the same model, only with his initials on it, and retired the original. As a standout at USC, Suh won eight times and was twice a first-team All-American while reaching No. 1 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking last summer.
(Suh also bought a third Method putter on eBay a few years ago after Nike exited the equipment business.)
“That putter is something I feel extremely comfortable with,” Suh said.
When Suh turned pro after last month’s NCAA Championship and teed it up in the Memorial Tournament, the flatstick remained in the bag. So did Suh’s other 13 clubs.
While Suh signed a head-to-toe apparel and bag deal with Puma and a contract with Titleist to continue playing the Pro V1x ball, he decided to hold off on an equipment agreement and continue using his all-Ping setup that he’s used for three years.
It’s a rare move during a time where the top amateurs are chasing six-figure paydays from equipment companies.
“What I have in the bag is something that I’ve had success with for years, and when I tee it up at a tournament, that’s something that I want in my hands,” Suh said. “I don’t want to look down and look at something completely new. I’m a big believer that the success on the golf course is ultimately going to determine the success you have off the golf course.”
Suh missed the cut at Muirfield Village thanks to an uncharacteristically poor two days on the greens. USC head coach Chris Zambri calls Suh “the best putter from outside of 30 feet I’ve ever seen.” Suh is also an elite driver of the golf ball, possessing above-average accuracy that allows him to hit driver often. (He won last year’s Northeast Amateur on a tight Wannamoisett layout after hitting the fairway on every hole he pulled driver on in the final round.)
“And I don’t hit it short, either,” Suh said.
The 22-year-old Suh is just one of several elite amateurs turning pro this summer. Cal standout Collin Morikawa made his pro debut at the RBC Canadian Open and tied for 14th. Oklahoma State teammates Matthew Wolff and Viktor Hovland, who was low amateur at the U.S. Open, will each make their first starts as professional at this week’s Travelers Championship.
Suh will join all three at TPC River Highlands and already has sponsor exemptions lined up for next week’s Rocket Mortgage Classic, John Deere Classic and Barracuda Championship. Suh’s agent, Peter Webb of p3SportsReps (whose clients include Suh’s friend and another former top-ranked amateur Maverick McNealy), said another invite is in the works, too, which would give Suh the maximum seven that are allowed per season.
Of course, Suh would love to earn special temporary status and unlimited sponsor exemptions this summer, or better yet lock up his PGA Tour card for next season. He’ll have the right tools, at least, including his faithful flatstick.
“You have to play with the clubs that you feel the most comfortable with,” Suh said. “For me, it’s difficult for me to see something new in the bag and feel confident that I’m going to go into the next week with the amount of comfort needed to play my best.”
Suh will work with Cobra later this year on finding comfort with a new set of clubs. But for now, he’s sticking with the sticks that work.
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Barcelona are seriously looking into bringing Neymar back to Camp Nou next season, with a high ranking source at the Catalan club telling ESPN FC a transfer "could be doable, but it won't be simple."
Barca, though, are aware that negotiating with Paris Saint-Germain is not like negotiating with other clubs, given the huge economic backing the Ligue 1 champions enjoy from their Qatari owners.
"If it wasn't for that, signing Neymar would be even simpler," the source said.
The source at the Spanish champions also stated that "there has been no direct contact with Neymar's people" but added that "once Neymar makes it known he wants to return to Barca, anything is possible."
Neymar joined PSG from Barca in the summer of 2017 for €222 million, making him the world's most expensive player.
One of the main reasons Barca are now contemplating re-signing him is because of key players in the team's desire to have him back in the dressing room, said the source.
The Brazil international remains good friends with Lionel Messi and Luis Suarez, in particular. Messi recently explained that the trio still speak regularly in a WhatsApp group called "The Three South Americans."
But relations between Barcelona and PSG have been non-existent for a while. The Blaugrana have unsuccessfully tried to sign Thiago Silva, Marquinhos and Marco Verratti from them in the past and in January beat them to the signing of Frenkie de Jong when PSG thought they had the Dutch midfielder tied up.
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Therefore, Barca have to approach the situation cautiously and also must have Neymar on board to be able to bring him back.
France Football reported last week that PSG would be willing to listen to offers, while Globoesporte in Brazil indicated on Monday that Barca president Josep Maria Bartomeu has already contacted Neymar, his father and the intermediaries in charge of negotiating the player's future.
According to Globoesporte, Barca could even include players in any potential deal. Ivan Rakitic, Ousmane Dembele and Samuel Umtiti were all mentioned in the report. Rakitic came close to joining PSG last summer.
PSG owner Nasser Al-Khelaifi has hinted that Neymar could be allowed to leave in the current transfer window. He told France Football this week that the club will no longer tolerate superstar attitudes from their biggest players and warned Neymar he only wants players who are "willing to give everything for the shirt."
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ARLINGTON, Texas -- The Texas Rangers are juggling their banged-up outfielders, with Hunter Pence the latest to go on the injured list.
Pence was placed on the 10-day injured list Monday, a day after he sustained a right groin strain in a loss at Cincinnati.
While Pence joined slugging outfielder Joey Gallo on the injured list, the Rangers activated outfielder Willie Calhoun from the list. Calhoun played in the series opener against Cleveland for his first action since a left quad strain May 21.
Gallo has been out since June 2 with a left oblique strain. The Rangers home run leader, with 17, worked out in Texas after a scheduled flight to Arizona was cancelled. He is scheduled to the team's spring training complex in Arizona on Tuesday to continue his rehab.
Pence got hurt Sunday when playing right field in place of Nomar Mazara, who was out of the lineup for the second game in a row Monday because of right hamstring tightness.
The 36-year-old Pence has had quite a comeback season in his debut with his hometown Rangers, hitting .294 in 55 games. He has 15 homers and a team-leading 48 RBIs, including a two-run homer Sunday before getting hurt.
Both Pence and Mazara had MRIs on Monday.
Manager Chris Woodward said Mazara has a mild strain that he could play through, but the team wanted to give him another day to get treatment. Mazara is expected to be the designated hitter on Tuesday, though Woodward said there was also the possibility he could go back into the outfield.
Calhoun, who hit safely in five of his six games for Texas before getting hurt, played left field for the series opener against the Indians. Utility player Danny Santana made his 14th outfield start, only his second in right field.
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