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Manchester United start their Premier League season against Chelsea following the full release of the fixture list for the 2019-20 season.
- Full Premier League fixture list | Club-by-club schedule
- Man City vs. Liverpool: When is the Community Shield?
- Who qualifies for Europe from the Premier League?
United ended last term sixth in a turbulent season that included Jose Mourinho's sacking in December. Successor Ole Gunnar Solskjaer starts his first full season in charge with a home clash against the Europa League winners, who are likely to have a new manager with Maurizio Sarri expected to leave the club this summer. Solskjaer has a testing January with trips to Arsenal and Liverpool, while United will be away from home following their first three Europa League group stage fixtures.
Manchester City begin their title defence away at West Ham while nearest challengers Liverpool kick off the first game of 2019-20 on Friday, Aug. 9 at home to promoted Norwich. Klopp's Champions League winners face a testing run-in, with a trip to Arsenal and a home match against Chelsea in May before ending the season away at Rafael Benitez's Newcastle.
Pep Guardiola's City claimed a second successive Premier League title last term and ended on 98 points, one clear of Jurgen Klopp's men. The champions' first home game of the new campaign is against Tottenham, while the first meeting between last season's top two comes in early November at Anfield, with the return match at the Etihad set for April. The first Manchester derby of the season comes in the first week of December at City, while United host the champions in the first week of March.
Arsenal kick off their campaign away at Newcastle while Champions League runners-up Tottenham host promoted Aston Villa on the opening weekend.
As well as United vs. Chelsea and City vs. Tottenham in August, there's the first north London derby of the campaign as well, and Unai Emery's men also travel to Anfield to face the Champions League winners in the opening weeks of the season.
Key fixtures
Aug. 11: Manchester United vs. Chelsea
Aug. 17: Manchester City vs. Tottenham
Aug. 24: Liverpool vs. Arsenal
Aug. 31: Arsenal vs. Tottenham
Sept. 28: Manchester United vs. Arsenal
Oct. 19: Manchester United vs. Liverpool
Nov. 9: Liverpool vs. Manchester City
Nov. 23: Manchester City vs. Chelsea
Dec. 4: Liverpool vs. Everton
Dec. 7: Manchester City vs. Manchester United
Dec. 14: Arsenal vs. Manchester City
Dec. 28: Arsenal vs. Chelsea
Jan. 1: Arsenal vs. Manchester United
Jan 18: Liverpool vs. Manchester United
Jan 22: Chelsea vs. Arsenal
Feb. 1: Tottenham vs. Manchester City
Feb. 8: Chelsea vs. Manchester United
Feb. 29: Manchester City vs. Arsenal
Mar. 7: Manchester United vs. Manchester City
Mar 14: Everton vs. Liverpool
Mar. 21: Chelsea vs. Manchester City
April 4: Manchester City vs. Liverpool
April 25: Tottenham vs. Arsenal
May 2: Arsenal vs. Liverpool
May 9: Liverpool vs. Chelsea
Fixtures are provisional and subject to change following television scheduling.
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U.S. manager Gregg Berhalter Q&A: Pulisic's best position, beating Mexico in the Gold Cup and moving on from World Cup failure
Published in
Soccer
Tuesday, 11 June 2019 16:28

CINCINNATI, Ohio -- It's the day before the U.S. men's national team is set to play Venezuela and Gregg Berhalter eases into a chair in the lobby of the team's hotel. The mood is light: the players' families have accompanied the team to get some quality time in before the start of the Gold Cup. Kids are running around and the squad is grateful for the time spent.
Little do Berhalter and the players know that in less than 24 hours the U.S. will be blown out by La Vinotinto 3-0, a massive wakeup call coming on the heels of a 1-0 defeat to Jamaica four days earlier. But in this moment, Berhalter is feeling optimistic about where things stand and is more than willing to explain his thinking on all manner of things from his team's preparations, how he's striking a balance between the present and 2022, the roles for Christian Pulisic, Tyler Adams and Michael Bradley and what he thinks of his compliment of center-backs.
(Editor's Note: This interview has been edited for brevity and clarity. It was also conducted before RB Leipzig midfielder Adams withdrew from the Gold Cup squad to rehab a persistent groin injury.)
ESPN: When we spoke in January, you talked about the 10 areas of the game: offensive and defensive transition, offensive and defensive set pieces, high-press defending, middle block defending, low block defender, building from the goalkeeper, building out of midfield and finishing. Where do you think your team stands in each of those areas? What are you pleased with and what areas do you need to make the most progress?
Gregg Berhalter: It's been interesting because I think the different games with different opponents have revealed different things about us.
When I look at Ecuador, we struggled breaking down a low defense. So we need to work on that. Then Chile comes and they're high-pressing us and we struggled there, so we need to work on that. What I'd say is we have a foundation for all of these phases right now and we need to continue to build on that, so that were really confident in all phases of the game so we can adapt.
When you think about the different personnel in each game, we've had our full group, I would say, maybe for one game: the Ecuador game. Weston [McKennie] got injured against Ecuador. Christian [Pulisic] played 30 minutes against Chile. We mixed guys up. We haven't had the entire group together long. Them being around, talking to them, I think we've made progress in a lot of areas.
- When is the CONCACAF Gold Cup?
- Full Gold Cup fixtures schedule
When I look at our defensive "low-block" shape, our "mid-block" shape, we don't give up very many chances at all in these games, which I'm very pleased with. Our high pressure could be better and more coordinated. That's something you see when you don't work with a team for a long time. [Our] High pressure isn't as good as it should be. And then in defensive transition we've been very good. In offensive transition, that's something we can be better in as well.
ESPN: Is improving in those areas going to be an ongoing process throughout this cycle?
GB: I think you just need the foundation. You need to keep building on the foundation that we can understand what we're doing in any given moment in the game. The opponent does this? Okay, we do that. You look at Chile, I think that's a good example of a team that can adapt during the game. It's no problem for them. If we pressed with three players, they would build [attacks] with four; if we pressed with two, they would build with three. During the game, they would change on the fly.
When we changed to five in the back, they changed their pressure right away. It was really nice. But then I think, this is a team that has won two Copa Americas together. The majority of those players have been playing together for over eight years. That's what you get when you have a team like that -- they become intuitive. We just need to keep building on the concepts and the variations. That's why against Jamaica, it was very important to play that formation [with three in the back] and for the guys to see, okay, thay's how it should be functioning. And for us as coaches, just to realize these are the potential weaknesses of this system. So if we play against an opponent that plays like this, we shouldn't use that. But if they play like this, we could use it.
[The Jamaica game] gave us material, and that's what we're looking for right now.
ESPN: How are you trying to strike a balance between the present and the future in terms of personnel, tactics, what you're teaching the guys.
GB: I think that in terms of personnel, it's important to have guys who have been around the national team. I think that's important to guide some of the younger players. We do have some young players that haven't been around the national team for a long time but part of it in our head is projecting out to 2022. Can they be available for 2022?
What we don't want is to have too many players that we don't think will be around in 2022. That's what we're aware of. That's on our mind. For the Gold Cup roster, it was just thinking about that. How many do we have that have no chance of being there in 2022? That number we want to keep small.
ESPN: But there are some guys here who won't be around in 2022?
GB: Potentially there are some guys who won't, yeah.
ESPN: To what extent does the previous cycle, with the U.S. failing to reach the 2018 World Cup, hang over the program at all? I know you weren't there and I know you had nothing to do with it. But is there even an emotional component that is hanging over the guys at all?
GB: No.
ESPN: So is it a clean slate and you guys are just completely looking forward?
GB: Yeah. I think what you have is a new opportunity. I think the guys understand that listen: this is a new coach and it's a new opportunity for us to go in the direction that we want to go. I think that I don't see guys looking back in the past. One thing I will say is we're comfortable with what happened in the past. We're comfortable with making the World Cup in 1990, 1994, 1998, 2002, 2006, 2010, 2014. That's great history. That's our past also.
I think when people talk about the past, they get hung up with 2018. It was a moment for us that wasn't great, but it was also a moment for us to learn. I think that's part of us, just as much as all those great triumphs are part of us also. All the times we went to the World Cup, and made the quarterfinals and went to the second around in the Group of Death in Brazil. That's all part of who we are as a nation. It's important to embrace that. But if you're talking specifically about 2017 and not qualifying, guys are ready to turn the page on that.
ESPN: You've been in charge for six or seven months. Is there anything that has been unexpected, that you've been made aware of? Is there anything in the job that you didn't anticipate?
GB: I think when you come from club soccer to the national team, you have to get used to not being on the field every day. That's one thing. But it's been a great opportunity to learn and reach out to other clubs and visit other clubs and get to see how teams are working. I've enjoyed that. Then it's just finding the balance of when you're assembling the roster, where guys are at and what the needs of the clubs are versus the national team, and that's always going to be a balance. That's always a challenge and I think every national team coach faces that same challenge.
ESPN: Why do you think Tyler Adams is best suited to this hybrid right-back/center-mid role, and how likely are we to see him remain in that role going forward? (Note: Adams is now out of the Gold Cup due to injury.)
GB: I think that Tyler is an extremely gifted soccer player. I think he has huge, huge potential. We want to put him in a position to succeed. When I think about a guy that is a big part of what we're trying to do, he's one of those guys. For us it's figuring out, if he's going to play there, how can we still utilize his skill set? And his skill set, to me, is more central than it is wide. To me this is a way to bring out his skills, get him on the field and help contribute to the overall success of the team.
ESPN: How much of a balancing act is there between the system and the personnel you have? When you look at the player pool, are you plugging guys into the system or would there ever come a time when you say, "I don't know that the system is working, maybe we need to try something else?"
GB: I guess our process is working with the players, seeing their strengths and adapting to it. We just haven't had time to adapt to it. So getting to know the players, getting to work with the players.
Christian [Pulisic] is a great example. People are asking, "is he going to be wide? Is he going to be central?" My idea is that he'll play central but move wide sometimes. We want him in between the lines, being able to attack players, go at players, and then help other people get goalscoring opportunities. We think he can do it from a central position better. But that may not be the case when we actually see him.
We know he has one-on-one ability out wide, so that's in the back of our minds already. Now it's just gathering information and saying, "Let's work with these guys. Let's see exactly everything they have. Let them form us a little bit." The product of that I think will be much better.
ESPN: So how many different tactical layers do you have to this? Will there be an end point?
GB: I hope not. Seriously. That's the fun part of the game, creating a team that can adapt. That's what we want to do, and it's difficult. With the national team you might even say it's impossible.
I can see that side of it, where it would be challenging because you don't have them every day. But the idea is that you have great and smart players, and they can adapt to what you're asking them to do based on our identity. Our identity is the same. We want to use the ball to disorganize the opponent and create goalscoring opportunities. That's fine. That's there, but we can have different ways to do it. That's what I'm interested in. That's why a game like Jamaica to me was great because we learned a lot.
We had this hypothesis that we could play with wing-backs, treat them like wingers, and they're still going to be able to get behind the back line. We just found we couldn't do it enough. They were too far from goal. You look at a couple of crosses, Antonee [Robinson] is outside the penalty box. And we need our wingers inside the penalty box. Then we can point to, okay, was it because we weren't fit because he hasn't played since May 5? Or is it because he's coming from too deep a position?
We're analyzing all these things and trying to get answers. That's why to me, it was a great exercise to get answers and start trying to figure out how this can work here, but it won't work in this situation.
1:45
Berhalter defends Josh Sargent's Gold Cup exclusion
USMNT coach Gregg Berhalter explains why Josh Sargent didn't make the Gold Cup roster and why he wasn't selected for the FIFA U20 World Cup instead.
ESPN: What will constitute success at this Gold Cup? Is it win or bust, or is it more about players getting knowledge about your style and your tactics?
GB: It's about competing. It's about our tactics, the way we play. It's about going through this process and learning together because tournaments are a learning process for a group. So it's about those three things. Then to me, it's ultimately about putting ourselves in a position to win.
We know Mexico is a very good team, probably the favorites of the tournament. We know that's a good team. We know that Panama has an experienced team. We know it's not going to be easy, but it's going to be good for this group to dig and have to compete for something.
ESPN: What do you see in Michael Bradley in terms of his role going forward?
GB: Michael is one of our best players. He's just such a smart soccer player, he's technically very good, he reads the game very well, he can make passes. He's an excellent, excellent player. What I would say about Michael, and this is the conversation I had with him, is that he's a guy you don't have to make any promises to regarding what the future holds. He's enjoying his moment when he's here.
ESPN: How do you see your center-backs shaking out? You've got Matt Miazga and Aaron Long, you've got Omar Gonzalez still in the mix, as well as Walker Zimmerman. How are you looking at that competition?
GB: John Brooks is injured. Brooks is a very good center-back: a top center-back, I think. When you talk about Matt and Walker, [they're our] younger center-backs. Aaron is a little bit older, but less experienced. You have Omar with more experience. We think it's a rounded group for this particular tournament.
Cameron Carter-Vickers is another guy who was in consideration and in the end, we went with the experience of Omar over that. I think it's a good group. In Walker you have a guy who is playing for LAFC and doing a great job: he's very dangerous on attacking set pieces. When you look at Aaron, you've got speed, someone who is very good in defensive transition. Miazga is a combination of both of them a little bit.
With Omar, you have the veteran experience. If you need to put him in difficult games, it's no problem for him. He's played in games like that before. He's won championships in MLS and Mexico. He's a great culture guy.
ESPN: It seems like the USMNT program has more guys in Europe now than maybe it did than at any time in the last few years. What do you make of that development as well as what MLS is doing in terms of developing players?
GB: I think it's a credit to MLS. It's a credit to our youth academies. It's a credit to the Development Academy because now you have young talents that are being scouted and I've always said, everyone has their own pathway. For one guy it may be going through the academy system, playing in MLS, and then progressing over to Europe. For another it may be going from the Development Academy straight to Europe and then going to the pro ranks there. Another guy may be playing in MLS a long time.
1:45
Berhalter defends Josh Sargent's Gold Cup exclusion
USMNT coach Gregg Berhalter explains why Josh Sargent didn't make the Gold Cup roster and why he wasn't selected for the FIFA U20 World Cup instead.
ESPN: Having played in Europe, to what extent is the culture over there more cutthroat than it is over here?
GB: It's not the same but I think you just have leagues that are more established. That's what it is. There are leagues where you don't have a salary cap, so money is driving most of this. When you're talking about cutthroat, when you're talking about pressure, what's it driven by? Money. That's all it's driven by. So when there's big TV contracts and to win the Champions League you get "X" amount, and if you get relegated you lose "X" amount. That's where some of this comes into play.
I think MLS has done a great job of growing and improving the quality of its league. But we're still not where the Premier League is or the Bundesliga is and that's normal. But what we've done over the last five years alone is amazing.
ESPN: How so?
GB: Think of the players we've sold in the past five years. Think of the young talents we've attracted to this league in the last five years. Think of the quality of players we have. My last year in the league, 2011, think of the strikers in the league at the time. Now look at the strikers in the league. It's a different level.
When you think about all the national team players we have, the younger talents we have, the transfer fees we're paying, but also the transfer fees that we're taking in is great. It was never like that.
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Premier League fixtures: Man United face tough run, Liverpool can win title
Published in
Soccer
Thursday, 13 June 2019 04:39

The countdown to the 2019-20 Premier League has now begun with the publication of the fixtures for the new season and it promises to be a box office start, with Manchester United hosting Chelsea at Old Trafford on the opening weekend.
There are a clutch of heavyweight clashes during the first month as Manchester City, on the back of last season's domestic treble, begin their bid to win a third successive Premier League title with an away game at West Ham on Aug. 10.
- Premier League fixtures 2019-20 in full
- Who has qualified for Europe from the Premier League?
- Man City vs. Liverpool: When is the Community Shield?
- Liverpool vs. Chelsea: When is the UEFA Super Cup?
Champions League winners Liverpool, having gone so close to winning their first title since 1990 last term, feature in the curtain-raiser at home promoted Norwich City, and they will expect to run Pep Guardiola's team close.
So who has had the most favourable fixture list and which club is facing a nightmare start? Here is the rundown of the big games and the outlook for every Premier League team.
JUMP TO: Must-see matches | Club-by-Club guide
EASIEST START: Manchester City
Although City face a tough home game against Tottenham on Aug. 17, that is the only fixture during their opening six matches where they would be expected to face a true challenge for all three points. An opening day trip to West Ham, where City won 4-0 last season, is a comfortable start and Guardiola's men also play Bournemouth, Brighton, Norwich and Watford before travelling to Everton on matchday six. With most of their top-six rivals facing at least two rivals in the first six games, City have the chance to get off to a flyer, again.
TOUGHEST START: Manchester United
United's dismal end to last season, when they won just two of their last 12 games in all competitions, has put manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer under pressure before a ball has even been kicked. A start that sees them host Chelsea on the first weekend and then travel to Wolves, who beat United twice at Molineux last term, is a nightmare. Spurs, Chelsea and Arsenal also have it tough in the first six games, but no team needs to get out of the blocks quickly more than United and their schedule, which also includes trips to Southampton, Leicester and West Ham, offers no margin for error. United don't face a promoted team until they travel to Norwich on Oct. 26, so Solskjaer needs his players to hit the ground running.
FIVE MUST-SEE MATCHES
Aug. 11, Manchester United vs. Chelsea: A true heavyweight clash on matchday one, but it is a game that neither side can afford to lose due to the pressure on Solskjaer and the likelihood that it will also be the first game in charge for a new boss at Chelsea. It would be way too early to assess either side's credentials after just one game, but the reality is that both will be judged on what happens during this first 90 minutes, so it is crucial that they get off to a good start, but only one team can do that.
Oct. 19, Manchester United vs. Liverpool: Despite United's recent fall from grace, this remains the most historic fixture in English football and the men from Old Trafford will be desperate to show their ability to compete against the best by beating their bitter rivals, who will face United as European champions for the first time since 2005. United have a long way to go to close the gap on Liverpool, but this game will offer an early gauge of the progress under Ole Gunnar Solskjaer and also tell us whether Liverpool are capable of winning the title.
Nov. 9, Liverpool vs. Manchester City: The European champions against the domestic treble winners and reigning Premier League champions: this game doesn't need any build-up or hype because it is unquestionably the one which will set the tone of the title race. The first encounter between Liverpool and City will be crucial and give an indication as to which club is most likely to win the title. The rest may believe they can compete, but last season's top two are the clear favourites to contest this year's race too.
April 4, Manchester City v Liverpool: Over the past two seasons, City and Liverpool have got their head-to-head fixtures out of the way by mid-January, but this time around, they will meet for the second time just as the title run-in begins to shape up. If the title race is close by the beginning of April, this game at the Etihad could tilt the title race in the favour of the winners, with both sides having just six league games to play after this colossal encounter.
April 25, Tottenham v Arsenal: Barring an encounter in the cup competitions, this will be the first North London derby to be staged at Tottenham's new stadium, so the game will have plenty of significance, regardless of where the teams sit in the league table. But with the clash being pencilled in at such a late stage of the season, the game could turn out to be decisive in the race for Champions League qualification.
CLUB-BY-CLUB
ARSENAL | Predicted finish: 5th
Games against Liverpool and Spurs in August ensure Arsenal face a tough start to the season and they meet the same two sides during the final four games in a tricky run-in. Arsenal must also navigate the Europa League next term, so it is tough for Unai Emery to break back into the top four.
ASTON VILLA | Predicted finish: 16th
Promoted Villa start away at Spurs, but after that they have a relatively comfortable start that could help build confidence and momentum back in the top flight. It won't be easy, but Villa should have enough to stay up.
BOURNEMOUTH | Predicted finish: 17th
Eddie Howe's side open up with games against promoted Sheffield United and Aston Villa, so they have to make a strong start. Bournemouth usually do enough to stay safe, but an alarming form slump last season suggests they face a tougher time this season.
BRIGHTON | Predicted finish: 18th
Graham Potter has been handed the task of steering Brighton away from the relegation battle that cost Chris Hughton his job at the end of last season, but the new manager has a fight on his hands, despite a soft start that sees the club open up against Watford, West Ham and Brighton.
BURNLEY | Predicted finish: 13th
Sean Dyche's men face Arsenal, Wolves and Liverpool in the first four games, but Burnley ended last season as one of the form teams in the Premier League and, without the drain of Europa League qualifiers this time around, a better start will tee up a season in mid-table.
CHELSEA | Predicted finish: 4th
The big question to be resolved is who will be the Chelsea manager next season. The club also have the issue of a two-window transfer embargo hanging over them, but even without the departed Eden Hazard, the shortcomings of Arsenal and Manchester United should ensure that Chelsea are favourites for a top-four finish.
CRYSTAL PALACE | Predicted finish: 15th
Palace have enough depth in their squad to be confident of avoiding a relegation battle, but clashes with Chelsea, Manchester United and Spurs during their final six games will be a concern if they are in the relegation mix.
EVERTON | Predicted finish: 8th
Marco Silva appeared to turn the tide at Everton in the final weeks of last season and offer optimism of a push for Europe this season. Leicester look their biggest rivals for seventh spot and their encounters on Nov. 30 and April 4 will be key.
LEICESTER CITY | Predicted finish: 7th
The opening day clash with Wolves at the King Power Stadium gives Brendan Rodgers' team the chance to hammer out their credentials as the team most likely to finish seventh. Leicester could even threaten the top six, but being the best of the rest will be the initial objective.
LIVERPOOL | Predicted finish: 1st
Jurgen Klopp has now broken his trophy hoodoo at Anfield by winning the Champions League and all attention will turn to the Premier League title this term. It could all hinge on the two games against Manchester City, but now they have tasted silverware, Liverpool can end their 30-year title drought.
MANCHESTER CITY | Predicted finish: 2nd
City are formidable and could yet make it a hat trick of titles, but the club and Pep Guardiola desperately want Champions League glory and after falling short last season, it may be a case of City focusing on Europe, which will give Liverpool that chance to snatch their domestic crown.
MANCHESTER UNITED | Predicted finish: 6th
United are in a state of flux and need a big summer to snap out of their downward spiral. If that doesn't happen, sixth is the best they can hope for, but the big worry will be the likes of Leicester, Everton and Wolves snapping at their heels if they have another bad campaign.
NEWCASTLE UNITED | Predicted finish: 14th
As it stands, with Rafael Benitez at the helm and a proposed takeover underway, Newcastle should be able to go into the new season with optimism. But if Benitez leaves and / or the takeover fails to happen, Newcastle could be quickly dragged into a relegation scrap.
NORWICH CITY | Predicted finish: 19th
Every promoted team dreams of a soft start in order to get points on the board, but with fixtures against Liverpool, Chelsea and Manchester City in their first five games, Norwich face an uphill battle from day one. Tough to see Daniel Farke's team avoiding the drop.
SHEFFIELD UNITED | Predicted finish: 20th
Chris Wilder has worked a sporting miracle at Bramall Lane by guiding the Blades from League One to the Premier League, but even though they have a decent start and comfortable looking run-in, it will be an immense achievement if United avoid the drop.
SOUTHAMPTON | Predicted finish: 11th
Ralph Hasenhuttl made an impressive start to life at Southampton after replacing the sacked Mark Hughes in mid-season, and the Saints should be comfortable in mid-table this time around. Aside from games against Liverpool and Manchester United in their first six, Southampton have a good early schedule.
TOTTENHAM | Predicted finish: 3rd
Having left Wembley behind to move into their new stadium, Spurs should have no homesickness concerns this time around. They still lack the depth to push for the title, but they should be comfortable in third and could go higher if they invest well in the squad this summer.
WATFORD | Predicted finish: 12th
Can Watford recover from the psychological blow of losing 6-0 to Manchester City in the FA Cup final, and can they hold onto manager Javi Gracia? Two big questions that will define Watford's season, but in terms of their squad, they shouldn't fear a relegation battle.
WEST HAM | Predicted finish: 9th
Manuel Pellegrini has brought a rare sense of calm and stability to West Ham and the Chilean can build on that this season by making the team challengers for Europe. And a positive result, however unlikely, at home to Manchester City on day one would give the Hammers momentum.
WOLVES | Predicted finish: 10th
Wolves have big ambitions of Champions League football at Molineux, but with a Europa League campaign looming -- if they make it through three qualifying rounds -- they face a battle to repeat last season's seventh-place finish, especially with Leicester, Everton and West Ham on the rise.
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Thought I might never score hundred for Australia again, admits Warner
Published in
Cricket
Wednesday, 12 June 2019 13:36

That leap to celebrate an international hundred is back. That feeling David Warner at times felt he would never be able to enjoy again. And it is that fear that kept Warner going through the 14 months of international exile, as a result of his role in the Newlands ball-tampering controversy. If that fear pushed him to be back to the best batsman he could be, his wife Candice's support helped him come out of the initial trauma, admitted a relieved Warner afterwards.
"Yeah, definitely," Warner said when asked if he ever feared he might never get a chance to score a century for Australia again. "There was always that going through my mind. And I think that's what drove me to keep being as fit as I can, keep scoring as many runs as I can in the Twenty20 tournaments that I was playing in."
Before he could get back to scoring those T20 runs, he struggled to get out of the bed even. That's when Candice helped him. "The thing that kept me going was my wife and my kids," Warner said. "Got great support at home, my family. And my wife is just, she's just my rock. She's unbelievable. She's determined, disciplined, selfless.
ALSO READ: Warner finds old mindset to flick switch for Australia
"And I hold a lot of credit to her. She's a strong woman. And she got me out of bed a lot in those sort of first 12 weeks, and got me back running and training hard as I could, and prepared for the other formats of the game I was playing. So it was just to maintain my level of fitness and just hard work. And she really nailed that into me."
There was no point moping around. Warner had to enjoy the process of getting back. There was no other option, but he found it genuinely enjoyable. "Really enjoyed going out there. And we used Regulation balls [Kookaburra Regulation, which has a more pronounced seam than Kookaburra Turf, which is used in the first half of the Shield season] back in Sydney [grade cricket]. And that was a challenge in itself to get used to that. The different obscure fields that were being set because the wickets are a tad slower. I really enjoyed all that. It was really, really hard work.
Watch on Hotstar (India only) - Hotstar of the match
"And I think going through those tough times and sort of regrouping with myself to put myself in the best position to come back to international cricket, I did everything I could. I really, really knuckled down and trained my backside off.
"And I'm just grateful for this opportunity. I'm just really looking forward to what's coming ahead of us here in the World Cup. Pumped to be back, and the boys are on fire here. We've got a great group harmony, a lot of smiles on the faces as you can see in a lot of the training sessions and out in the field. So, look, I'm pumped."
Warner is pumped, and finally he has had a match in England where he was not booed. He has a message: the booing might only make him and Steven Smith more determined. "The boos, we don't really hear that when we're out there," Warner said. "At the end of the day we're out there to do a job. For me, it's just trying to score runs and have a lot of energy in the field. And, look, it's water off a duck's back. You get it all the time. I've heard it my whole career. Actually it eggs us on a lot and makes us knuckle down and try to score more runs if anything."
There is a difference between Smith and Warner, though. Warner has largely been seen as the corrupting influence. Warner has not had the amount of sympathy that has come Smith's way. Nor has he done any interviews to seek any.
"I was just focused ahead," Warner said. "That was my own thing. I was just focusing on playing the next game that I was playing in, training as hard as I could. I didn't need to say anything. What was said was said back in those press conferences. And now it's about looking forward."
And to be in the here and now is to enjoy the soreness from training hard to be fit enough to be part of the current Australia set-up. "Coming back, that soreness that you normally get, it was it put a smile on my face," Warner said. "I had a little bit of a strain on my glute. I think that was just purely based on getting back into it and sort of getting back in the mojo of things. And, look, it was just great to be back and part of the team."
More smiles will be on his face when partners of the players join the team in London on Thursday. The last time Warner had Candice over when playing for Australia was probably the most desperate time of his career. He was under the pump, she was mocked disgustingly by the crowds, and it all led to a bitter climax in Newlands. Warner is in a much better place, Australia are in a much better place, and he is looking forward to being with his family and enjoying the tour. That could hardly be said in South Africa.
Sidharth Monga is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo
© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.
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'We have a right to compete against the big teams' - Steve Rhodes
Published in
Cricket
Wednesday, 12 June 2019 23:25

A year on from joining as Bangladesh's head coach, Steve Rhodes has made quiet contributions to the team's progress. He has now overseen 15 wins in 25 ODIs, as well as a Test series win over West Indies. Now well into their World Cup campaign, Bangladesh are a team rated as one of the more dangerous sides in the tournament.
The BCB chose Rhodes after Paul Farbrace, Andy Flower, Tom Moody and a host of other coaches had said no to the Bangladesh job between November 2017 and May 2018. Rhodes had a tough mandate to not just follow up on Chandika Hathurusingha's success, but also to chaperone the side through a World Cup in his home country.
Bangladesh have made progress on the back of consistency from their top five players - Shakib Al Hasan, Mashrafe Mortaza, Tamim Iqbal, Mahmudullah and Mushfiqur Rahim - but in the World Cup's lead-up, the refreshing factor has been the performance of someone like Soumya Sarkar who has looked in good form.
Rhodes said that in the past 12 months, he has tried to give Bangladesh's newer crop of players like Soumya, who made his debut in 2014, more liberty, along with responsibilities so that they develop the strength of character to take decisions for themselves. He said that Soumya, Mehidy Hasan, Mustafizur Rahman and Mohammad Saifuddin had earned their places in the playing XI through not just performance, but improved consistency.
"It is my plan as a coach to try and give these guys some responsibilities on the field and in training," Rhodes told ESPNcricinfo. "So that they can make some decisions for themselves and grow and learn. It is a little bit different to the way it has been run, but I think that's the way we get the younger players performing. Everyone then says it is a better squad.
"Soumya is finding his feet. Liton [Das] is in good form, although he is not playing. Sabbir [Rahman] with that hundred in New Zealand, and [Mehidy Hasan] Miraz has been bowling in the last two or three years. Nobody mentions [Mustafizur Rahman] Fizz, and Saifuddin has come through. So I do think we are starting to get a little bit more depth."
Rhodes said that some of these players had improved enough to ensure that Bangladesh's squad has a bit more depth than before.
Their World Cup campaign so far has seen them beat South Africa, go close against New Zealand but then fizzle out against England. They would have also expected to beat Sri Lanka if not for the washout in Bristol, while they have beaten West Indies, their next opponent, quite regularly in the past 12 months. Rhodes said that Bangladesh should consider themselves as a major competitor against bigger teams.
"I think if you look at all the teams in this competition, we have a right to be on those fields competing against some of these big teams. But we are still well short of the depth and quality of some of these teams as well. But I'd say that we do have some wholehearted, trying cricketers. We also have some great ability. Shakib has been absolutely amazing. We are starting to get a little bit more depth in the players that, you might say, are less experienced."
At the time of Rhodes took over in June last year, Bangladesh were going through a bit of a confidence crisis, following heavy losses in South Africa and at home against Sri Lanka, as well as getting blanked by Afghanistan in a T20 series. The confidence, at least in ODIs, was regained when they beat West Indies 2-1 away, before getting one back at them in the Test series at home in November.
Rhodes was also expected to deal with BCB chief Nazmul Hassan regularly and quite directly, and so far those exchanges have hardly made the news - which is a good thing. There is however a lot left for Rhodes to do, when it comes to the Test side that was battered by New Zealand earlier this year, as well as a better plan for the T20 side.
Seen as a positive presence in the dressing room, Rhodes has understood how and where not to coach certain cricketers, and areas where he has to put his foot down. Albeit quietly.
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Joe Burns was due to be at New Road this week, helping Lancashire against Worcestershire in Division Two of the County Championship.
Instead he is home in Brisbane, resting, after it was revealed he had been diagnosed with post viral fatigue disorder following a virus in October last year.
It is not an illness that is widely understood but it is far from uncommon. Whilst it is believed Burns' diagnosis has been detected early and Queensland and Cricket Australia medical staff are expecting him to make a swift and strong recovery, the news made former Australia Under-19 captain and Western Australia batsman Rob Baker shudder.
"I get a sick feeling in my stomach," Baker told ESPNcricinfo.
Baker was a rising star among a golden generation of WA batsmen in the 1990s. He captained Australia's U-19s on a tour of India in 1994, leading a squad featuring Michael Hussey, Brett Lee, Jason Gillespie and Andrew Symonds, against an India line-up with VVS Laxman in their middle order.
Baker broke into the strong WA Sheffield Shield side and made 83 in the 1995-96 Shield final, where South Australia held on for a thrilling draw. In 1998-99 he made a century and three half-centuries in 13 innings, averaging a tick under 50, and played in WA's last Shield-winning final, against Queensland.
But just as his career was set to take off in 1999-2000 after a solid start to the season, he was struck down with illness ahead of a tour match against Pakistan.
"I just came down with this horrible virus that was just one of those ones where you're just hot and cold, sweating, I was really disoriented, it really messed with my balance and pretty much went to bed for a week and said I can't play this game," Baker recalled. "I gradually got a bit better, got a bit stronger, never felt quite right but after two weeks or so I thought, 'I need to get out there and train, they need me for the next Shield game'.
"Halfway through that next game I starting coming down with the same thing again and was just feeling absolutely rotten and it really spiraled from there.
"The doctors were not really knowing [what was wrong] and I was getting asked by the coach and the captain to get out there and play, which obviously I wanted to do as well, and I just kept pushing and pushing and pushing until…I was never right, my form suffered."
An on-field collision and a fractured cheekbone actually ended his season but Baker was eventually properly diagnosed with post viral or chronic fatigue syndrome. It is an umbrella term that is used to define ongoing, often debilitating, fatigue symptoms that can occur in the aftermath of a broad range of viral infections. It can manifest in many different forms but ongoing physical and mental fatigue, and never-ending hangover-type symptoms are the most common experiences, although a host of other issues, as Baker experienced, can occur in conjunction with that.
"I was vomiting before playing a local club match because my body was just freaking out, all stuff that would never have even bothered me the slightest in the past"
"For some people it literally can be some rest and looking after yourself and before you know you're back to yourself, like probably Simon Katich, who had a bit of the similar stuff about the same time that I ended up with my more serious version of it," Baker said. "[Katich] was able to recover after having a few months rest and being well managed and obviously went on and did great things.
"Obviously for myself, it was very, very confusing at the time, not really understanding what was going on. The doctors not properly understanding what was going on and being very headstrong. In your own mind thinking that you can keep pushing through it and it'll go away and you're far too mentally tough for something like this to knock you down only to be taught a pretty harsh lesson I guess.
"I think it's almost once your body reaches a point where it doesn't want to be pushed like that anymore it just goes into shut down and it's a very, very long journey back from then."
Baker only managed five Shield games in the 1999-2000 season while Katich played seven. Both men averaged below 30 and neither could bat long enough to make more than 80.
But while Katich made a full recovery, scoring six centuries and 1145 runs in the 2000-01 Shield season to get himself on the 2001 Ashes tour which began an impressive international career, Baker never played another Shield game, and he only managed a handful of List A matches, state 2nd XI games and some grade cricket thereafter.
"The WACA contracted me for the next year and they were supportive of me trying to work my way back in but obviously it reached a point where I needed to be out on the field and I was just never right," Baker said. "I just kept getting worse and worse and your body just starts to break down. I ended up with all sorts of dreadful digestive issues, central nervous system issues, anxiety. I was vomiting before playing a local club match because my body was just freaking out, all stuff that would never have even bothered me the slightest in the past.
"I knew I had to go away and get well and unfortunately that turned out to be a nearly decade-long journey from about my early to mid-20s to my early to mid-30s until I really got my genuine quality of life back."
Whilst Burns' issues are understood not to be close to Baker's extreme version of post viral fatigue syndrome, there are lessons to be learned with the illness.
"There wasn't any single one thing that helped me get better, it was a lot of gradual things along the way that helped me get back together," Baker said. "I obviously don't know exactly where Joe is at, how early they've caught it and how he's travelling right now but if he knows in his own head that he isn't genuinely improving and feeling stronger each day and was putting all sorts of pressure on himself to be ready for the Ashes - then absolutely my advice would be to stop.
"Just give yourself the time, even if it means missing this Ashes. That would be my advice. Life after cricket is long - okay you might miss the Ashes - but you can probably build your way back into the cricket side. But if you push yourself and completely break yourself you might not play much more cricket and you might be pretty crook for a long time."
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Sources: Pats file tampering charges vs. Texans
Published in
Breaking News
Wednesday, 12 June 2019 15:26

The New England Patriots filed tampering charges Wednesday against the Houston Texans for the attempted general manager hire of Nick Caserio, league sources told ESPN.
The league now is expected to gather relevant information to open its investigation against Houston, sources said.
Houston fired general manager Brian Gaine the night after New England's Super Bowl ring ceremony on June 6 at Robert Kraft's house. The Texans finished in first place in the AFC South with an 11-5 record last season.
Former Patriots team chaplain and current Texans executive vice president of team development Jack Easterby attended that party, as did Caserio, New England's director of player personnel since 2008. Easterby and Caserio are represented by the same agent, Bob LaMonte.
The Texans have requested permission to interview Caserio for their GM job but have not been granted permission to date, per sources.
The NFL's anti-tampering policy states, "Any interference by a member club with the employer-employee relationship of another club or any attempt by a club to impermissibly induce a person to seek employment with that club or with the NFL" is impermissible.
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Blues lean on 'cool customer' Binnington in G7 win
Published in
Breaking News
Wednesday, 12 June 2019 23:00

BOSTON -- Jordan Binnington stayed in his crease as wave after wave of celebratory St. Louis Blues players crashed onto him Wednesday night, their Stanley Cup party starting on the Boston Bruins' home ice. When the final buzzer sounded on the Blues' 4-1 victory in Game 7, the rookie goalie was engulfed by his teammates -- a fitting image, given that he was at the center of their victory, delivering the first Cup in franchise history to St. Louis.
"I'm so proud of this group, and I'm so excited to celebrate the city of St. Louis," Binnington said.
It was the end of one of the most unlikely journeys for both a team and its goaltender. The Blues were in last place in the NHL in early January. Binnington started the season as he had in every year of his pro career: in the minor leagues, with the San Antonio Rampage of the American Hockey League. He had been buried on the Blues' depth chart since being drafted No. 88 overall in 2011. But his confidence in his abilities never wavered.
His message after hoisting the Stanley Cup as a 25-year-old rookie couldn't have conveyed the emotions behind that wait any more starkly.
"Man. F--- everyone. You just got to believe in yourself and work hard and just keep believing," Binnington said as the Blues celebrated with the Cup. "I work pretty hard. Obviously, the group was incredible, we meshed well, and everyone was playing hard for each other, so I'm really happy with where I'm at right now."
Where Binnington was at the end of Game 7 was in rare company. His 32 saves was the most by a rookie goalie to clinch the Stanley Cup Final since the league began tracking shots in 1955. He joins a list that includes Ken Dryden, Patrick Roy and Cam Ward as rookie goalies who led their teams to the Stanley Cup.
Those four won the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP. Binnington watched teammate Ryan O'Reilly collect that award. But there was no question who the most valuable player in Game 7 was.
"I think Binner really set the tone for us early," St. Louis center Tyler Bozak said. "They came out really hard. They got a lot of good scoring chances. And he shut the door. He made incredible saves and gave us that confidence that he was dialed in, like he was all year."
No save was better, or will be better remembered, than his sprawling stop on Joakim Nordstrom with 11 minutes, 8 seconds left in the third period, not long before Brayden Schenn made it 3-0.
"That save that he made, early in the third? Oh, my God. Right after that, we scored our third goal," said Larry Robinson, the Blues' senior consultant to hockey operations. "You gotta have your goalie."
1:45
Binnington: I'm so excited to celebrate this with St. Louis
Blues rookie goaltender Jordan Binnington talks about capturing the Stanley Cup and how it feels to achieve this in his first season in the NHL.
The Blues also had him in Game 5, when Binnington made 38 saves to win in Boston and give them a chance to clinch in St. Louis. The Blues lost that game. But that's OK, because if there's one thing that has defined Jordan Binnington during this journey from the bottom of the depth chart to raising the Stanley Cup, it's winning after losing.
Binnington is now 14-2 after losses, including 8-2 in the Stanley Cup playoffs, with a 1.78 goals-against average and .936 save percentage in such situations.
He was everything the Blues needed to find their confidence and put away the Bruins.
"You could just see our bench getting motivated by it," St. Louis general manager Doug Armstrong said.
How did this rookie pull it off?
"His demeanor," Armstrong said. "Even now, in the celebration, it doesn't look like it's too much for him. He's just one cool customer."
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Raptors relishing opportunity: 'This is awesome'
Published in
Basketball
Wednesday, 12 June 2019 17:34

OAKLAND, Calif. -- The Toronto Raptors came about as close as a team can to winning an NBA title Monday night.
Up by six points with three minutes to go against the Golden State Warriors, and then having multiple chances to tie or win the game in the final minute, the Raptors came within a couple Draymond Green fingertips of a shot to win a championship at the buzzer of Game 5 of the NBA Finals at Scotiabank Arena.
But rather than being upset about the opportunity it let slip away, Toronto is instead excited to have two more cracks at winning this series -- beginning with Game 6 on Thursday night here at Oracle Arena.
"Did it hit me any harder? Not really," Raptors coach Nick Nurse said during his news conference before his team practiced Wednesday afternoon. "They all hit you hard. Listen, I'm like anybody that was there that understands the outcome of that one changes things a little bit.
"But I'll say this: I'm absolutely thrilled to be coaching in another Finals game. This is awesome, right? All these things when you look back on them, every single thing you do, if it doesn't turn out, you wish you would have called another play or had somebody else in or got somebody else a shot. ... I think if you remove that from it and you watch it, we ran a great play out of the timeout where [Marc] Gasol absolutely got clobbered for a no-call. Kyle [Lowry] had a wide-open 3 with a minute to go. We ran some nice stuff and got exactly what we wanted."
Even after letting Game 5 slip away, Toronto has a 3-2 series lead and still has to be considered the strong favorite to find a way to close these Finals out, beginning with the fact the Raptors can win either Thursday or in Game 7 back home Sunday night.
Beyond that, though, Golden State is riddled with injuries. Forward Kevin Durant underwent surgery Wednesday to repair his ruptured Achilles tendon. Center Kevon Looney is questionable after aggravating the chest injury he suffered in Game 2 in the second half of Game 5. Forward Andre Iguodala and swingman Klay Thompson are playing in the wake of leg injuries earlier in these playoffs and this series, respectively.
Still, Toronto knows it is facing the two-time defending champions, and injuries or not, the Warriors are going to need to be taken out of the series if they are going to lose. The Raptors know the title won't be handed to them.
"Just go out there and do our job," Raptors guard Lowry said. "We're a professional basketball team. We have been in the same situation. We have been the same team all year.
"We don't get too up. We don't get too down. We live in the moment. We understand that today is today and tomorrow will be another test of who our group will be on the road. We'll be against a team that will be ready to go, but we'll be ready to play too."
Oracle will undoubtedly be rocking Thursday night, as the Warriors try to keep their season -- and their chances for a three-peat -- alive with a win in what will be the final game the arena ever hosts. Next season, Golden State will be moving across the Bay and into the palace that will be the Chase Center in San Francisco.
Still, Toronto became the first team since the Seattle SuperSonics in 1995 to win three games here in a single season (regular and postseason) by sweeping Games 3 and 4, and will have a chance to go a perfect 4-0 in at Oracle this season with another victory Thursday.
All Toronto is focused on, however, is getting the final win it needs to secure the franchise's first NBA title, and the city's first championship since the Toronto Blue Jays won a second consecutive World Series 26 years ago.
"Get there when we get there," Lowry said. "Right now, we're just focusing on how we continue to get better. Tomorrow will be a tough task, and we'll be ready to go."
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