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The MLS Disciplinary Committee has handed D.C. United forward Wayne Rooney an additional one-game suspension.
The Washington Post was the first to report the news.
According to sources, Rooney had the option of appealing the decision, but declined to do so.
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Rooney was initially suspended after getting red-carded in DCU's 2-1 defeat to the New York Red Bulls on Aug. 21, when he appeared to land a forearm to the face of Red Bulls midfielder Cristian Casseres, Jr. He sat out last weekend's 3-1 defeat to the Philadelphia Union, and now he will miss this Saturday's match at the Montreal Impact.
After leading D.C. to the playoffs in his debut season in MLS, Rooney has found life more difficult in 2019. While he leads the team with 11 goals and seven assists, the club hasn't been able to build on last year's success. DCU are fifth in the Eastern Conference, five points ahead of eight-place Montreal. The top seven teams in each conference reach the postseason.
Rooney is already slated to depart D.C. United at the end of this campaign, when he will take on a player/assistant coach role at English second-tier side Derby County.
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Atlanta United wasted little time in taking control of the U.S. Open Cup final by securing two early goals Tuesday, while the defense did just enough in a 2-1 victory over visiting Minnesota United.
Atlanta United won despite playing the final 16-plus minutes down a man after defender Leandro Gonzalez Pirez was sent off because of a red card that followed two quick second-half yellow cards for dissent and unsporting behavior.
Atlanta United won its third trophy in the past nine months after winning last season's MLS Cup title and then taking the Campeones Cup earlier this month over Club America in a matchup of champions from MLS and Liga MX. The team also earned an automatic berth into next year's CONCACAF Champions League.
The U.S. Open Cup, which had its first edition in 1913-14, is a single-elimination tournament that was contested in 2019 among 84 teams from MLS, the second-tier USL and amateur sides throughout the country. It is the 20th consecutive year an MLS team has won the title.
The 35,709 in attendance at Atlanta's Mercedes-Benz Stadium was a record for a U.S. Open Cup final, and the fans were treated to a productive opening 16 minutes.
Atlanta United took a 1-0 lead in the 10th minute on a gift own goal when Gonzalez Pirez's cross from the right side deflected off the right foot of Minnesota United defender Chase Gasper and over the head of Minnesota United goalkeeper Vito Mannone.
In the 16th minute, Atlanta United increased its lead to 2-0 when Gonzalo "Pity" Martinez scored with his left foot from the left side of the penalty circle after a centering pass from Justin Meram.
With the Loons missing leading scorer Darwin Quintero, after head coach Adrian Heath left the inconsistent forward out of the game for all but the final 15 minutes, Minnesota United still managed to make a game of it 62 seconds into the second half. Robin Lod redirected a centering pass from Kevin Molino off the left post and into the goal past Atlanta United goalkeeper Brad Guzan.
Guzan made three saves in the victory, including a diving stop on a shot from Ike Opara in the first minute of second-half stoppage time. Minnesota United's Michael Boxall missed a point-blank shot over the top of the goal that would have tied the score just two minutes before the final whistle.
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How Arsenal's 'transfer guru' Raul Sanllehi orchestrated club's super summer after years of bad signings
Published in
Soccer
Tuesday, 27 August 2019 11:20

Raul Sanllehi lights up a cigar. It's the evening of Aug. 9. Arsenal's head of football has spent the whole day at the club's training ground in London Colney. He arrived extremely early on site and will almost certainly be one of the last one to leave.
Aug. 9 was, for those concerned, another successful day in Arsenal's transfer window. On deadline day, and right at the wire, the Gunners signed two more players who illustrate perfectly the talent of the man the club hope can be their long-term football mastermind.
The first one was a target for a long time. To recruit Celtic and Scotland left-back Kieran Tierney, Sanllehi and his team, consisting of chief negotiator Huss Fahmy and sporting director Edu, had to work really hard. It was a long courting process that lasted all summer, with multiple offers, a lot of conversations with Celtic and a lot of brainstorming to find the right way of convincing the Scottish giants to let their best player leave. With the window hours from closing, Arsenal finally made a breakthrough, emerging with a well-structured deal and the feeling of a job well done.
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By contrast, the second one was a short, well-drilled coup. Arsenal had been looking for a centre-back all summer. They secured the signing of French prodigy William Saliba but loaned him back to Saint-Etienne. They pursued various options, some more intensely (Dayot Upamecano of RB Leipzig, Juve's young defender Daniele Rugani) than others. They were offered some players before learning that David Luiz could be available.
Despite Chelsea's reluctance to let him join an immediate rival, Sanllehi used all his negotiating skills to get the deal done in little over 24 hours. Tierney and Luiz joined Brazilian forward Gabriel Martinelli, Saliba, Dani Ceballos and Nicolas Pepe as the new players in the squad.
Six incoming players for a grand total of £45m spent.
Arsenal didn't have much money to spend -- the owner's son and Arsenal director Josh Kroenke even quipped in July that Arsenal "have a Champions League wage bill on a Europa League budget" -- but they budgeted their money wisely. "Sanllehi is a very intelligent man. His social skills, his charisma, his ability to be liked by people wherever they come from or whatever their background or role is are amazing. He has the gift of the gab," explains one influential French agent who engaged with Arsenal this summer. "He makes you feel at ease. You warm to him, in confidence, and you trust him very quickly."
Sanllehi is indeed a great talker with a commanding presence. He's also a football man. He spent 11 years at Nike, then left to go to Barcelona as a marketing director in 2003, before being promoted to director of football in 2008. He joined Arsenal in February 2018 and became CEO in charge of football after Ivan Gazidis left for AC Milan in October 2018, with Vinai Venkatesham taking on the CEO role specifically in charge of running the club.
But more than charisma, Sanllehi's biggest asset is his address book. Arsenal has been crying out for someone like him in recent years. Players, agents, sporting directors, CEOs: he has an incredible network of contacts. For the Pépé deal, he had a big advantage over every other club because he knew Marc Ingla, the Lille CEO, so well. They had worked together at Barcelona and Ingla's friendship with Sanllehi meant that he was able to engineer the conditions necessary for Arsenal to successfully recruit the Ivorian international over other suitors around Europe.
Furthermore, his excellent relationship with Petr Cech since their time together at Arsenal helped him signed David Luiz from Chelsea. There was never any panic -- or at least none he was showing outwardly -- even with only a few hours to go before the end of the transfer window and the moves for Tierney and Luiz still not completed.
Arsenal had a very clear idea of the kind of players they wanted this summer but the genesis of this very successful transfer goes back to a few months earlier.
During a regularly scheduled meeting, manager Unai Emery and Sanllehi identified the profiles of the men they needed to attract to Arsenal: young, with the ability to increase in value over time and with the right combination pace and ball skills to play on the counterattack away from home. Dani Ceballos and Pepe satisfied those requirements to the extent that Emery and Sanllehi believe they are much better equipped to challenge the likes of Manchester City and Liverpool
No club can work all their miracles in one transfer window, of course, but Arsenal seem to have rediscovered their touch when it comes to making shrewd signings, just like they did in the early years of the Arsene Wenger era. But this is only the beginning: Sanllehi already has plans for the January and next-summer windows.
Back in March, for his 50th birthday, Raul Sanllehi could not have wished for a better year in terms of recruitment. Five months later, a cigar has never felt as sweet to him as the one he enjoyed at the training ground on Aug. 9.
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Unbeaten ton to Aaron Finch leads Surrey to victory over Somerset
Published in
Cricket
Tuesday, 27 August 2019 15:18

Surrey 158 for 4 (Finch 102*) beat Somerset 157 for 9 (Banton 47, Tahir 4-25) by six wickets
Aaron Finch clattered a remarkable nine sixes in a brilliant 102 not out from 53 balls at the Kia Oval as Surrey kept alive their slim hopes of reaching a Vitality Blast quarter-final by severely denting Somerset's qualification ambitions with a barnstorming six-wicket victory.
Chasing Somerset's 157 for 9, in which openers Tom Banton and Babar Azam put on 80 in 8.2 overs before the innings fell away dramatically against the spin of Imran Tahir and Gareth Batty, Finch's assault emphatically settled matters and brought Surrey their fifth win of the campaign.
They now have 12 points and Somerset, in fourth place with 13, need to beat Middlesex in their final group game on Friday if they are to have a chance of making the last eight.
Tahir's 4 for 25 from four overs, each wicket wildly celebrated as is the South African leg spinner's wont, and Batty's 2 for 24, were as important to Surrey's cause as Finch's power-hitting. The two Surrey spinners totally changed the impetus of the Somerset innings, after they had been given a flyer by Banton and Babar after choosing to bat first in front of a 25,000 sell out crowd - Surrey's fourth full house in six home games so far.
But Somerset might still have defended their eventual total if Craig Overton had managed to cling on to a boundary-edge catch in the eighth over, with Finch on 33, when the Australian pulled a short ball from leg spinner Max Waller to deep mid wicket and saw the ball bounce through Overton's upstretched hands and go over the rope for his fourth six.
Finch did not give any other chances, however, as he followed up that blow, two earlier straight sixes off Tim Groenewald and an opening pulled maximum off Overton, with further sixes off Roelof van der Merwe (both in the ninth over), Waller (spectacularly reverse-driven over long off in the tenth over) and two off Tom Lammonby's left arm seamers in the 11th over.
By then, it hardly mattered that Sam Curran had skied Van der Merwe's left arm spin to Tom Abell in the ring, having contributed just 9 to a second-wicket stand of 61 in a mere 5.1 overs, following Mark Stoneman's departure for 18 to the last ball of the sixth over, or that Ollie Pope was run out for 7 in the 15th over.
Finch completed his 52-ball hundred, his seventh in T20 cricket, in the same over with his fifth four - whipped wide of mid on off Groenewald, and Will Jacks smacked two successive fours before being caught and bowled for 9 by Van der Merwe with just eight more runs wanted. Jordan Clark then hit Jerome Taylor into the pavilion for the evening's final six as victory arrived with 3.3 overs to spare.
Somerset, earlier, were flying along at ten runs per over until the two veteran Surrey spinners began to exert their stranglehold.
Banton's 28-ball 47 was by far the most fluent of the Somerset batting efforts, with legside sixes off Curran and Clark and five fours besides - the pick of them a reverse flip for four off Tahir in the game's very first over. Babar hit only three fours, but played his part too in an opening partnership which hinted at an eventual Somerset total of around 200.
Once Banton had fallen in the ninth over, however, the innings lost all its forward momentum and soon James Hildreth followed, stumped off Batty in the next over for 1 when he advanced to a well-flighted delivery outside off stump and yorked himself.
Worse was to come for Somerset, though, with Babar chipping a return catch to Tahir to go for a 31-ball 37 and, in the same 11th over, Ed Byrom also giving the South African leg-spinner a simple caught and bowled off a looping leading edge.
Four wickets had gone in 17 balls, for the addition of only 13 runs, but from 93 for 4 a mini-recovery was quickly stifled as Batty removed Abell for 14, stumped as he attempted a reverse sweep and Tahir had Van der Merwe leg before for 2.
That was 114 for 6, in the 15th over, and from there, the lower order did its best to get Somerset up to a defendable total with Lammonby reaching 19 before being caught behind in a nine-ball Jade Dernbach over, the 18th, costing 12 runs.
Clark and Curran grabbed the wickets of Overton and Groenewald in the closing overs and Somerset needed their tenth wicket pair of Taylor and Waller to make sure they batted through their 20-over allocation.
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Blistering 77 from Ed Pollock guides Birmingham Bears to victory over Durham
Published in
Cricket
Tuesday, 27 August 2019 15:17

Birmingham Bears 153 for 3 (Pollock 77) beat Durham 151 for 5 (Short 50) by 7 wickets (DLS method)
A blistering innings of 77 from Ed Pollock guided Birmingham Bears to a seven-wicket victory over Durham via the Duckworth-Lewis-Stern method in their Vitality Blast North Group clash at Emirates Riverside.
The Bears were set a challenging total of 153 from 19 overs after rain interrupted the host's innings, with D'Arcy Short top scoring for Durham with a half-century. However, Pollock was outstanding on his return to the Birmingham line-up, allowing the visitors to control the tempo of their chase.
The 24-year-old dismantled the Durham bowling attack with ease before he was dismissed. Matthew Lamb and Will Rhodes saw their side over the line in the final over, lifting them off the bottom of the table, ending Durham's hopes of reaching the quarter-finals of the competition in the process.
The home side were inserted by Bears skipper Jeetan Patel, who put faith in George Garrett to open the bowling on his T20 debut. He had a first over to forget as Short dispatched him for five boundaries. Chris Green shared the new ball and made the breakthrough with his off-spin, bowling Scott Steel for a duck. Short and Harry Adair kept Durham moving to reach their fifty in the powerplay, which included a six from Adair that had just enough to clear the rope.
The weather intervened to halt the Durham innings, with play resuming 35 minutes later and the loss of one over. The two batsmen struggled to find the boundary after the break, although it did not stop them putting a partnership of 70 for the second wicket. Adair tried to attack the spin of Alex Thomson, but could only send a leading edge back to the spinner.
Short worked his way to his half-century from 38 balls - his fourth of the competition. However, a change in ball resulted in his dismissal as Patel turned one through the gate, narrowly avoiding a front-foot no ball. Durham needed an injection of pace and it came from their skipper Peter Handscomb scoring a brisk 25, including a six down the ground off Patel, taking his final over for 17 runs.
Graham Clark also played a useful knock of 26, adding late boundaries before he was caught on the fence. As a result of their striking, Durham surpassed the 150-run mark at the end of their 19 overs, setting Birmingham a competitive total after being adjusted to 153.
Birmingham opened with attacking intent, putting the pressure on Liam Trevaskis. Pollock and Dominic Sibley scored five boundaries between them from the left-arm spinner's opening two overs. Pollock continued to provide an early onslaught, dispatching Matty Potts for a six over the leg-side and a boundary in back-to-back deliveries, pushing the run rate above 10 per over.
The home side had no answer for the power of Pollock. James Weighell's introduction into the attack resulted in a 19-run over, including another maximum from the left-hander. Short broke the opening stand for 83 when Sibley chipped tamely into the deep, but Pollock stayed calm at the other end, reaching his half-century from 24 deliveries.
Short notched his second wicket as Sam Hain played on to his stumps, attempting a reverse sweep. However, Pollock was undeterred and continued to find the boundary, whittling down the total. Pollock was finally out in the 17th over, smashing a drive straight back to Steel to set up a closer finish than expected. However, Lamb and Rhodes did enough to secure the victory with one ball to spare.
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Fit-again Keemo Paul replaces Miguel Cummins for Jamaica Test
Published in
Cricket
Tuesday, 27 August 2019 19:55

Keemo Paul has recovered from his ankle injury and has been drafted back into the West Indies squad straightaway for the second and final Test against India in Kingston, replacing Miguel Cummins, the man who had filled in for him in Antigua.
That was the only change to the squad for the first Test, which India won by 318 runs. Shai Hope kept wickets then, and might continue to do so with first-choice Test wicketkeeper Shane Dowrich back in Barbados continuing his rehabilitation from an ankle injury, even though back-up keeper Jahmar Hamilton is among the 13 in Jamaica.
Cummins didn't have a particularly good time of it in Antigua, conceding 69 runs in 20 wicketless overs across two innings, as India piled up 297 and 343 for 7 declared while bowling West Indies out for 222 and 100 to earn 60 World Test Championship points.
While batting was West Indies' weak link in the first Test, the bowling unit did let India off the hook somewhat after having the visitors down on the mat at 25 for 3 - Cheteshwar Pujara and Virat Kohli among the batsmen out - on the first morning. "We got the early wickets we were looking for but I thought that we tried a bit too hard, we didn't stick to coming down the channel, we tried a bit too hard with the short-ball plan and stuff like that," Roston Chase, the only spinner in the XI for the first Test, had said of that performance.
West Indies will hope that changes in the second Test. With Cummins out and Paul in, that might be a straight swap in the XI at Sabina Park, unless the conditions call for an international debut for Rahkeem Cornwall, the 26-year-old offspinning allrounder from Antigua.
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Lloyd serious about NFL try, but not until 2020
Published in
Breaking News
Tuesday, 27 August 2019 17:52

Carli Lloyd's 55-yard field goal at a Philadelphia Eagles-Baltimore Ravens practice last week generated enough buzz that the soccer star said she's now mulling multiple offers from NFL teams to explore kicking.
Just don't expect Lloyd to try to make that happen in 2019, according to the coach who helped her reach the pinnacle of her current sport. James Galanis said that if Lloyd pursues football, it will be with an eye toward training for the 2020 season.
"If she's going to do this, she'll do it -- she'll train in the offseason, she'll get herself ready so that she just doesn't do it for the sake of doing it," Galanis told ESPN. "If she's going to do it, she's going to do it so that she can be a success."
What began as an invitation for Lloyd to observe Eagles practice with her husband, Brian Hollins, and Galanis' son Preston last week quickly took on a life of its own when video of her field goal began to circulate.
Galanis said that on Sunday, Lloyd sent him a screenshot of a text message from an NFL general manager gauging her interest in participating in a preseason game Thursday. She couldn't because the U.S. women's national team plays the same night.
Galanis said two NFL teams have expressed serious interest in Lloyd. He declined to name the teams out of deference to ongoing conversations.
"I am having discussions with my husband and James about the reality of playing in the NFL," Lloyd told Fox Sports. "They both feel that I could do it and should consider it. So I'm seriously considering it, as it's a challenge."
Lloyd's longtime coach said he met no resistance when he advised her in a long conversation Monday that it would be a step for women around the world and also a great experience for her personal growth to attempt kicking in the NFL. An in-depth conversation followed Tuesday, when they began to talk about not only kicking style, but issues such as how locker room dynamics would work for a woman.
"In terms of dealing with the pressure and being able to execute the kick itself," Galanis said, "we both feel she could definitely do it."
Galanis also said numerous observers pointed out to him that Lloyd took five steps before connecting from 55 yards at Eagles camp, while the standard run-up for an NFL kicker in game conditions is two steps. Tweaking that will be the first step when the two of them get together after the U.S. plays Portugal in Minneapolis on Tuesday to evaluate her potential options.
"We'll try kicking balls with a couple of steps," Galanis said. "And if her range is still the same ... then that's an important piece we knocked over because we'll know that she can kick the ball 55 yards with two steps, the same way an NFL player could.
"Once we knock that over, we'll contact one of the NFL teams and tell them that we're interested and we'd like to come down and spend some time with their field goal-kicking coaches and let them make some tweaks and fix her technique or adjust her technique. From there, bring in the team, and she can do it live at training in kind of like a realistic situation."
Gender aside, it is unlikely anyone new to it could pick up the nuances of football place-kicking in time to make a serious run at the rosters of NFL teams entering preseason finales. But Lloyd, 37, became a World Cup Golden Ball winner, a two-time World Cup winner, a two-time Olympic gold medalist and one of the all-time leading scorers for the U.S. with a methodical, almost maniacal, approach to training and attention to detail. She didn't do anything on a whim, and that appears to be her mindset when it comes to a future on the gridiron.
"I don't want to go in there blindly," Lloyd told NBCSports Philadelphia after she threw out the first pitch at Tuesday night's Pittsburgh Pirates-Philadelphia Phillies game. "I want to actually attempt to do it. But I know that I definitely could do it, because anything I set my mind to do, I can do it. And I actually do kick balls for a living. So, yeah, it's all about the technique, and we'll see what happens."
What that means for her soccer future, either with the U.S. or Sky Blue FC of the National Women's Soccer League, is unclear. She filled an important role for the U.S. en route to the World Cup title this past summer, playing primarily as a forward off the bench instead of her usual position as a starting midfielder, but she made no secret of her belief that her play merited more minutes.
She has long stated a desire to play through the 2020 Olympics, hedging only slightly in saying in the immediate aftermath of the World Cup final that she would go home and evaluate her plans. Olympic rosters are limited to 18 players, five fewer than the World Cup, which will leave Jill Ellis' successor as U.S. coach with a host of difficult decisions entering qualifying.
"There's question marks still with what's going on with Carli moving forward with the women's national team," Galanis said. "We don't know who the coach is going to be. Whoever the coach is, Carli is going to have to have a conversation with the new coach and see if Carli is even part of the plans moving forward."
Or if she has moved on to an unprecedented challenge. The idea obviously intrigues her at the moment. She will know more after kicking more seriously with Galanis next week, and then potentially as more than a guest in an NFL practice.
"Then she's going to have to make a decision for the future," Galanis said. "That's the short-term plan that we have for it, because she's serious about it, and she wants to see if this is something that she can really do."
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Sources: Dolphins interested in Clowney trade
Published in
Breaking News
Tuesday, 27 August 2019 14:04

The Miami Dolphins are interested in trading for Houston Texans star Jadeveon Clowney and recently met with the pass-rusher, according to ESPN and multiple reports.
Clowney has met with first-year coach Brian Flores and other members of the Dolphins organization, who hope to persuade the three-time Pro Bowler to accept a trade to Miami, according to ESPN and multiple reports.
The Texans have interest in Dolphins left tackle Laremy Tunsil, but Miami is believed to be unlikely to part with him in a Clowney deal, a league source told ESPN's Cameron Wolfe.
There is interest in completing a deal, but a trade isn't considered a guarantee or imminent at this time.
The NFL Network was first to report Miami's increased interest in Clowney. The Miami Herald also reported Tuesday that the Dolphins consider themselves the leading candidate to acquire Clowney, who has not yet signed his one-year franchise tender with the Texans.
Clowney, who was named to his third consecutive Pro Bowl last season, finished 2018 with 47 tackles, nine sacks, a forced fumble and a fumble recovery. He also had 16 tackles for loss, which tied for ninth in the NFL last season, and he now has 53 tackles for loss over the past three seasons, which ranks third in the league.
Clowney, 26, the first overall pick of the 2014 draft, struggled with knee injuries early in his career, missing 15 games in his first two seasons. In 2016, he played through wrist and elbow injuries, appearing in 14 games and making the Pro Bowl for the first time. Since then, he has missed just one game over two seasons.
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Whom should you take in each draft spot for Rounds 1 and 2?
Published in
Breaking News
Tuesday, 27 August 2019 07:40

If there's one thing we always stress over as fantasy football managers, it's the selection of our annual draft order.
How many times have you opened up your draft room on ESPN, or arrived at your league's live draft table, only to react in horror to learn that you've drawn the final slot in your draft?
"ARRRRRGGGH! I'm picking 10th in my 10-team league, I'm DOOMED!!!"
It's an understandable reaction, considering how much time we put into the draft-preparation process, often going so far as to craft strategies around specific draft slots or individual players we're targeting in the first and/or second rounds. When we're then slotted into a range in the draft where we can't put our much-researched plan into action, it can be frustrating, to say the least.
Worry not, though, as below I've laid the groundwork for you to navigate smoothly through the first two rounds of your draft, regardless of the spur-of-the-moment draft slot you draw. This column solves the proverbial puzzle of Rounds 1-2 strategy from each draft slot, for both 10- and 12-team leagues. Listed at each draft slot is a list of the most likely candidates available to you in both Rounds 1 and 2, as well as any strategic considerations you'll need, including the possible ramifications on your picks in subsequent rounds.
This examination is for an ESPN standard PPR (point per reception) league.
Draft Slot 1
Round 1 (Pick 1 overall): This has to be a running back, considering the massive value relative to replacement that the best at the position provides, and Saquon Barkley, the position's top scorer last season and the man we project to lead it again by 20.3 PPR fantasy points over Ezekiel Elliott (whose holdout lowers his draft value), is the obvious standout among a field of three. Those with particularly strong opinions of Christian McCaffrey (projected 25.3 points behind Barkley) or Alvin Kamara (projected 5.7 behind McCaffrey) could pick either.
Round 2 (Pick 20 in 10-team, Pick 24 in 12-team): Fingers crossed that someone slips in a 10-team league, because I've got a clear top 19 overall before I draw a "tier line," meaning that the dream scenario has Nick Chubb, Dalvin Cook, Tyreek Hill or Odell Beckham Jr. lasting. Mike Evans wouldn't be a bad prize otherwise. In a 12-team league, a running back will probably need to be one of your second- or third-round picks, with Leonard Fournette, Kerryon Johnson or Devonta Freeman the ones most likely to still be around.
Tristan's best start: Barkley/Evans in 10-team, Barkley/Johnson in 12-team.
Draft Slot 2
Round 1 (Pick 2): I've got Barkley as the clear top pick from the aforementioned three-running-back Tier 1, and assuming he's the pick at No. 1 overall, the second pick is simply a matter of your personal preference between McCaffrey or Kamara. I prefer Kamara only because I've got a hair more confidence in the Saints' offense, the height of his statistical floor, as well as my projection that he gets more goal-line carries of the two, but -- again -- the margin is razor-thin.
An aside: If we had a promise that Elliott, last season's No. 5 running back scorer in PPR leagues (thanks in large part to his receiving targets increasing by 150%), would take the field in Week 1, he'd be the guy to get right here. But we don't, and the memories of last season's No. 2 overall pick on average, Le'Veon Bell, holding out for the entire year are still too fresh for most.
Round 2 (Pick 19 in 10-team, Pick 23 in 12-team): I waffle between whether the No. 1, 2 or 3 slot is the most favorable in 10-team leagues, since as mentioned above, I've got that "tier line" drawn in my rankings after the top 19. Here, I'd take whatever is left of those 19 regardless of position: Chubb? Hill? And it's not like those in 12-team leagues are in much worse shape. Wide receiver will probably be the richest position, with Evans, Antonio Brown, Keenan Allen or Adam Thielen available.
Tristan's best start: Kamara/Hill in 10-team, Kamara/Allen in 12-team.
Draft Slot 3
Round 1 (Pick 3): Feast upon the leftovers from the Barkley/Kamara/McCaffrey tier. As the picks pass, however, the less scary taking the chance on Elliott becomes. The 3-slot is a great place to be in a 10-team league this season, because it guarantees you one of the top three running backs, as well as either one of the top seven wide receivers or another top-10 running back in the second round. That's an awfully solid start.
Round 2 (Pick 18 in 10-team, Pick 22 in 12-team): If Travis Kelce went considerably earlier than this in your draft, resist the urge to take either Zach Ertz or George Kittle here (or with the 1- or 2-slots). I've got both graded as third-rounders, and would rather first build with top-12 running back or top-10 wide receiver talent. A McCaffrey/Brown pairing in a 12-team league would be a strong one, giving you a good high-floor/consistent base in a PPR format, thanks to their receiving target total, which should contend for the league's lead.
Tristan's best start: McCaffrey/Chubb in 10-team, McCaffrey/Brown in 12-team.
Draft Slot 4
Round 1 (Pick 4): Now things get interesting, though this might be the toughest of the first-round spots from which to decide. Is it Elliott time, or should he be allowed to slip a few spots further (some offsite ADP sources have his low-end selection at 11th overall)? If a "safe" pick is your aim, then the top wide receiver tier comes into play, including DeAndre Hopkins, Julio Jones, Davante Adams and possibly Michael Thomas. David Johnson has become an increasingly popular pick at fourth overall, for those who worry about Elliott's holdout yet want to begin with a running back. It's probably wisest to take a known Week 1 option here.
Round 2 (Pick 17 in 10-team, Pick 21 in 12-team): If you took Hopkins (or another wide receiver) in Round 1, here's hoping that either Cook or Chubb remains for you in a 10-team league in Round 2, which seems to have slightly greater than 50-50 odds, looking at industry ADPs. Fournette is the most logical running back partner for Hopkins in a 12-team league, but otherwise, it's smarter to go wide receiver/wide receiver with an Evans, Allen or Brown, then take a running back like Freeman, Kerryon Johnson, Damien Williams or Aaron Jones in Round 3. Don't fear waiting on a running back from this slot!
Tristan's best start: Hopkins/Cook in 10-team, Hopkins/Fournette in 12-team.
Draft Slot 5
Round 1 (Pick 5): I've got Hopkins as my No. 1 wide receiver for 2019, and our PPR projections agree, so if David Johnson is gone, this is a wise time to shift to the wideouts and take the top name on the board. Any of the players remaining from the fourth pick makes a strong choice here, but if Hopkins went fourth and David Johnson remains, this is a wise time to scoop up the running back.
Round 2 (Pick 16 in 10-team, Pick 20 in 12-team): There's no reason any of the top five wide receivers should remain at this stage, and if either JuJu Smith-Schuster or Beckham is available, they're slam-dunk picks for those in 10-team leagues (and outrageous steals if somehow there in 12-teamers). This is a good spot at which to grab either Cook or Chubb, otherwise. For those in 12-team leagues, the 5-slot is a rough place to be, unless you're much more confident in Brown's prospects with the Oakland Raiders than I am (not that I'm lacking in confidence, but I don't think he belongs among the top seven at the position). I've got a line drawn behind the top 11 running backs, top seven wide receivers and No. 1 tight end, totaling 19 selections, making the 20th pick overall a toughie. Fournette is the best running back choice here; Evans, Allen or Brown the top wide receivers; and I'd resist taking either Kittle or Ertz this soon.
Tristan's best start: David Johnson/Beckham in 10-team, David Johnson/Evans in 12-team.
Draft Slot 6
Round 1 (Pick 6): Elliott probably shouldn't be allowed to slip much further than this, though looping Bell into the group discussed in the 4-slot still gives a fantasy manager a strong field from which to choose a "safer" option. I'd take the chance on Elliott -- especially in a 12-team league, where the best running back likely to remain at Pick 19 will probably be Fournette. In a 10-team league, that running back could be Cook or Chubb, making a wide receiver more palatable at Pick 6.
Round 2 (Pick 15 in 10-team, Pick 19 in 12-team): Fantasy managers locked into the 6-slot -- or the 4- or 5- or 7-slot, depending upon where Elliott got picked -- need only consider the possibility that the Cowboys back is not available for you in Week 1, which is why going running back/running back makes the most sense for any such team in a 10-team league. It's not outrageous for a manager in a 10-team league to grab either Cook or Chubb, though it's possible that one in a 12-team league could find only Fournette, Kerryon Johnson, Freeman or a lower-ranked running back of their choice as the best available remaining options. Don't pass up the opportunity to pair up Elliott with a rock-solid wide receiver like Beckham or Hill, if your league has drafted running backs heavily up to this point.
Tristan's best start: Elliott/Thomas in 10-team, Elliott/Hill in 12-team.
Draft Slot 7
Round 1 (Pick 7): The best running back remaining on the board is likely to be Bell, an entirely fair selection this soon. If six consecutive running backs (including Elliott) began your draft, though, it's time to shift to those wide receivers. In all likelihood, this will become a decision between Bell, Jones and Adams in most leagues.
Round 2 (Pick 14 in 10-team, Pick 18 in 12-team): What's nice about the 7-slot is that it's the final one that guarantees you a top-nine running back, top-four wide receiver or No. 1 tight end Kelce, all of whom I think should be universally regarded top-15 overall selections in 10-team leagues. In 12-team leagues, the worst-case scenario has you choosing between running backs Cook or Chubb or wide receiver Hill, still solid pickings. This is the latest in a 10-team league that I'd allow Todd Gurley II to slide.
Tristan's best start: Bell/Smith-Schuster in 10-team, Bell/Beckham in 12-team.
Draft Slot 8
Round 1 (Pick 8): The 8- and 9-slots in either 10- or 12-team leagues seem destined for near-identical outcomes this season, with their managers likely picking from among the Jones/Adams/Thomas/Smith-Schuster tier in the first round and a running back from the Joe Mixon/Gurley/James Conner tier in the second. That said, there's still a chance that teams drafting out of the 8-spot could still find Bell there for the taking. Otherwise, this is the first spot where the value margins between the teams' first- and second-round picks are razor-thin; I've got my Nos. 8 through 17 players overall in the rankings valued awfully similarly, and there's no shame in going with your personal preference at either spot. Even if your league has drafted the running-back position aggressively through the first seven picks, resist the temptation to reach for Mixon, Gurley or Conner this early.
Round 2 (Pick 13 in 10-team, Pick 17 in 12-team): An 8-slot team might wind up lucky, getting a preferred running back in Round 1, affording it the choice between either a borderline top-10 running back, a top-five wide receiver or the No. 1 tight end in Round 2. Among the back-half draft slots, No. 8 is probably in the best position to go value regardless of position with the first two picks, knowing that it's still probable that there will be a top-20 running back there for the taking in Round 3. If Bell was there for you in Round 1, I'd consider going for domination at the running back position, pairing him up with Gurley -- it's risky with those two, yes, but think about the upside -- or Mixon in a 10-team league, or Conner, Cook or Chubb in a 12-teamer.
Tristan's best start: Jones/Conner in 10-team, Jones/Chubb in 12-team.
Draft Slot 9
Round 1 (Pick 9): Adams and Jones cannot be allowed to sneak past the 9-slot, gifting two of the three best wide receivers in fantasy football to the No. 10 team in a 10-team league. Take the best one that remains, though this is the spot where top tight end Kelce as well as wide receiver Beckham join the fray. In defense of Kelce's inclusion -- a tight end in the first round might seem like an unusual strategy, considering the history of 21st century fantasy football -- he was the No. 6 finisher overall using value based drafting (VBD) calculations in 2018, and he's still a go-to guy for the game's most talented young quarterback.
Round 2 (Pick 12 in 10-team, Pick 16 in 12-team): Considering the likelihood that teams drafting out of the 9-slot will wind up with a wide receiver as their top option off the board, a running back is a wise target for those squads in Round 2. Gurley has lingered as far as the 12th pick in a lot of early drafts, and as late as the end of the round in a few offsite drafts (judging by ADP results). There's a good chance teams in this slot will be looking at a running back from the Mixon/Gurley/Conner/Cook/Chubb group. In a 10-team league, though, there's a real chance that Kelce or Jones might last.
Tristan's best start: Adams/Gurley in 10-team, Adams/Cook in 12-team.
Draft Slot 10
Round 1 (Pick 10): Here's where the 10- versus 12-team league angle becomes important, because the elite running back pool drains more quickly in the latter than former. That Kelce advantage relative to replacement at the tight end position becomes more tantalizing at the 10-slot in either league type, but taking him there in a 12-teamer might result in Mixon, Gurley and Conner all being gone before Pick 15. I'd rather "reach" for Mixon here, knowing that either Kelce, Gurley, Conner, Smith-Schuster or Thomas is guaranteed to remain in Round 2, rather than take Kelce and feel forced to "reach" for Cook or Chubb at Pick 15. It's different, of course, for those who have a particularly strong opinion about Cook or Chubb.
Round 2 (Pick 11 in 10-team, Pick 15 in 12-team): Fantasy managers in 10-team leagues get their pick from the top tight end (Kelce), a member of the RB1 class (Mixon, Gurley or Conner) or a top-five receiver (probably Smith-Schuster or Thomas), while those in 12-team leagues enjoy the leftovers from any of the top 10 running backs (adding Cook) or top six wide receivers (adding Beckham). It's not a bad place to be, despite having the look of a low draft slot.
Tristan's best start: Kelce/Mixon in 10-team, Mixon/Thomas in 12-team.
Draft Slot 11 (12-team leagues)
Round 1 (Pick 11): Assuming that Mixon went at Pick 10, Kelce is every bit as strong a choice as is either Smith-Schuster or Thomas, especially since you're guaranteed to get either of those wide receivers or your choice between Gurley and Conner at Pick 14.
Round 2 (Pick 14): Leftovers, and warm, delicious, the-day-after leftovers at that. The worst-case scenario for those in the 11-slot is taking a wide receiver in Round 1, then finding that another wide receiver -- Smith-Schuster, Thomas or Beckham -- is the strongest choice remaining. More likely, Gurley or Conner will remain, and while Gurley's injury questions throughout the offseason have lingered, he's still far too talented to allow him to slip much further than 14th overall.
Tristan's best start: Kelce/Conner.
Draft Slot 12 (12-team leagues)
Round 1 (Pick 12): The odds of Smith-Schuster/Thomas bookend picks is excellent, though the danger in it is that 20 running backs go off the board before your third- and fourth-round bookend picks at 36/37 overall, potentially pushing you into "reach" selections of Marlon Mack, James White or Sony Michel. The 12-slot is my least preferred in a 12-team league, an opinion that might seem obvious but more so for what it means in Rounds 3-6 than in Rounds 1-2. If a Gurley or Conner is available to you with either of these bookend picks, take one and don't risk being forced to piece the position together in the later rounds.
Round 2 (Pick 13): Smith-Schuster, Thomas or Beckham should remain available, as should either of Gurley or Conner. Again, I'm against the zero-RBs strategy, especially in this slot in a 12-team league this year.
Tristan's best start: Smith-Schuster/Gurley.
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Family of Rays prospect killed in triple homicide
Published in
Baseball
Tuesday, 27 August 2019 21:00

The wife, child and mother-in-law of a Double-A pitcher in the Tampa Bay Rays organization were killed Tuesday in a small Virginia town, with police arresting the brother-in-law of right-hander Blake Bivens and charging him with three counts of first-degree homicide, sources told ESPN.
Matthew Thomas Bernard, 18, of Keeling, Virginia, was arrested after a manhunt that dispatched dozens of police officers around the community near the Virginia-North Carolina border.
Police said they did not know the motive for the killings. Bernard, who was naked at the time of his arrest, led authorities on a short on-foot chase. Police have not named the victims.
In a statement, the Rays said: "Earlier today we learned that Blake Bivens, a pitcher with our Double-A affiliate, the Montgomery Biscuits, suffered a terrible family tragedy in southern Virginia. Our hearts are broken for Blake."
The Biscuits canceled a doubleheader scheduled for Tuesday in Chattanooga, Tennessee, due to what the team called a "tragic event."
CEO Lou DiBella later tweeted a statement.
A statement from CEO & Managing Owner, Lou DiBella. pic.twitter.com/Uocm0juKb7
— Montgomery Biscuits (@BiscuitBaseball) August 28, 2019
Bivens, 24, was chosen by Tampa Bay in the fourth round of the 2014 draft out of high school in Danville, Virginia. After spending most of his career as a starting pitcher, he transitioned to a relief role this year and was 4-0 with a 3.95 ERA.
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