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I Dig Sports
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For the second year running, the IPL welcomed a batch of English players - despite a number of them being recalled early for national duty ahead of the World Cup. With the group stage finished, and none making it through to the knockout stages, we take a look at their returns.
Jofra Archer Rajasthan Royals
Appearances: 11
67 runs, SR 167.50; 11 wickets, econ. 6.76
Not on this list a year ago but now fully qualified and subject of much hype as England mull whether to select him for the World Cup. This was another solid campaign, speckled with moments of quiet brilliance: figures of 3 for 15 against Kings XI in Chandigarh, which included two wickets in the 19th over while conceding just three runs; a cameo 27 off 12 balls to resurrect his team against Kolkata, sealing victory with a six in his last act before heading off to link up with England for the first time. Despite three dropped catches against Mumbai Indians (a game Royals won), he was full value. Among seam-bowlers over the last two seasons, only Jasprit Bumrah has taken more wickets at a lower economy than Archer.
Jonny Bairstow Sunrisers Hyderabad
Appearances: 10
445 runs, SR 157.24
In his debut IPL season, Bairstow was unarguably the leading English import - an orange ball of fury at the top of the Sunrisers order where he formed an exhilarating, and unlikely, partnership with David Warner. When he departed for England duty, his tally of 445 runs put him second on the list, while Bairstow and Warner also set an IPL record for the highest opening partnership when looting the RCB attack for 185. He also kept wicket tidily, despite the challenge of trying to pick Rashid Khan, and gave himself fully to the experience of living in and travelling around India. Unsurprisingly, once their opening partnership was broken up Sunrisers struggled, losing three of their last four games
Sam Billings Chennai Super Kings
Appearances: 1
0 runs, SR 0.00; 1 catch
CSK stuck with Billings as one of their overseas contingent as much for his utility as back-up keeper and substitute fielder as anything. But he was only required in the starting XI once, making a four-ball duck against Kings XI, and flew home early to try and get game time with his county, Kent - a plan which was wrecked almost before it started as a badly dislocated shoulder put him out of the England reckoning.
Jos Buttler Rajasthan Royals
Appearances: 8
311 runs, SR 150.70; 9 catches
Pretty much a veteran after four successive IPL seasons - two for Mumbai, two for Rajasthan - Buttler was again a force at the top of the order. The high point was a Man-of-the-Match display against Mumbai Indians, bulldozing 89 from just 43 balls to set up what was only Rajasthan's second win of the competition (he passed 50 in their first, too). However, he was also in the middle during one of the most controversial moments of the 2019 season, after being Mankaded by R Ashwin in Jaipur. Royals were on course to win their opening match but Buttler strayed out of his ground and Ashwin ran him out without a second thought (or a first warning) - Buttler complained afterwards that it set a "bad precedent". Left India early to attend the birth of his first child.
Sam Curran Kings XI Punjab
Appearances: 9
95 runs, SR 172.72; 10 wickets, econ. 9.78
Bought for a million dollars in the auction, Curran arguably didn't live up to his price tag - but he also had a more-than-handy first IPL, too. That fee probably demanded a place in Kings XI's opener, but despite taking two (expensive) wickets in victory, he was then left out for two games, before returning with 4 for 11 - his best T20 figures - against Delhi, finishing a sensational match with a hat-trick. He continued to be in and out of the side, but finished the season well with a 23-ball fifty against KKR, then 3 for 35 before hitting the winning runs in his final outing. While his economy was on the high side, Curran's versatility was a bonus as Kings XI sought a play-off spot, even filling in as a pinch-slogging opener at one stage.
Joe Denly Kolkata Knight Riders
Appearances: 1
0 runs, SR 0.00
There was not much for Denly to write home about during his maiden appearance at the world's biggest T20 league. He made one appearance, filling in with KKR's regular opening partnership of Chris Lynn and Sunil Narine absent, and lasted a single ball after losing his off stump to Ishant Sharma. Did his duty with the drinks for a little while longer before coming back home early to get some cricket under his belt with Kent.
Harry Gurney Kolkata Knight Riders
Appearances: 8
1 run, SR 20.00; 7 wickets, econ. 8.81
A one-time England candidate who has begun a productive late-career spell on the global T20 circuit, Gurney will not be adding an IPL title to the ones he recently picked up while at the PSL and Big Bash, as KKR missed out on the top four thanks to defeat in their final match. Gurney was almost ever-present through the second half of the season, having claimed the Man of the Match award on debut for a parsimonious 2 for 25 - his skiddy left-arm angle and teasing variations seemingly suited to slow, grippy surfaces. That was about as good as it got, however, as KKR went on a six-match losing streak, Gurney's wicket returns and economy rate going in opposite directions.
Liam Livingston Rajasthan Royals
Appearances: 4
70 runs, SR 145. 83; 0 wickets, econ. 13.00
Part of the four-man England contingent at Royals, Livingstone was another who was left kicking his heels for much of the tournament. Made an appearance midway through, with Ben Stokes carrying a knock, but bowled just one over at a cost of 13 and then made a two-ball duck. After Stokes and Buttler returned home towards the back end, he came into the team for a mini run and produced one notable knock of 44 off 26 balls - handing out some unusual punishment to Rashid Khan - to help set up a comfortable victory over Sunrisers. The rain did for his chance to shine in Bengaluru and he was part of a major Royals collapse in the final game as the play-offs slipped out of reach.
Moeen Ali Royal Challengers Bangalore
Appearances: 11
220 runs, SR 165.41; 6 wickets, econ. 6.76
While his team had a bit of a shocker, losing their opening six games and ending up bottom of the pile, Moeen played to his strengths - selfless versatility and laconic stoicism - during a breakthrough campaign. Like a silent gunslinger from a spaghetti Western, Moeen swung first and asked questions later. His strike rate was bettered only by Andre Russell and Hardik Pandya, among batsmen to have faced 100 balls, and he chipped in whenever Virat Kohli chose to throw him the ball. Moving around the order so much wasn't ideal - he batted everywhere between No. 2 and No. 6 and only settled in his most productive slot at No. 4 eight games in - but a flying 66 off 28 balls against KKR, when he outscored Kohli by a ratio of 3:1 showed how destructive he could be.
Ben Stokes Rajasthan Royals
Appearances: 9
123 runs, SR124.24; 6 wickets, econ. 11.22
Where have you hidden the real Ben Stokes? The owners of Rajasthan Royals would be forgiven for asking that question as England's totemic allrounder followed up an underwhelming first season in Royals blue with an equally underwhelming one in Royals pink. The player who won the MVP award for his performances with Rising Pune Supergiant in 2017 has struggled to click since then: fewer runs at a lower strike rate; fewer wickets at a worse economy. There were moments to savour, such as a magnificent diving catch at backward point against CSK; but his season was summed up later that same match when he failed to defend 18 off the final over, conceding a no-ball, a wide and two sixes either side of dismissing MS Dhoni. Eventful, yes. Successful, less so.
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Kohli the captain 'relies on intuition', is 'exceptionally open to ideas' - Vettori
Published in
Cricket
Monday, 06 May 2019 01:54
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Virat Kohli's IPL captaincy has polarized opinion in recent times, and the debate is unlikely to go away given Royal Challengers Bangalore's wooden-spoon finish in IPL 2019. So, just what kind of a T20 captain is Kohli? Someone who "relies on intuition" and is "exceptionally open to ideas", according to Daniel Vettori, who has worked with him for six seasons as player and coach at the franchise. Vettori, a well-travelled coach who has also had stints with Brisbane Heat in the Big Bash League and Middlesex in the T20 Blast among other teams, weighed in on a range of topics, on the latest episode of ESPNcricinfo's Talking T20 podcast.
Vettori was part of both Royal Challengers sides which finished runners-up in 2011 [as captain] and 2016 [as coach], apart from a run to the playoffs in 2015. However, dismal performances in subsequent seasons meant they parted ways ahead of IPL 2019. Despite another forgettable season for the franchise, Vettori only had high praise for his former captain.
"When I used to speak to him or any other coaches [used to] speak to him, there's always a conversation around what you think is best, where can this work," Vettori said. "It wouldn't always be a numbers-driven conversation, it would be around some intuition and understanding of the game. I think, ultimately, when you sold a compelling story to Virat, he was always on board, open to listen and that made him such a good captain."
A widely-discussed aspect of Kohli's game is his on-field personality, his "energy, enthusiasm and desperation to win" which Vettori said "is contagious", and when "you couple that with [him being] the best batsman in the world, and with a work ethic that has probably led India into the situation they are now [in]. Everyone wants to follow his gym [routine], and everything he does off the field, the way he basically prepares to play the game. That's a huge part of leadership. That's a huge part of captaincy."
Vettori, regarded as a smart bowler even during his playing days, also spoke about the challenges in getting T20 teams to buy into data and analytics-driven wisdom by "telling a compelling story" to players and team managements, as the field is still in its "infant stages" with small sample sizes making it harder to present a convincing case.
"For me, I think there's such a strong correlation between thorough planning and the use of data to performance. I think it's so important because I think cricket, in general, is quite immature in terms of its exposure to this and...the sport I like is baseball, and I think they use it as strongly as anyone. The thing they have in their favour is huge sample sizes, and the thing that I always battled with [as a coach] was '[you say], here's a plan' and then go back to how many times it's worked. 'Oh, it's worked four times'. And four times doesn't seem like a lot to base things on. I think that's what [the challenge is]. When you're presenting to the captain or the owner or the rest of the coaches, you want to be overwhelming with it.
"And I know that with baseball, and a lot of the sites that I follow, they want 500 instances of that to happen before they can sort of guarantee a prediction that they can rely on. And when you're dealing with David Warner facing Yuzvendra Chahal, [say], 33 times over the course of his career, and then you make a prediction from that, I think that's the thing they have, but that's only gonna grow. So, while we're in these infant stages, I think it's hard for people to get their heads around [analytics]. But, the people who are gonna buy into this first, get their heads around it, I think they'll get the jump-start on everyone."
Vettori singled out former team-mate and current Mumbai Indians bowling coach Shane Bond as one of the trailblazers in making the most of data and insights, as Mumbai's "structured, planned" approach to T20 cricket has paid dividends over the years.
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PORTLAND, Ore. -- When he stepped out of the locker room on Sunday, Damian Lillard adjusted his crimson vest and navigated the thin corridor in the belly of the Moda Center en route to the podium for his postgame media conference.
The hallway, no more than 10 feet wide, is packed with people postgame -- friends, families, teammates, team employees, agents, reporters -- and that is compounded by the fact that the Denver Nuggets locker room is right next to the podium room. There seems to be a crowd around Lillard anywhere he goes, and even after the game is over, never is a Nugget too far away.
It is an ongoing theme of the series: Damian Lillard just can't seem to get any space.
"I think it's obvious: They're trying to show bodies and make me play in a crowd," Lillard said. "Find the open man, that's what I'm trying to do. Trying to see where the help is coming from, see where the other guy is coming from and make that play. And still just find a way to be aggressive and look for shots. Don't let them turn me into a passive player. I can definitely see them trying to be a little more aggressive and have more bodies around me."
Like anyone else who has an Internet connection or TV, the Nuggets saw the way Lillard tormented the Oklahoma City Thunder in their opening-round series. They saw the logo shots. They saw the dramatic shifts of momentum with each ruthless step-back jumper. They saw the way a single Lillard 3-pointer could feel like a 10-0 run, energizing the crowd and deflating defenders.
In the series against the Thunder, Lillard opened it with a missile from some 32 feet and ended it with one from 37 feet away. Against the Thunder, he went 5-of-5 on 3s from 30 or more feet from the hoop. Against the Nuggets, he is 2-of-5 from 30-plus feet.
"I think they're picking him up pretty high. They need to be open," Blazers coach Terry Stotts said. "For Dame, an open 3 is a good 3. They are picking him up across half court. They are not giving him a lot of space, so I don't think those same 3s are there."
Nuggets assistant Wes Unseld Jr. has been at the heart of Denver's defensive turnaround this season, and his focus entering the series against the Blazers wasn't too complicated. He saw the things that gave the Thunder problems: Their pickup points were too low, their bigs weren't up enough, and they weren't into the ball enough, which let Lillard reject screens.
"He had a lot of open space in that series, we felt, and that's not a knock on OKC. We just wanted to be a little bit better," Nuggets coach Mike Malone said. "We didn't want him getting 33 a night."
Lillard scored 28 in Game 4, a 116-112 loss that evens the series 2-2, but he shot just 9-of-22 from the field and 2-of-7 from 3. The frustration was obvious for him. He is trying not to press, but the Nuggets are trying to force the ball out of his hands. He is trusting the pass, but the Nuggets want him to pass. He is a scorer; it's what makes him elite. But he also is committed to making the right play and leaning on his teammates. That is what worked in Games 2 and 3, with CJ McCollum, Rodney Hood, Enes Kanter and Maurice Harkless all having big games. Lillard is trying to pick his spots, waiting for the defense to soften.
Lillard's first quarter was brilliant in Game 4, with picture-perfect pocket passes and pinpoint dimes to shooters in the corners as he orchestrated around Denver's attention on him. Lillard lives for the crucial moments, though -- the dagger shots and game-changing plays. The Nuggets are committed to forcing someone else to make them. There hasn't been much of an opportunity for rhythm for Lillard. He started 4-of-14 from the floor and showed signs of frustration as he fought against forcing the issue.
"I think when you see a defense come at you that aggressively, you have to identify what you think they are trying to do and what you think they are trying to do," Lillard said. "Try to make them pay for it. Try to attack them with the pass, maybe the weak side or wherever the help is coming from, attack them there and try to take advantage of it. That way it breaks down, and maybe they go away from it or it softens up because they are paranoid about the other side scoring. Then get more aggressive after that to score the ball.
"If that's not working, then you have to figure it out. Maybe attack, get downhill more and try to draw some contact. Try to make them pay with the pass, and see if it will work out by giving the ball up. If not, you have to stay aggressive."
That mindset seemed to pay off in the fourth quarter, when Lillard scored 15 points on 5-of-8 shooting. The opportunities started to show, and he took them. However, he missed three free throws -- very un-Dame Time-like -- including a critical one with 20.3 seconds left that would've cut Denver's lead to one.
Besides Game 1, in which he scored 39 points, Lillard hasn't had that kind of dominant, unstoppable look he had against OKC. Denver guard Jamal Murray was asked what the Nuggets are doing to prevent that, and the whole time Murray answered, Nikola Jokic was scanning the stat sheet in front of him, frowning at it like something didn't add up.
"Brother, he scored 30 points," Jokic said, shaking his head at the questioner.
It was actually 28, and it certainly wasn't the 33 Lillard averaged against OKC that Malone referenced. It goes deeper than this series, too, with the Nuggets holding Lillard to 24.3 points, 40.3 percent from the field and 27.1 percent from 3 in eight games -- regular and postseason combined. Against the rest of the NBA, Lillard averaged 26.5 points on 44.9 percent shooting from the field and 38.2 percent from 3.
"We haven't done anything yet," Malone said with a cautionary tone. "It's a tied series, and we've taken home-court advantage back, but Dame is capable of putting up 40 and 50 in a heartbeat. So by no means do we think that we've figured him out."
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PORTLAND, Ore. -- Jamal Murray opened Game 4 driving baseline when he was forced to take a fading, behind-the-basket rainbow shot that floated over the backboard and dropped in.
The guard sealed the game with six clutch free throws in the final 13.2 seconds to help the Denver Nuggets pull off their gutsiest victory of the season with a 116-112 win over the Portland Trail Blazers to even this best-of-seven Western Conference semifinals 2-2.
Just more than 40 hours after dropping Game 3 in a grueling, four-overtime marathon that matched the longest in NBA playoff history, the Nuggets returned to the Moda Center determined not to let fatigue decide the outcome of their season. They responded by stealing home-court advantage back as the series shifts to Denver for Game 5 on Tuesday.
"You go down 1-3, we all know how that story ends," Denver coach Michael Malone said. "We never frayed, we stayed together, and I can't speak enough about the resiliency and toughness of our team."
With their brains just as weary as their legs following Friday's 3-hour, 25-minute test of wills, the Nuggets rode Murray and Nikola Jokic to their biggest bounce-back of the season. The duo became only the second pair of teammates to record a triple-double and a 30-point game in back-to-back playoff games since the Lakers' Magic Johnson and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar did so in 1980 against the Suns, according to Elias Sports Bureau research.
Murray opened the game with his Larry Bird-like, behind-the-basket rainbow trick shot and an emphatic first-quarter dunk over Enes Kanter complete with a scowl to set the tone for Denver. Murray scored 34 points for the second straight game to go with five rebounds and four assists.
After logging 65 minutes in Game 3, Jokic delivered his second consecutive triple-double with 21 points, 12 rebounds and 11 assists, despite being booed almost every time he touched the ball by Portland fans who thought he has been too physical with Kanter's injured left shoulder.
"We just said to ourselves, if we win today, last game doesn't really matter that much," Jokic said. "Yes, we played four overtimes, it was exhausting. But we want to make the last game not really matter."
Malone gave his team the day off from basketball on Saturday, as he wanted his players to recharge physically and mentally from the 140-137, four-overtime loss on Friday. No film. No shots. Just visits with the training staff if needed.
"For me, I eat good, I watch TV show, I eat good again, sleep," Jokic said. "And to be honest, I didn't think about that game the whole day."
The Nuggets got a scare with 47.9 seconds left when Jokic limped to the bench after getting hit in the side of his right knee. Jokic said his body went numb, but he returned at the end of the game and reported that he's fine.
Most would've expected Jokic's 7-foot, 285-pound body to go numb after he played the most playoff minutes by any NBA player since 1953. But the All-Star center responded with his fourth triple-double of the playoffs, marking the second-most triple-doubles by a player in his first postseason, behind Johnson's five triple-doubles.
Jokic's passing was on display when the game was on the line. He dished four consecutive assists for huge Denver baskets after the Blazers cut the Nuggets' lead to one with 3:26 remaining.
When Damian Lillard (28 points) and CJ McCollum (29 points) got the Blazers within two on three occasions in the final 20 seconds, Murray responded with a pair of free throws each time.
"Free throws [are] my thing," said Murray, who is a career 87.9 percent free throw shooter. "My dad and I do a lot of training free throws, blindfolded. He'll be talking to me just like the crowd is, put pressure on me. Take 1,000 free throws in practice to make one or two. Tonight it ended up being six."
In what is the first postseason for many of the young Nuggets, Denver lost Game 1 in the first round at home and Game 3 and Game 6 at San Antonio. Each time, the team bounced back with what was basically a must-win game against the Spurs.
After the Nuggets' biggest bounce-back yet, guard Gary Harris was asked about the Nuggets' resilience.
"Everybody just learn that word right now?" asked Jokic, standing next to Harris in the locker room.
No one questions the Nuggets' fortitude after they overcame one of the most physically challenging circumstances for a team to face. Not since 1953, when the only other four-overtime playoff game was played, has a team had to rebound from such a physically and mentally gut-wrenching loss.
"I really was confident because in close games this year, we're 13-3, decided by three points or less," Malone said. "We're 12-1 in the second nights of a back-to-back, best record in the NBA."
"To come in here and win this game 36 hours after losing a four-overtime game speaks to just how tough we are."
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How the Cubs already took over first place in the NL Central
Published in
Baseball
Sunday, 05 May 2019 21:49
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CHICAGO -- If there is such a thing as a baseball Hollywood script in early May, then the Chicago Cubs have the plot line down: Get off to a bad start -- inviting doubters from all over the game -- then turn things around to the tune of a seven-game winning streak culminating in a three-game sweep of the first-place team.
In pulling that off, the Cubs switched places with the St. Louis Cardinals, and they find themselves on top of the National League Central less than one month after a season-opening 2-7 road trip. The turnaround has been as dramatic as it reads.
"I didn't really anticipate this," manager Joe Maddon said before the Cubs beat the Cardinals 13-5 on Sunday. "I talked about [picking up] one game a week. That's normally how you do it. You don't normally have this quick rebound."
The Cubs just about doubled what Maddon thought was possible, picking up six games in the standings since April 7. How did they do it? This is where Hollywood would want to alter the script. There was no magic formula -- just good, solid baseball.
"Our pitchers have been great," Kris Bryant said. "Our at-bats have been great. Defense. Everything has really been clicking for us. This is the type of baseball that's super fun to be a part of."
Bryant provides a good example of what a stretch of a few bad games means over the course of a long season, for both an individual player and a team. It means little, especially when there's a track record involved, as there is for Bryant and the Cubs. Bryant put the icing on the cake on Sunday, when he hit an eighth-inning grand slam as part of an offensive attack that scored in five of eight innings and saw each starting position player collect at least one hit.
It would be hard to find a player more satisfied with how things are going than Bryant. He started the season slowly, enduring way too much early criticism, but has turned it on of late. Whether the results show or not -- they're starting to -- Bryant has been scorching the ball all over the field.
"I've been feeling really good at the plate," he said. "I feel like I've been hitting the ball so hard."
Bryant credits Maddon with watching old film of his at-bats and noticing a "quieter" hitter, especially during his MVP year in 2016.
"My philosophy of hitting is not to have much movement," Bryant said. "It shows in my swing. It's kind of what I got back to. It's nice to hit the ball hard all over the field."
It's also nice when the pitching can match the hitting. That wasn't the case the first week or so of the season, when the Cubs were walking way too many hitters. That changed after the opening road trip, and if anything has keyed the turnaround, it's a staff that is on fire right now. Since April 8, the Cubs' team ERA is 2.48. The next best in baseball in that time -- the Arizona Diamondbacks -- have a 3.40 mark. Let that sink in. Since the second week of the season, the Cubs are giving up one run fewer per game than the next best pitching staff.
"It starts with the starting pitching," Maddon said. "They've permitted us to get on this roll."
Jose Quintana is the definition of a starting pitcher on a roll. The Cubs have won his past five starts while he has compiled a 1.93 ERA, walking a total of five batters. He's just one of a group of pitchers who were maligned early in the season but have helped the team to the top of the standings.
Just like that, the Cubs have their swagger back, a swagger that comes with having the most regular-season wins in baseball over the past four years and earning four trips to the postseason in that time.
"I'd like to believe we have this inner swagger, always," Maddon said. "We're playing the game with a lot of energy. The pitching has set the tone."
Bryant shook his head when asked if he doubted the team even just a little when it started the season 1-6, 2-7 and 3-8.
"That was just kind of a weird start to the year," he said. "We all knew we had talent in here."
That talent has shown up in a big way. Even before the Sunday night win, the Cubs were the first team in 24 seasons to start the year at least five games under .500 and reach six games over by their 30th contest. A 17-5 stretch has put them seven games over .500 and in first place.
"We really turned it around since then," Bryant said. "Any time you can take three from the team that's in first, of course you're going to feel good about it."
As for that swagger Maddon was taking about, he doesn't care how it's described. He's feeling the same thing a huge Sunday night crowd was feeling as it chanted "sweep, sweep, sweep" in the closing moments of the May blockbuster movie entitled "Cubs take over first place."
"I just like the way we are," Maddon said. "However you want to write that, I like the way we are right now."
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Eliud Kipchoge targets sub-two-hour marathon in INEOS 1:59 Challenge
Published in
Athletics
Monday, 06 May 2019 00:21
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London could be the venue for the attempt set for autumn in front of ‘tens of thousands’ of spectators
Eliud Kipchoge has already accomplished more in the marathon than some perhaps ever thought possible.
But now, on the 65th anniversary of Sir Roger Bannister’s own piece of barrier-breaking athletics history, it has been confirmed that Kipchoge will again attempt to run a sub-two-hour marathon.
When Bannister ran the world’s first sub-four-minute mile at the Iffley Road track in Oxford on May 6, 1954, it was described as the ‘Everest of athletics’ and a barrier which, like the two-hour marathon, many thought couldn’t be broken.
But Olympic champion Kipchoge came close when he ran 2:00:25 for 26.2 miles at Nike’s specially-created ‘Breaking2’ event in Monza exactly two years ago and now believes he can go even faster.
Since that time trial in Italy, Kenya’s Kipchoge has gone on to break the official marathon world record with his time of 2:01:39 in Berlin last September and recently won his fourth Virgin Money London Marathon title in 2:02:37 for the second-fastest official time in history.
While in the UK for the London event, Kipchoge visited the Iffley Road track and it could be back in the UK that his next sub-two attempt takes place.
Organisers of the attempt have confirmed that it is being planned for late September or early October, which could mean a clash with the IAAF World Championships in Doha taking place from September 27 to October 6, though Sean Ingle of The Guardian has said he understands October 13 is a preferred date for the attempt.
When it comes to the course, options which offer a ‘flat looped circuit’ are said to be being investigated and ‘tens of thousands’ of spectators are expected to attend.
“I learnt a lot from my previous attempt and I truly believe that I can go 26 seconds faster than I did in Monza two years ago,” said Kipchoge.
“It gives me great pride to accept the challenge presented by INEOS.
“I am very excited about the months of good preparation to come and to show the world that when you focus on your goal, when you work hard and when you believe in yourself, anything is possible.”
Kipchoge’s time in Monza cannot be ratified as an official world record because of certain strategies used, including the way he was paced, and it is believed that similar strategies will be employed during his next attempt.
According to The Guardian, London’s Battersea Park is being considered as a venue, with Hugh Brasher – the son of Chris Brasher who helped to pace Bannister to his sub-four mile – said to be helping with the planning of the sub-two attempt as part of his role as the event director of the London Marathon.
The INEOS 1:59 Challenge is being supported by INEOS, one of the world’s largest manufacturing companies, which also sponsors children’s running charities GO Run For Fun and The Daily Mile.
“As Eliud showed in Monza, when he came within touching distance of achieving what many had previously thought impossible, he is a truly special athlete with incredible levels of mental resolve,” said Kipchoge’s coach, Patrick Sang.
“Throughout his dazzling marathon career he has pushed the event to a new stratosphere and with the right preparation, I believe he has the ability to make history.”
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McIlroy's silver lining entering PGA? The driver is back
Published in
Golf
Sunday, 05 May 2019 14:26
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CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Rory McIlroy’s closing 73 at the Wells Fargo Championship wasn’t what he’d hoped for, but he did find a silver lining as he prepares for his next start at the PGA Championship in two weeks.
After struggling with his driver at last month’s Masters, the Northern Irishman said he was pleased with the progress he made off the tee at Quail Hollow Club, where he finished second in strokes gained: off-the-tee.
Instead he said his focus before heading to Bethpage for the year’s second major will be on his short game. Specifically, McIlroy said he wants to be more consistent with his chipping after an equipment change prior to the Masters.
“I didn't feel like I chipped the ball particularly well this week,” said McIlroy, who finished tied for eighth. “I was sort of messing around with a 64 [degree wedge] going into Augusta and so I was practicing with that a good bit and then just went back to the 60 [degree wedge] last week. I was sort of in between two wedges a little bit.”
McIlroy said he doesn’t plan to make a scouting trip to Bethpage before the PGA Championship and suggested the setup will be more forgiving than it is when the layout hosts the U.S. Open.
“I think it will be set up very similarly to the way the PGA Tour events were set up,” he said. “It's sort of fair, it's right in front of you. I think [PGA of America chief championships officer] Kerry Haigh does a really good job, so somewhere in the region of 8 to 12 under par will probably win.”
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DALY CITY, Calif. — Sei Young Kim overcame a rough start to win the LPGA Mediheal Championship on Sunday at cold and windy Lake Merced, outlasting Bronte Law and Jeongeun Lee6 with a birdie on the first hole of a playoff.
Three strokes ahead entering the day, Kim opened double bogey-bogey and dropped another stroke on No. 8. The 26-year-old South Korean birdied the par-5 15th to regain a share of the lead, dropped back with a bogey on the par-3 17th and birdied the par-5 18th for a 3-over 75 and a spot in the playoff at 7-under 281.
Law closed with a 65, finishing more than two hours before Kim, and Lee6 had a 67.
Kim won for the eighth time on the LPGA Tour, improving to 4-0 in playoffs. She nearly retraced her regulation path on the 18th in the playoff, almost driving into her own divot and hitting another 4-iron from 199 yards a foot closer than before onto the front right fringe.
Law left her approach short and right and pitched to 6 feet. Lee6's approach bounced into the middle of the green, leaving her a 40-foot eagle putt that she hit 6 feet past. After Kim putted to 2 feet, Law missed her birdie putt to the right, and Lee6's try went left. Kim then ended it.
Law, the 24-year-old former UCLA star from England, missed a chance to tie the LPGA Tour record for the largest comeback at 10 strokes. She made five birdies in a six-hole stretch in the middle of the round and reached 7 under with a 4-wood to 4 feet for eagle on No. 15.
Lee6 played the final four holes in regulation in 4 under, holing a 12-footer for eagle on 15 and making birdies on 16 and 18. The 22-year-old South Korean has the number in her name because she was the sixth player with the same name on the Korean LPGA. She has embraced the number, answering to it and writing a large ''6'' on her balls. Her South Korean fan club is called ''Lucky 6.'' Jeongeun Lee5 also plays the LPGA Tour.
Lexi Thompson, Amy Yang, Eun-Hee Ji and Charley Hull tied for fourth at 5 under. Thompson, Yang and Ji each shot 71, and Hull had a 74. Hull eagled the 15th to get within a stroke of the lead, then bogeyed the 16th and parred the final two.
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Law comes up short in playoff, but moves up in European Solheim Cup rankings
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Golf
Sunday, 05 May 2019 15:43
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DALY CITY, Calif. – Bronte Law is a match-play dynamo with her heart set on making the European Solheim Cup team headed to Scotland in September.
The 24-year-old Englishwoman took a large step toward doing that with her nearly historic finish Sunday at the Mediheal Championship.
Ten shots down at day’s start, Law went on a tear in the middle of her round, making five birdies and an eagle in a nine-hole stretch to shoot 7-under-par 65. She was tied for the lead when she signed her scorecard two hours ahead of the final group. She actually went up by a shot waiting in the clubhouse, before finally being caught by Sei Young Kim and Jeoneun Lee6, and before losing to Kim in a three-way playoff.
Law didn’t match the LPGA record for a final-round comeback and didn’t get her first title, but there was satisfying consolation.
Law started this week seventh on the European Solheim Cup world rankings list, but she is expected to move into the top five with Sunday’s tie for second. That’s big, because the top five will make the team when qualifying ends at the conclusion of the Ladies Scottish Open (Aug. 11). She could also make the team by finishing among the top three on the LET Solheim Cup points list. She isn’t currently among the top 15 on that list.
“It’s huge,” Law said. “I went to LET Q-School for a reason. I really want to make that team.”
Law earned LET membership in December winning Q-School medalist honors. She needed LET membership to be eligible to make the European team. She showed her explosiveness there making an LET record nine birdies in a row in the third round.
As an amateur, Law distinguished herself in match play. Three years ago, she became the first player from Great Britain and Ireland to go 5-0 in the Curtis Cup. She also helped England make a hard run at nearly upsetting the South Koreans at the UL International Crown last fall.
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Kim prevails at Mediheal, proves she can win with any score, on any course
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Golf
Sunday, 05 May 2019 16:17
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DALY CITY, Calif. – Sei Young Kim hoisted the Mediheal Championship trophy late Sunday with her caddie marveling in the background.
Paul Fusco has watched his player win every which way now.
He watched her put on a spectacular fireworks show winning the Thornberry Classic last year, smashing the LPGA’s 72-hole scoring record. Her 31-under total was four shots better than the previous tour record, which she shared with Hall of Famer Annika Sorenstam. Fusco was on the bag when Kim went on that birdie blitz in Phoenix to win the Founders Cup in 2016 to tie Sorenstam’s mark.
Fusco was also there her rookie year, when Kim beat her idol, Inbee Park, in jaw-dropping fashion at the Lotte Championship in 2015. That’s the year Kim rinsed her approach at the 72nd hole, looking as if she was going to blow a chance to win her second LPGA title. But after taking a penalty drop, she holed an 8-iron from 154 yards for par to force the playoff with Park.
“She’s one of those special players,” Fusco said. “When she’s firing on cylinders, she can do crazy things. Today, she showed she can do it even when she doesn’t look like she’s on her game. She showed she can still win.”
With Sunday’s victory, Kim showed she can win when par’s a good score.
Lake Merced was dressed up like a major, with pinched fairways, thick and gnarly rough and firm, undulating greens.
She has now won at 31-under and at 7-under.
“I think this was the hardest win of my life,” Kim said, who is now 4-0 in LPGA playoffs. “In my other wins, I played well in the final rounds. Today, I wasn’t good in the final round.”
Kim won despite shooting a 3-over-par 75.
She beat Jeongeun Lee6 and Bronte Law with a birdie on the first playoff hole.
This was Kim’s eighth LPGA title, her first “come-from-ahead” victory. That’s what it felt like after she gave away a three-shot lead over the first two holes. She squandered it with a double bogey at the first and a bogey at the second. She shot 40 on the front nine.
It didn’t take long before Kim was chasing, with Law putting on a show in front of her. Law shot 65 in a torrid run of five birdies and an eagle in a nine-hole stretch in the middle of the round.
“The feeling was 'Just hang in there, you did it in the first round and you came back and you can do it again,’” Fusco said.
Kim started the tournament just as poorly. She didn’t look like she was going to make the cut on Thursday. She was 4 over after her first four holes in the first round.
“Something we talk a lot about is not reacting, not getting too emotional when things aren’t going well,” Fusco said. “It just makes the game easier.
“The media always wants to know what a player’s thinking. We don’t really want to do too much thinking. It’s 'Here is the number, hit it.’ I know that’s not what the media wants to hear. It’s not the entertaining thing to say, but it’s really just that simple.”
Kim won on a golf course she didn’t really like.
“It didn’t suit my eye, because of a lot of trees,” Kim said. “I kept talking to myself, telling myself, 'I like this golf course.’ ... I do like it now.”
Kim has now won in each of her first five seasons on tour.
“I learned a lot today,” Kim said.
She learned there may not be a setup she can’t conquer.
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