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I Dig Sports
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CHICAGO -- Suspended Chicago Cubs shortstop Addison Russell will play seven games at Triple-A Iowa beginning Wednesday before being eligible to rejoin the big league club on May 3.
Russell, 25, was suspended 40 games in September for violating the league's domestic abuse policy after details emerged about his former marriage.
Under league rules, Russell is allowed to play up to seven games in the minors before his suspension is complete. He has been working out at the Cubs' spring complex in Mesa, Arizona, this month after participating in spring training with the club.
"I know he's eager and anxious to get out there," manager Joe Maddon said Tuesday. "My conversations with him have been about baseball and how he's feeling."
The Cubs have monitored Russell's mandated counseling, calling his return to the Cubs a "conditional second chance."
Maddon was asked if the Cubs are prepping Russell for what could be a less than positive response from some fans when he returns.
"Let's get him playing, and then after that we'll make our call," Maddon said. "I'm certain we'll discuss those kinds of things prior to him getting here."
It's not clear what role Russell has with the team right now. National League MVP runner-up Javier Baez has thrived at shortstop, and the Cubs are well off at second base with Ben Zobrist, Daniel Descalso and David Bote sharing playing time.
There's still a chance that Russell could be traded, just as Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Roberto Osuna was last season with days left on his suspension for the same violation.
The Cubs did make one move on Tuesday, as Bote was placed on paternity leave, and the team recalled lefty reliever Randy Rosario. Bote is expected back on Wednesday.
Indians' Carrasco exits in 4th, awaits MRI on knee
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Cleveland Indians starting pitcher Carlos Carrasco left in the fourth inning of Tuesday night's 3-1 loss to the Miami Marlins with what the team said was left knee discomfort.
Manager Terry Francona said Carrasco will have a precautionary MRI on the knee.
Carrasco, 32, suffered the injury when he landed hard scrambling to catch Carlos Santana's errant throw while trying to cover first base. Carrasco finished the inning, but Francona, not wanting to take any chances, pulled him for reliever Neil Ramirez to start the fifth.
Carrasco pitched four shutout innings and struck out four before being forced to leave. He is 2-2 with a 6.00 ERA this season.
It's the latest injury for Carrasco, who has missed significant time in previous seasons with assorted injuries, many of them unlucky.
His absence will put further stress on Cleveland's rotation, which is already missing Mike Clevinger because of a back strain.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
MLB looks at Harper's rant; no call on discipline
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NEW YORK -- Major League Baseball is reviewing Bryce Harper's rant at an umpire, trying to determine whether the Philadelphia Phillies star should be disciplined.
There was no decision Tuesday, a day after Harper went wild during a game against the New York Mets at Citi Field.
Harper was ejected for the 12th time in his eight-season career as he barked from the dugout four batters after being called out on strikes by Mark Carlson.
Phillies manager Gabe Kapler walked toward the plate to argue, then Harper bolted from the bench. He repeatedly yelled and pointed at Carlson from close range. While trying to hold back Harper, Kapler bumped into the umpire.
Kapler spoke to MLB executive Joe Torre and the umpires before Tuesday night's game against the Mets.
"I felt nothing," Kapler said. "Doesn't mean there wasn't contact."
Philadelphia's Jake Arrieta was the losing pitcher Monday night and later called out Harper, saying the high-priced All-Star slugger needs to keep himself on the field, no matter what.
Harper is in the first season of a 13-year, $330 million contract.
"He's fiery, he's competitive, he's aggressive and he's a strong figure," Kapler said. "I think he understands what he needs to do."
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The AW contributor shares some of his favourite athletics books
I recently counted the athletics book on my shelves and was surprised to find about 50. Some were published as far back as the 1940s, others in the past year or two. For this article I have selected some of my favourites – a tall order indeed.
Eric Liddell, who won gold in the 1924 Olympics after switching from the 100m to the 400m because his Christian conscience did not allow him to run the shorter event on a Sunday, is the most written about athlete. I have 10 books on the shelves about him.
The best and most recent is For the Glory: The Life of Eric Liddell by Duncan Hamilton (Doubleday, 2016. ISBN: 9780857522597) which covers his athletics well but also the latter part of his life in a Japanese prison camp. The 1924 Olympic 100m title was won by Harold Abrahams, whose story is told in Running with Fire: The True Story of Chariots of Fire Hero Harold Abrahams by Mark Ryan.
Emil Zátopek was arguably the greatest distance runner of all time. Remarkably two books were published about him in 2016.
For me the better one was Today We Die a Little: The Rise and Fall of Emil Zátopek, Olympic Legend by Richard Askwith (Yellow Jersey, 2016. ISBN: 9780224100342). The book presents Zátopek as much more than just the greatest distance runner ever. It gets inside the man who achieved everything “with a grace and generosity of spirit that transcended sport”.
The men’s 100m is often seen as a highlight of the athletics programme. In 100 Metre Men by Neil Duncanson (André Deutsch/Carlton, 2016. IBSN : 9780233005027) the author writes about every winner of the Olympic race from 1904 onwards. It is gripping reading. The range is fascinating. “These fast men are an extraordinary blend of success and disaster, as well as glory and tragedy; ranging from amazing wealth to grinding poverty, superstar adulation and national hero status to bankruptcy, shame, prison, even suicide.”
My shelves have three Usain Bolt books but the one I like best is The Bolt Supremacy: Inside Jamaica’s Sprint Factory by Richard Moore (Yellow Jersey, 2015. ISBN 9780224092302). Moore sets out to investigate how Jamaica has managed to dominate sprinting in recent years and finds some interesting answers.
Modern British athletes Mo Farah, Jo Pavey, Jess Ennis-Hill and Greg Rutherford have all published autobiographies. As I have to choose one, I will go for Rutherford’s – Unexpected (London Simon and Schuster, 2016. ISBN: 9781471162527).
Rutherford starts the book with a clear statement: “I hate sports autobiographies. Most bore me to death. So before I started writing this, I had a clear condition in my mind: I had to be brutally honest. I didn’t want this to be a conventional, sugar-coated, bland tale of a developing sportsman.” The book is certainly not PC and bland.
I shouldn’t really mention my own contribution – Kriss (Marshall Pickering (Harper Collins), 1996. ISBN: 0551030291) – but I will!
For further assessment of a number of the athletics books I have read, see veritesport.org
Barcelona Open: British number two Cameron Norrie loses in first round
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British number two Cameron Norrie lost 6-2 6-2 to Spain's Albert Ramos Vinolas in the first round of the Barcelona Open on Tuesday.
The 23-year-old, who climbed to 45th in the latest ATP world rankings, lost serve at the start of both sets before losing the final three games.
Vinolas, 31, is ranked 38 places below the Briton and will now face Russia's Daniil Medvedev in the last 32.
Norrie is set to play at next month's French Open at Roland Garros.
The loss comes less than a week after Norrie exited the Monte Carlo Masters in the round of 16 to Italian Lorenzo Sonego, ranked 40 places below him.
Justin Gimelstob: ATP to decide on future after court sentencing
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Justin Gimelstob's future will be decided by the ATP after the leading tennis administrator was sentenced for assault in Los Angeles on Monday.
Gimelstob, a retired two-time mixed doubles Grand Slam winner, was handed three years probation and 60 days community service after pleading "no contest" to a battery charge.
The American is one of three player representatives on the ATP board.
Gimelstob, 42, has also worked as a coach and TV commentator.
An ATP statement read: "The decision was taken to let the judicial process run its course before any judgement was made on his future, so with that process complete this is now a subject for review by the board and/or the player council.
"As a related matter, the election for the role of the next Americas player representative on the ATP board - the position currently held by Gimelstob - will take place as scheduled on Tuesday, 14 May, in Rome."
The players' council, led by Novak Djokovic, has the power to remove him, but would need the consent of at least six of its 10 members.
Former friend Randall Kaplan alleged that early in the evening of 31 October, Gimelstob "punched him in the head and face more than 50 times" in front of Kaplan's pregnant wife Madison and two-year-old daughter.
Madison went on to have a miscarriage, which the couple believe was a result of the stress of the attack.
Gimelstob, who was also compelled to attend anger management classes by the court, partnered Venus Williams to win the Australian and French Opens in 1998 and twice reached the men's doubles quarter-finals at Wimbledon.
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Some three years ago, 65 year old Nenad Bach, a prominent peace activist who appeared alongside the late Luciano Pavarotti in 1995 at a humanitarian concert for the children of Bosnia and Herzegovina, was diagnosed with Parkinson’s. He started to play table tennis; the result is life has improved.
“Parkinson’s is not a disease, it is a diagnosis.” Nenad Bach
Now, following the signing of a contract with the ITTF Foundation, the inaugural Parkinson World Championships will be staged from Friday 11th to Sunday 13th October at the Westchester Club in New York, the club owned by Will Shortz, the man who designs the crosswords for the New York Times.
Present for the signing in Budapest was Thomas Weikert, ITTF President alongside Steve Dainton, ITTF Chief Executive Officer, Leandro Olvech, ITTF Foundation Director and fellow Croatian, Zoran Primorac, Chair of the ITTF Athletes’ Commission.
“I met Nenad at the World Parkinson Day gathering in Zagreb in 2017, we spoke, we played and it interested me that table tennis could help him; so for me it was how best we could promote the cause. I am grateful to the ITTF for the support, after only one year we have a world championships.” Zoran Primorac
A motivated Zoran Primorac, now there is a highly inspired group of delegates, Marko Spes, Kreso Grobenski, Silvio Grobenski and Danijela Pospis all actively supporting the initiative of the championships.
All are inspired by the positive, forward thinking of Nenad Bach; such initiatives are very much at the heart of Thomas Weikert who sees sport in a wide sphere, more than competition, more than winning and losing.
“We met last year in Halmstad, a pillar of our programme within the ITTF Foundation is health, so we looked at what we could do to support.” Thomas Weikert.
Moreover, Nenad Bach demonstrated the fact that table tennis has helped his musical ability by playing the guitar to the strains of a song written for the occasion.
“My posture is better through playing table tennis, I shake less, I think better and my syncopation when playing the guitar is better. I played table tennis in my youth, it’s an inexpensive sport, everyone can play; it is a sport that is beneficial to all of us.” Nenad Bach
The music was appreciated by all, most certainly in Steve Dainton, Nenad Bach has a fan.
“Last year in Halmstad it was one of those moments you will never forget; it was a step of how we could work together. I am really excited about this first world championship.” Steve Dainton
In Budapest from all concerned there is a sense of anticipation, a sense that table tennis can achieve what no other sport can achieve; a sport that is to the benefit of mankind, a sport that is ahead of the field.
Full details of the Parkinson World Championships will be issued shortly; watch this space.
Luxembourg pays respecting follow death of Grand Duke
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The following statement was issued by Grand Duke Henri:
“It is with great sadness that I inform you of the death of my beloved father, His Royal Highness Grand Duke Jean, who has passed away in peace, surrounded by the affection of his family.”
Born on Wednesday 5th January 1921, Jean Benoît Guillaume Robert Antoine Louis Marie Adolphe Marc d’Aviano, when 19 years old and the heir to the throne, fled the Grand Duchy under the protection of the French army following the invasion of German forces on Thursday 9th May 1940.
He lived in exile in France, Portugal, the United States and Canada, alongside other members of the royal family, before arriving in Great Britain where, following the advice of King George VI, he volunteered for the Irish Guards in November 1942.
Notably he trained at the celebrated Royal Military College, Sandhurst in England. Later, he was a member of the Allied forces that took part in the now famous Normandy landings, one of the most daring amphibious operations in history; the enemy holding a strong defensive position. He landed near Bayeux on Sunday 11th June 1944, five days after D-day.
Additionally he was involved in the liberation of Luxembourg, the country having been annexed by Nazi forces.
He married Princess Joséphine-Charlotte of Belgium in 1953, and together they had five children. Most notably, he completely changed the Luxembourg from a country with a weak economic structure to a major financial centre.
Meanwhile, in the sporting world he was a prominent member of the International Olympic Committee (IOC). He was Chair of the IOC Rules Reviewing Commission from 1973 to 1976, he was also a member of the IOC Commission of Enquiry for the Winter Games in 1968 and 1969.
Saddened by the passing André Hartmann, the President of the Luxembourg Table Tennis Federation added his condolences with a degree of pride.
“Prince Louis, a son of the actual Grand Duke Henri is the patron of the Luxembourg Table Tennis Federation. The Luxembourg table tennis team showed a great sign of compassion and expression of condolence to the Grand Ducal family.” André Hartmann
In 2000, he abdicated from office after almost 36 years on the throne in favour of his son Henri.
Jonah Holmes: Leicester Tigers and Wales wing to have operation
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Leicester Tigers and Wales wing Jonah Holmes has been ruled out for the rest of the season with a torn hamstring.
Holmes is due to have surgery and will miss Leicester's final three games as they fight to avoid relegation from the Premiership.
The 26-year-old, who joined the Welford Road club from Yorkshire Carnegie in 2017 and has two Wales caps, has scored six tries in 19 games this season.
"I'm gutted to not be able to play a part in the next three games," he said.
"But I have every bit of confidence in the lads to get the job done and finish this campaign on a high."
Leicester are 10th in the Premiership table, just eight points above bottom club Newcastle Falcons, and host Bristol Bears on Saturday.
What you need to know about the final day of the Pro14 season
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The regular season in the Pro14 reaches a climax on Saturday with seven matches in four countries.
Defending champions Leinster have clinched the Conference B title and with it a home game in the play-off semi finals.
But Glasgow and Munster can both still win Conference A, and there is a battle for third place in Conference B between Benetton, Edinburgh and Scarlets.
Can Benetton claim a Champions Cup spot for Italy, and will any Welsh region make it into Europe's top tournament?
The final weekend - where every game is a local derby - was designed to keep interest high when there was a danger of dead rubbers dominating.
As it turns out, there's a lot more than just local bragging rights at stake.
Here's a closer look:
Conference A
AT STAKE: Top spot and fourth place.
Glasgow and Munster are out to claim first place and a home draw in the Pro14 semi-finals.
Warriors face Edinburgh at home in a match that could also decide whether Edinburgh make it into the Pro14 play-offs and qualify for the Champions Cup by finishing in the top three in Conference B - more of those permutations below.
For Glasgow the equation is simple - win and they finish top of Conference A. Lose, and Munster can overtake them by beating Connacht, who are safe in third place and cannot catch Munster, who will be keen to secure home advantage in the play-offs after the disappointment of their Champions Cup semi-final defeat by Saracens.
Perhaps the most compelling match of the weekend is the Judgement Day clash at the Principality Stadium in Cardiff, where the Blues tackle Ospreys with fourth place up for grabs.
Is it strange to be worried about finishing fourth? Not if fourth secures a chance to qualify for the European Champions Cup in a play-off against the team finishing fourth in Conference A.
It boils down to that in Cardiff, with Blues trailing their rivals by a point after consecutive defeats against Munster and Connacht.
In a season where there is still a danger of no Welsh region qualifying for the premier European tournament in 2019-20, it's a big incentive.
The Blues and Ospreys might be drinking in the second chance saloon, but it promises to be quite a session...
Conference B
AT STAKE: The final Pro14 championship play-off place and automatic qualification for European Champions Cup.
With the top two places sealed by Leinster and Ulster, it's all about third and fourth place in Conference B.
Benetton are currently third and strong favourites as they visit Italian rivals Zebre in their final match. It was close the last time the teams met in Stadio Sergio Lanfranchi, when Benetton won 10-8.
Zebre have won only three league matches all season - all at home against Southern Kings, Edinburgh and Cardiff Blues.
Zebre's motivation is pride, while Benetton have a Pro14 end-of-season play-off and a guaranteed place in the European Champions' Cup at stake.
Edinburgh travel to Glasgow hoping for a win and a slip-up by Benetton.
The fact the Warriors need a win to seal the Conference A crown and with it a home draw in the Pro14 semi final is an issue for the visitors. Finishing top means one game fewer in the play-offs.
It is a tough ask for Edinburgh, who could miss out on even fourth place and a play-off for Champions Cup qualification if they lose and Scarlets beat Dragons in Cardiff.
Scarlets were Pro12 Champions two years ago and Champions Cup semi-finalists last season, but have been a shadow of that side this season.
However, if Benetton and Edinburgh slip up they could still find themselves sealing third with a bonus-point win against their Welsh rivals at the Principality Stadium.
The omens are good on that front. Scarlets have won the last 10 meetings between the sides - but they need a bonus point this time in what could be the final game in charge for the coaching team of Wayne Pivac, Stephen Jones and Byron Hayward, who all join Wales next season.
Even then, Scarlets could miss out on fourth place if other results go against them. Finish fourth, however, and there will be an all-Welsh showdown with Cardiff Blues or Ospreys on 17 or 18 May, with the winners qualifying for the Champions Cup.
Scarlets have appeared in the tournament every year since the advent of regional rugby in 2003.
Play-off schedule:
Quarter finals (4 May): Ulster v Connacht (QF 2); 2nd Conf B v 3rd Conf A (QF1)
Semi finals: (17 or 18 May) - Leinster v Winner QF 1; Glasgow or Munster v Ulster or Connacht
Final: (25 May) Celtic Park, Glasgow
Champions Cup play off: (17 or 18 May) - 4th Conference A v 4th Conference B (venue TBC).