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Harlequins and former Scotland wing Tim Visser is to retire at the end of the current season.

The 31-year-old ended his Test career a year ago and will now quit the professional game to "move on to new challenges outside of rugby".

Netherlands-born Visser, known as the "The Flying Dutchman", scored 14 tries in 33 Tests after qualifying for Scotland through residency in 2012.

His 66 games for Quins have brought 39 tries since his arrival in 2015.

Visser started his professional career at Newcastle after being discovered playing sevens in the Netherlands.

He moved on to Edinburgh, where he was leading try-scorer in the old Pro12 league for four successive seasons in a six-year spell in the Scottish capital, before moving south to Quins.

Visser will not be involved as Paul Gustard's side - one point behind fourth-placed Northampton - target victory over Wasps in Coventry on Saturday in the final game of the regular English Premiership season, which could see them snatch the final play-off spot.

'Fantastic servant'

"I'd like to thank everyone at Harlequins for the opportunity to be part of such a fantastic club; I've thoroughly enjoyed my time here," Visser said.

"I feel now is the time for me to move on to new challenges outside of rugby with my young family. I'm looking forward to trying and proving myself in a completely different career."

Harlequins head of rugby Gustard praised Visser's "exceptional career", calling him "a fantastic servant" to the club.

"I have thoroughly enjoyed his company and have always respected his commitment, attitude and humour since I joined the club last July," Gustard added.

"He is an immensely valued and very popular member of the squad whom we will miss. We all wish him and his family the very best as he embarks on a new adventure.'

Danny Cipriani has the chance to win another award after being nominated for Premiership Player of the Season.

The 31-year-old Gloucester fly-half has already won the Rugby Players Association's annual award.

Sale scrum-half and World Player of the Year nominee Faf De Klerk and Saracens' European Player of the Year Alex Goode are also on the six-man shortlist.

Exeter's Matt Kvesic, Northampton's Cobus Reinach and Bristol's Steven Luatua are the other nominees.

The final round of fixtures in the Premiership's regular season take place on Saturday, with Northampton and Harlequins competing to join Exeter, Saracens and Gloucester in the play-offs.

Finland, Czech Republic cruise to shutout wins

Published in Hockey
Friday, 17 May 2019 15:26

KOSICE, Slovakia -- Mikko Lehtonen had a goal and an assist as Finland shut out Britain 5-0 at the hockey world championships on Friday.

Toni Rajala, Atte Ohtamaa and Joel Kiviranta each scored in the second period before Kristian Kuusela stretched the lead to 4-0 with an empty-net goal in the third. Lehtonen finished it off with a power-play goal with 11 seconds remaining.

Finland moved into first in Group B with 13 points after five games, but it has played one more game than undefeated Germany. Britain, which returned to the top division after 25 years, has not won any of its five games and has been outscored 31-4.

Slovakia rebounded from three straight losses with a 6-3 victory over France on Friday, keeping alive its slim hopes of reaching the quarterfinals.

Richard Panik scored and had two assists and Erik Cernak had a goal and an assist for Slovakia, which moved into fifth in Group A with six points after five games. The top four teams from each eight-team group advance to the quarterfinals.

Slovakia led 3-0 midway through the second period before France answered with a pair of goals, but the Slovaks scored three times in the first six minutes of the third period.

France, which lost to Denmark in a shootout on Saturday, has not won any of its five games.

In Bratislava, the Czech Republic routed Italy 8-0 as Michael Frolik and Dmitrij Jaskin each scored twice.

Radko Gudas also scored, with his slap shot from the center line surprising goaltender Marco de Filippo Roia in the second period.

The Czechs are tied with unbeaten Russia and Switzerland atop Group B with 12 points, but they have played one more game. Italy has not scored in its five games and has allowed 38 goals.

Earlier in Group B, Norway beat Austria 5-3 in a meeting of two teams looking for their first victory.

The big winners of the 2019 NHL playoffs (so far)

Published in Hockey
Thursday, 16 May 2019 08:30

Whenever we get this deep into the NHL playoffs, we tend to do the dance of sizing up the teams that are left standing. While there's certainly a good chunk of randomness and luck that goes into any extended postseason run, there's also just as many reasons why these particular teams have managed to keep winning games and advancing.

The beauty of it all is that there isn't just one way to be successful in this sport, which provides us with plenty of opportunities to get valuable nuggets of information from a number of different sources.

Let's bounce around the league and take a closer look at some of the prevailing themes from the 2019 Stanley Cup playoffs. Here are a few of the more notable winners that have emerged thus far, whether they be players, teams or big-picture concepts. We'll leave all talk of controversial officiating and reviews to a potential "biggest losers" column, because that's been the obvious elephant in the room this season, calling into question a process that desperately needs to be overhauled moving forward. Now, on to actual hockey.

Note: All data in this piece is courtesy of Natural Stat Trick and Corsica.

Jump ahead: Most outstanding player | Workload management
Offensive innovation | Making big trades | Sharks' run continues


The most outstanding player

Even though they're no longer alive in this year's playoffs, the Colorado Avalanche are a big winner because they gave us a sneak peek at what looks like an awfully bright future. Not only do they already have a young nucleus in place that figures to continue improving, but they're also primed to build on it further this summer with their financial spending room and draft capital (including two first-round picks, one of which is fourth overall).

But it all runs through Nathan MacKinnon, who was unequivocally the single most electrifying force we've been exposed to all postseason. He quickly became the talk of the entire league throughout the first two rounds, winning the attention of the hockey world and forcing us all to make Avalanche games appointment television. It really shows the importance of playing on the biggest stage in front of a national audience, which gives added credence to people's frustrations with Edmonton Oilers management over how they have deprived us of getting to enjoy Connor McDavid in similar circumstances over the past two years.

MacKinnon's combination of speed and power is unmatched, manifesting itself most often in absolutely breathtaking end-to-end solo rushes. There may be players who are faster straight-line skaters, and there may be players who are stronger on their skates, but there is no one who is able to jam both qualities together into the same frame as well as he does, going from zero to 100 in the blink of an eye.

Most impressive about his postseason production was the sheer volume of minutes he was able to play, averaging 23:43 per contest. In retrospect, it seems almost inhuman that he was able to play as much as he did, considering the force he was exerting on those shifts and the pace at which he was zipping around the ice.

The surest sign of respect for his play was the care with which the San Jose Sharks handled him in their second-round series. They certainly made sure not to fly too close to the sun, taking every precaution possible to protect themselves from MacKinnon's blinding greatness. They went above and beyond in catering their entire defensive game plan and player usage toward trying to slow him down, making sure to have the duo of Marc-Edouard Vlasic and Logan Couture out there whenever he stepped on the ice. It ultimately proved to be successful as they squeaked out a Game 7 victory on home ice, but just barely, and not before he made them work for every single bit of it.

It's a shame that MacKinnon and the Avalanche are no longer around in these playoffs, but it's hard not to view their run as a smashing success, and it's even harder not to be tremendously excited about what's next for them.


Goaltender workload management

"Workload management" has become a trendy term in NBA circles, with star players selectively sitting out back-to-backs in an attempt to play the long game with their bodies. To the surprise of no one, it's a concept that's been slower to catch on in the NHL, where there's an admirable, yet misguided, deep-rooted belief that players should continue playing through pain and injuries at all costs (even if bones are broken and organs are punctured).

But it's only a matter of time before that begins to change, and we're already seeing signs of it. For starters, earlier this season we looked at how workhorse goalies were becoming an endangered species. It's a change in philosophy that's been brewing for years now, and this season was just the latest natural progression in that evolution.

With more and more teams buying into the importance of sports science and performance optimization, we've seen goalie usage around the league dialed back as a result. Considering the physical and mental demands of the position, it makes sense that those with aspirations of playing deep into the spring would be wise to avoid burning out their goalies in the regular season.

It's no accident that this has been somewhat of a recurring theme for teams that have enjoyed playoff success of late. This postseason has been an extension of that, because it felt like we saw more 1A-1B tandems than ever before, and considering the largely positive results, it stands to reason that we'll only see more of it moving forward. Just look at how the teams that won at least one playoff round distributed their goalie starts throughout the regular season:

Even the two teams that bucked the trend and played their starters north of 60 times had their reasons. As shaky as Martin Jones was, Aaron Dell -- who had an .886 save percentage and saved an astounding 14.75 goals below league average in just 25 games -- forced San Jose's hand because he was somehow even worse. The Blue Jackets were incentivized to ride Sergei Bobrovsky as much as possible because they were battling for a playoff spot until the very end, and with him likely leaving this summer anyway, there were no real concerns about any long-term ramifications stemming from the added wear and tear.

Of everyone on the list, the biggest beneficiary has undoubtedly been Tuukka Rask, who enjoyed a softer workload this season than he has in any full season since 2011-12. Looking fresh as can be, he has really turned back the clock this postseason, paying the Bruins back with a vintage throwback performance. In his 17 playoff appearances, he's sporting a ridiculous .942 save percentage overall and has saved the team 13.65 goals above league average (both of which are easily tops among all playoff goalies). He has not only consistently held his ground, but has elevated his game when the team needed it most.

In the opening round against Toronto, he saved his best performance for the do-or-die Game 7 setting. Against the Blue Jackets he outplayed Bobrovsky rather thoroughly, giving up just four goals against combined over the course of the final three games after the Bruins went down 2-1 in the series. And against Carolina he stood on his head when the Hurricanes threw the kitchen sink at him in front of their raucous home crowd in Game 3, stopping 35 of 36 shots he faced and giving Boston a 3-0 stranglehold on the series. He then followed that up with a shutout in Game 4, closing out the feisty Hurricanes and punching Boston's ticket to the Cup Final.

He's been Boston's best player throughout, and he's fully earned his status as the front-runner for the Conn Smythe Trophy through the first three rounds. He may be 32 years old, but he's looking and playing like the 22-year-old phenom who came into our lives throwing milk crates in viral videos. While even the Bruins surely couldn't have expected these kinds of playoff results, they're being rewarded for how they handled the situation in the lead-up to this postseason.


Offensive innovation

Unlike in basketball, where the NBA has undergone a radical 3-point revolution, or baseball, where MLB hitters are obsessed with launch angles, the offensive innovation in hockey has been far more subtle.

NHL teams have been using four forwards and just one defenseman on their power play for several years now, and in recent seasons they've begun pulling their goalies when facing a third-period deficit earlier than they ever would've dreamed of before. But for the most part, the league still has a well-earned "conservative" label, and coaches largely remain reticent to try unorthodox things because it means exposing themselves to criticism, and ultimately the chopping block, if those ideas don't work out.

The good news is that desperate times call for desperate measures, and the postseason typically lends itself to teams pushing the envelope in an attempt to squeeze out any additional offense they can muster. There's been a number of notable examples where teams have admirably gone down swinging. I'm a big believer in the idea that if you're going to lose, at least do it with your very best so that you don't have to spend the entire offseason wondering what could have been.

It's easy to forget now, because it will always be overshadowed by the phantom five-minute major to Cody Eakin and the eventual overtime defeat, but the reason the Golden Knights even made it that far in the first place was because they scored a game-tying goal in the final minute. With the goalie pulled and the clock ticking down on their season, they decided to forgo using any defensemen, giving all six available spots to the forwards that occupy their top two scoring lines. It's a rare occasion that called for that type of aggression, but it was also fascinating to see a team not only do it, but successfully pull it off.

More typically, we've seen coaches make a habit of putting their usual player combinations in a blender depending on the game setting. More specifically, there are notable examples where they've capitalized on higher-leverage offensive situations by getting the most skilled players out on the ice, regardless of whether they typically play together.

Stars coach Jim Montgomery, Sharks coach Pete DeBoer and Avalanche coach Jared Bednar, in particular, often went to the well with their best offensive defensemen, scrapping their usual pairings and getting the two blueliners they deemed most likely to create a goal on the ice in the instances where they were guaranteed to at least start the shift in the offensive zone (and therefore keep the puck as far away from their own net as possible):

To put those offensive numbers into some quick perspective: The Sharks have been generating goals with Erik Karlsson and Brent Burns out on the ice at 5-on-5 at roughly the same rate as they have overall on the power play. There's some small-sample-size caveats there, but it reinforces how lethal they can be with the puck. Few teams have the luxury of having one, let alone two, players of their caliber offensively, but the idea here is that you should be trying to maximize all of your scoring opportunities.

The Stars took this one step further this postseason. Even though they split up all of their best players across two forward lines and defense pairs to become more difficult to defend, there were some occasions where they tossed all five of them out there together in 5-on-5 situations as if they were a five-man power-play unit. In the 26:49 that Tyler Seguin, Jamie Benn, Alexander Radulov, John Klingberg and Miro Heiskanen played together, the Stars led shot attempts 49-16, outshot opponents 26-7, and scored three times without giving up a goal against. Unsurprisingly, of the 48 shifts that they started with a faceoff, 36 of them came in the attacking zone (and just three came in their own end).

None of this is necessarily groundbreaking, but it's also the type of stuff that passes as "creative" in a sport where any break from the norm is met with resistance. The results speak for themselves, and in a game or series that could come down to a single play here or there, stacking the deck in your favor can go a long way.


Fortune favors the bold

One common thread among the four conference finalists is that each of them took some serious home run cuts in an effort to improve their teams, whether last summer or as recently as the trade deadline. Sometimes you wouldn't know it based on how certain teams operate in this league, but the goal should be to do everything you can to get as many good players as possible -- and you can never really have too many of them.

The acquisition of Ryan O'Reilly arguably wound up being the biggest addition anyone made on July 1 last summer, but it's hardly the only upgrade the Blues made. They also added David Perron, Tyler Bozak and Patrick Maroon through free agency, all of whom have contributed in a significant way. Bozak and Maroon have combined to form what's somewhat surprisingly become the Blues' most consistent line during this run alongside youngster Robert Thomas.

The three of them have played more minutes together this postseason than any other forward trio, moving the needle for St. Louis by controlling 53.4 percent of the shot attempts, 57.1 percent of the high-danger chances, and 55.3 percent of the expected goals when they're on the ice. A big part of what makes the Blues special is their forward depth, and having a trio like that to throw against secondary opposing competition typically gives them a massive competitive advantage.

The Hurricanes made a pair of blockbuster trades themselves last summer, including a five-player trade that landed them Dougie Hamilton, Micheal Ferland and Adam Fox (later traded to the Rangers) in exchange for Noah Hanifin and Elias Lindholm.

The Blue Jackets fell just short of the Eastern Conference final, but no other team better personified the "go for it" mantra this season, holding on to pending free agents Artemi Panarin and Sergei Bobrovsky, while adding two big pieces in Matt Duchene and Ryan Dzingel. They were rewarded with their first series win in franchise history, and it was one of such historic proportions that it won't soon be forgotten. Even if some of those players leave this offseason and they take a step back next season, it'll have ultimately been well worth it.

The team that beat them was the Bruins, who now find themselves just one win away from making it back to the Stanley Cup Final. The big question with them all season, as it's been in years past, was whether they'd be able to muster up enough secondary scoring to complement their terrific top line. They've passed that test with flying colors, led by a pair of players who were acquired close to the trade deadline.

Marcus Johansson has nine points, four of which came in the first two games of the conference final and included a big goal to help swing the outcome of the opener. Most important, he's provided them with another creator on the second power play and is a dynamic puck carrier through the neutral zone. Meanwhile, Charlie Coyle has six goals and 12 points this postseason and has been among their most dangerous offensive threats. The talent has never been in question with Coyle; he's been a tantalizing player over the years, never quite getting the production to properly reflect his physical capabilities. To his credit, he's put it all together in his new surroundings, providing the Bruins with the exact type of shot in the arm they needed.

The Sharks might be the best example of never being able to have too much of a good thing. They pounced on Erik Karlsson this offseason once the opportunity presented itself, even if it meant getting just one kick at the can with him before free agency. On a lesser scale, they also surprised people by adding another offensive talent in Gustav Nyquist at the deadline after already being flush with scoring. But after Joe Pavelski got injured in Game 7 against the Golden Knights, Nyquist was bumped up to the top line and hasn't looked back.

His vision and playmaking has been a perfect fit alongside Logan Couture and Timo Meier, and the three of them have been downright dominant together. In just under 120 5-on-5 minutes this postseason, they've outscored opponents 8-4 and controlled 56.6 percent of the shot attempts, despite the fact that they've often been tasked with going up against the other team's best offensive players.


Oops! They did it again

One final note on San Jose while we're here: Couture is getting most of the headlines because of his clutch goal-scoring binge, and it's justified. If you score 14 goals in 17 games and your name isn't Alex Ovechkin we should all be talking about you.

But the ascension of players like Timo Meier and Tomas Hertl represents what makes the Sharks such a special organization. These are their ranks among all players this postseason in the key offensive categories:

Meier has been an absolute juggernaut at 5-on-5, playing like a prototypical power forward that fans and front-office executives love. While a larger chunk of Hertl's production has come on the power play, where he feasts as a trigger man and generates an insane volume of scoring chances, his emergence as a legitimate 1B to Couture's 1A down the middle that can eat up a large number of minutes and shrink the game for the rest of the roster has been just as important of a development this postseason.

It's no accident that the Sharks are going on well over a decade now of legitimate relevance and are perennially in the mix as a contender with no real extended hiccups. They've missed the playoffs just once over the past 15 years, and when they did, they made the most of their rare lottery pick by walking away from the draft with Meier.

By continually bringing in new waves of young contributors to rise up the ranks and pick up the slack, they've managed to keep reopening their window as a contender without ever really needing to fully step back and rebuild.

Meier and Hertl have been the two latest names to step up in that conga line of star makers, and they've cemented their status as future foundational pillars for the Sharks with their tremendous play this postseason.

FARMINGDALE, N.Y. – Statistically, Dustin Johnson was his predictably dominant self from tee to green on Friday at the PGA Championship. His putting, however, was another story.

Johnson was first in strokes gained: tee-to-green, first in driving distance and second in greens in regulation when he completed his second round. Unfortunately, he was also 68th in strokes gained: putting and has needed 62 putts through 36 holes at Bethpage Black.

“The greens are very subtle and you're trying to read break, and I missed a lot of putts just playing too much break. But then you do that, and then you go and you don't play enough and it breaks,” Johnson said. “They're hard to read. I felt like I'm hitting good putts, so I need to keep doing that.”

PGA Championship: Scores | Full coverage

The good news for Johnson is that despite his less-than-stellar week so far on the greens, he remains in the hunt after a second-round, 3-under 67. He was tied for third place and three strokes off the pace when he completed his round.

The low point for Johnson on the greens came when he three-putted from 82 feet on the par-3 third hole (he started his round on No. 10), and he’s made just six putts longer than 5 feet this week. He had started Round 2 with five birdies in his first eight holes.

“I missed quite a few short ones there from 18 to 5," Johnson said. "But if I keep giving myself chances, I feel like I'm rolling the putter well, just a couple misreads."

FARMINGDALE, N.Y. – Through three holes Friday at the PGA Championship Rory McIlroy had one foot out of the door at Bethpage Black.

A wild drive and a bad decision led to a double bogey at his opening hole (No. 10). He kept the theme going with a bogey at the 11th hole and when he needed four shots to reach the 12th green on his way to his second double bogey at No. 12 he was four shots outside the cut and fading fast.

When the 2012 and ’14 PGA champion finally limped his way up the 18th fairway at 5 over for the day a rally seemed unlikely.

“I said to [caddie Harry Diamond] going up the 18th, ‘Let's not shoot any worse than I shot yesterday [2-over 72]. Let's make 72 the worst score we're going to shoot,’” McIlroy said. “It was nice to go one better than that and shoot 1 over in the end.”

McIlroy began his comeback with a 13-footer for birdie at the fourth, added two more at Nos. 5 and 6 and made one of seven birdies from the early wave at the par-3 eighth hole to secure his spot in the field on the weekend with a 71 and a 3-over total.

“I was just trying to play a good round of golf and try to get something that's close to the best out of myself,” he said. “I don't like missing cuts. It's not something that I'm used to fortunately, and I wanted to be around for the weekend.”

McIlroy will need to continue that momentum going into the weekend if he’s going to have any chance with leader Brooks Koepka pulling away from the field at 9 under par early in his second round.

The New York faithful got an up-close-and-personal look at Tiger Woods early in his second round at the PGA Championship. And it was every bit as chaotic as one would imagine.

Woods pulled his tee shot at the par-4 first hole into the left rough. He had to wade through a sea of people to reach his ball and it took several minutes – with Tiger trying to help direct traffic – in order to clear a path for Woods to hit his second shot.

Woods eventually hacked out into a greenside bunker and got up and down for par.

Highlights: Koepka fires 65, dominating PGA field

Published in Golf
Friday, 17 May 2019 11:30

Brooks Koepka picked up right where he left off.

A day after shooting 7-under 63 in Thursday's opening round around Bethpage Black, Koepka again started strong Friday at the PGA Championship.

The reigning PGA champ took an aggressive line at the par-4 fourth to set up an opening birdie.

Koepka added a second straight birdie with a 9-foot make at the par-4 second.

And Koepka extended his lead to five shots with a two-putt birdie at the par-5 fourth hole.

Koepka made four consecutive pars to close out his opening nine and then bogeyed the par-4 10th, his first dropped shot of the championship. But he got back to double-digits under par with this birdie at the par-5 13th.

He moved six clear of the field with a birdie at No. 15.

And then made it back-to-back birdies with another at No. 16. At 12 under par, Koepka was seven shots ahead of second place. He bogeyed the 17th hole, but rebounded with a birdie at the last.

Koepka finished with a 5-under 67 and, at 12 under for the championship, was seven up on second place.

Cart-riding Daly goes 75-76 to miss cut at PGA

Published in Golf
Friday, 17 May 2019 10:27

FARMINGDALE, N.Y. - John Daly and his bum right knee rode away from the PGA Championship happy to get the chance to play, even with the aid of a cart that caused some controversy.

Daly shot a 6-over 76 on Friday and finished 36 holes at Bethpage Black at 11 over, a score that will miss the cut for the weekend.

The results were not surprising, considering the 53-year-old Daly has been playing in the PGA Tour Champions, a 50-and-older circuit that allows for carts, since 2016, winning once in 2017. He has not won on the PGA Tour since capturing the 2004 Buick Open.

The decision by the PGA of America to allow Daly to use a cart in this event because of his arthritic right knee has been an issue for many.

But the fans loved seeing the cigarette-smoking, long-hitting Daly, who looks more like an average weekend golfer than a pro.

''I was happy I played,'' Daly said after the round. ''I played good. It's a major championship. If you miss a fairway here and there by just a little bit, you are going to score bad and I did.''

The worst might have been the bogey on the 18th, his final hole. His drive found a bunker. His second shot found another bunker and his third found a greenside bunker.

After the second shot, he drove to his bag as the caddie manicured the sand, grabbed a club and slammed the bag down.

Daly drove to the greenside bunker, hit the sand wedge to within 2 feet and knocked it in for a bogey.

The crowd roared.

It was a perfect ending to a performance that was anything but.

Daly said he felt obligated to play in the PGA Championship, the tournament that made him a fan favorite after he won at Crooked Stick in 1991 at the ninth alternate. He added a second major, capturing the British Open in 1995.

''This is a week I can't leave disgusted because I played good golf,'' Daly said. ''It played long and you just miss fairways by a little bit, the rough is so thick; probably the thickest I have ever seen, you are just laying up. I'm not strong enough to get it anywhere near.''

Daly, who visibly limped when he walked on the course, added that he just couldn't get his putts to the hole.

When someone noted he had two birdies on Friday, he quipped, ''At least I finally made a few.''

Daly is the first player to ride in a cart at a major since Casey Martin in the U.S. Open at Olympic Club in 1998 and 2012.

He also has asked for an exemption for the British Open and is awaiting a response.

Man City 'just better' in end than Liverpool - KDB

Published in Soccer
Friday, 17 May 2019 17:00

Kevin De Bruyne said he has no sympathy for Liverpool after Manchester City pipped them to the Premier League title by just a point because they were the better team in the end.

Liverpool lost just one match all season to finish on 97 points -- the highest total ever by a runner-up and a figure that would have been enough to win the title in all-but three Premier League seasons.

But they lost out to City after a 14-game winning streak to finish the season and De Bruyne says it shows they were better than Jurgen Klopp's side.

"It's a remarkable effort [from Liverpool], but it means that we were just better than them in the end," De Bruyne told reporters. "I don't feel sorry for them, because I don't think they'd feel sorry for us.

"I don't think anybody felt sorry about the way we went out of the Champions League. You take it. I know how they feel, because you're going to feel disappointed. We'd feel the same if it happened to us. But we're still competitors. We want to win as much as they do, but I can understand the feelings they have.

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"It's the general view of athletes. You feel compassionate with other teams, but in the end the most important thing is, if you play an individual sport, it's yourself, and when it's your team, it's your team. It's been a great battle. But to feel 'sorry' for them is maybe going a little too far."

City boss Pep Guardiola described their exit as "cruel" after Raheem Sterling's injury-time winner against Tottenham was ruled out after a review by the video assistant referee.

That ended City's hopes of winning a Quadruple although they can complete a domestic Treble at Wembley by beating Watford in the FA Cup final on Saturday (live on ESPN+ at noon ET) after also winning the Carabao Cup earlier in the season.

Sterling grew up just a few miles away from Wembley and is desperate to win his first FA Cup winners' medal.

"To be in the final, that's massive and people might say it's just another cup, but for us to be in the final is a massive achievement," Sterling said. "There's been many a year we have tried, and we've not been able to get there and this year we've got there.

"We just need to be positive going into it and try to win it. It's a beautiful trophy and it's a trophy that I've never touched and hopefully I can walk up those stairs and get my hands on it.

"We've got a long way to go and we know how difficult it will be against a really tough Watford team, but it's a challenge we're up for."

Meanwhile, Guardiola said he wants Leroy Sane to stay at Manchester City but says the German winger, whose starts were limited during the team's stretch run, is no closer to signing a new contract.

Bayern Munich have been linked with a summer move for Sane, 23, who has two years remaining on his current contract.

Sources told ESPN FC that Sane was close to signing a new deal in March but he has started just three Premier League games since, although Guardiola insists he wants him to remain and fight for a starting place.

"We have been one-and-a-half years trying to [get him to] sign his [new] contract, we want him," Guardiola told a news conference ahead of the FA Cup final against Watford.

"If you want to extend [someone's] contract, it's because you want him. You're not going to extend his contract because you don't want him.

"[He's not playing] because he's competing with Raheem Sterling and Bernardo Silva. It's not easy. If you want to play in for competitions for the quadruple we need Leroy, Sterling, Riyad [Mahrez], Bernardo, we can't compete for the quadruple with just two wingers.

"They have to fight each other and play the best as possible to convince me to put them in the lineup."

But with the contract remaining unsigned, Guardiola refused to confirm that Sane will still be at the club next season.

Vincent Kompany's future is even more uncertain with the City captain's contract running out at the end of the season.

Saturday's FA Cup final at Wembley could be his final appearance for the club after 11 years and 359 appearances for the club.

"Hopefully not," Guardiola said when asked if it will be his last game. "We spoke with Vinny and we are going to speak after this game. But my words are unnecessary for what he has done over the last few weeks and his career.

"Vinny has shown again when he is fit what he is able to do. It is top. The problem is the period between November and February and March. We were losing quite often for that reason. When he is fit he is incredible."

Soccer

USWNT awaits update on Alyssa Naeher leg injury

USWNT awaits update on Alyssa Naeher leg injury

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsUnited States women's national team No. 1 and Chicago Red Stars sta...

Pep: 'Arsenal champions' if City don't beat Spurs

Pep: 'Arsenal champions' if City don't beat Spurs

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsPep Guardiola has told his Manchester City players to take their ch...

Villa snatch Liverpool draw on late Durán double

Villa snatch Liverpool draw on late Durán double

Colombian super-sub Jhon Durán scored two late goals as Aston Villa battled back to salvage a 3-3 ho...

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2024 PARIS OLYMPIC


Basketball

Knicks' Robinson has ankle surgery, sources say

Knicks' Robinson has ankle surgery, sources say

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsNEW YORK -- Knicks center Mitchell Robinson had surgery on his left...

Sources: Lakers to start talking with candidates

Sources: Lakers to start talking with candidates

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsCHICAGO -- The Los Angeles Lakers are expected to start contacting...

Baseball

Reliever Alzolay (forearm) joins Cubs' crowded IL

Reliever Alzolay (forearm) joins Cubs' crowded IL

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsATLANTA -- Right-hander Adbert Alzolay, who opened the season as th...

Orioles promote Stowers, option Kjerstad to AAA

Orioles promote Stowers, option Kjerstad to AAA

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsIn the midst of his power explosion since the start of spring train...

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    Federation Internationale de Speedball

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