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Yanks' Sabathia third lefty in 3,000-strikeout club

Published in Baseball
Tuesday, 30 April 2019 21:41

PHOENIX -- As he nears the end of what might be a Hall of Fame career, CC Sabathia added to his extensive Cooperstown résumé Tuesday night at Chase Field by recording his 3,000th major league strikeout.

The milestone K came in the bottom of the second inning of the New York Yankees' series-opening 3-1 loss to the Arizona Diamondbacks. Sabathia got catcher John Ryan Murphy swinging at a changeup as he struck out the side.

Sabathia is the 17th pitcher in big league history, and the third southpaw, to reach 3,000 strikeouts.

"When I actually got that last strike, I didn't want it to be Murph," Sabathia said of the former second-round Yankees draft pick. "Me and him are really close, I've been knowing him his whole career."

Sabathia and Murphy played together in the Bronx from 2013 to 2015, with Murphy having caught Sabathia 15 times.

Ahead of Murphy's at-bat, Sabathia picked up two quick strikeouts in the inning before Diamondbacks second baseman Wilmer Flores hit a two-out solo homer. On the two pitches before the 382-foot blast, many of the 36,352 fans present had been chanting "CC, CC, CC" and "Let's go, CC."

Though the cheers didn't work on the Flores at-bat, they did when Murphy came to the plate.

Ultimately handed the loss, Sabathia left the game after 5⅓ innings, having given up two earned runs, five hits and two walks, and striking out five.

As Sabathia walked off the mound in the second inning after the momentous inning-ending strikeout, he was met near the Yankees' first-base side dugout by teammates and coaches who swarmed him with daps and hugs and handshakes. A graphic also flashed on the center-field video board congratulating Sabathia on reaching the milestone.

Before the game, right fielder Aaron Judge and fellow Yankees lefty J.A. Happ asked manager Aaron Boone what course of action the team should take when the key strikeout was recorded.

Boone told them not to have a plan -- just go with the flow.

"I just said, 'We're going to react. We're going to let the moment tell us what to do,'" Boone said. "We're not going to take a cue from anyone. We're just going to respond to the moment in celebration of our guy."

The celebration lasted a couple of minutes along the warning track by the dugout before Sabathia disappeared inside it. At some point after Sabathia came back into the dugout, Yankees catcher Gary Sanchez handed him the historic ball.

"The experience to catch his 3,000th strikeout is something that I'll never forget," Sanchez said through an interpreter.

When he finally emerged from the dugout, Sabathia had a bat and helmet in his hands as he waved and acknowledged the cheering crowd.

In the next instant, he looked over to a gap in the protective netting, where his children, Carsten Charles III, Carter Charles, Jaeden Arie and Cyia Cathleen -- none of whom was alive to see his first career strikeout in April 2001 -- had peered through to greet him with congratulatory hugs.

Each of his children, as well as his wife, Amber, mom Margie, and other family members and friends have traveled across the country with Sabathia and the Yankees in recent weeks as he has chased 3,000. For his oldest, it has meant missed high school baseball games.

"It's been fun with them, traveling around the last three starts to every city, so we've enjoyed our time together and hanging out," Sabathia said. "It's a very special time right now to have everybody in town."

Nearly an hour after the game, Sabathia and his friends and family were still celebrating the moment, soaking it up on the field.

Even before Tuesday's game, Sabathia's manager was soaking up the history he was about to witness.

"It's one of those awesome numbers: 3,000 hits, 500 homers, 3,000 strikeouts," Boone said before the game. "That's what I grew up with in my mind, and I think I got to see Rod Carew hit 3,000, Reggie [Jackson] 500 [homers], Don Sutton 3,000 [strikeouts], 300 wins.

"Those are magical numbers in our sport, and people should take notice when people come up upon them."

Boone expanded on that thought after the game.

"In a game that dates back to the 1800s, to be only the 17th guy to get to 3,000 is amazing," Boone said. "But it means a lot to the guys in that room, because they know who he is.

"Obviously frustrated with the loss, but [Tuesday] is about us celebrating a man and what's been an amazing career."

Arizona manager Torey Lovullo doesn't know Sabathia anywhere near as well as Boone, but he still believed Sabathia's feat deserved the attention it received.

"If you're a baseball fan, you have to appreciate what you saw today," Lovullo said.

One of Sabathia's longtime opponents, former Orioles outfielder and current Diamondbacks right fielder Adam Jones, certainly has taken notice. When speaking to ESPN about the pitcher who he said treated him "like a little brother" over the years, Jones recognized multiple parts of the historic significance of Sabathia's accomplishment.

"He's one of the biggest names in the game for the last two decades, and he's the [third] African American pitcher with at least that many strikeouts," said Jones, who entered Tuesday with 105 career plate appearances against Sabathia, the most against any pitcher in his 14-year career.

Hall of Famers Bob Gibson and Fergie Jenkins are the only other black pitchers to have amassed 3,000 strikeouts in their careers. Like Sabathia, Gibson and Jenkins are part of the 15-man group of "Black Aces," a collection of the only black pitchers to have won 20 or more games in a season. The group's founding member, Don Newcombe, who posted the first of his three 20-win seasons in 1951, died earlier this year.

"Being a 'Black Ace' is something that I take very seriously," Sabathia said. "So to be on that list as one of three guys with 3,000 strikeouts, it's hard to grasp, it's hard to think about it. But it's cool to be on that list."

Added Jones: "That's pretty historic. This is just another sign that [Sabathia] is building his résumé for Cooperstown. I've played against him for 12 years, and I can say that the competition against him is always A-1. You always know when you face him that the intensity is going to be high.

"He deserves everything that's coming his way."

Sabathia is the first pitcher to cross the 3,000-strikeout threshold since John Smoltz did it for the Atlanta Braves on April 22, 2008. Smoltz struck out the Washington Nationals' Felipe Lopez swinging in the third inning of that game.

In February, two months after an unexpected offseason angioplasty that followed an earlier offseason knee surgery, Sabathia, a former first-round draft pick, announced he would be retiring after 19 seasons.

Earlier this season, Sabathia admitted he has been thinking about getting his 3,000th strikeout since spring training. Because he came into the year just 11 strikeouts shy of the milestone, he found it difficult to avoid thinking about it.

"Just ready to get it over with," he said two starts ago.

Of the pitchers to have previously reached 3,000 strikeouts, all but two -- Roger Clemens and Curt Schilling -- have been elected to the Hall of Fame.

When the Yankees visited San Francisco on Friday, Sabathia was treated to a two-minute, between-innings montage on the Oracle Park video board recognizing his accomplishments as a pitcher. His upcoming 3,000th strikeout was mentioned.

Fittingly, the Giants were the first team to recognize Sabathia, a native of neighboring Vallejo, California, during a Yankees road trip this season. Asked about that video, Sabathia simply smiled and said seeing it was "cool."

What happened in April? Here are the five big storylines.

1. Lots of home runs

2. Dogfight in the National League

3. Cody Bellinger and Christian Yelich

4. Defending champs play like chumps

5. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. reaches the bigs

But what about for your team? My April grades with best storyline and one key do-over for each team:

Jump to ...:
The high achievers | The C-class | Hey, at least you passed | Three who failed

The high achievers

Tampa Bay Rays: A+

Best storyline: How good does last July's Chris Archer trade with the Pirates look now? Tyler Glasnow is throwing strikes and dominating, and looks like a potential Cy Young contender after starting 5-0 with a 1.75 ERA in his first six starts. Austin Meadows was off to a .351/.422/.676 start in 20 games before landing on the IL because of a thumb injury.

Mulligan: Blake Snell signed a $50 million extension, so he can afford a proper interior decorator who would have never placed a granite stand right next to the shower that Snell might conceivably try to move and accidentally drop on his toe, breaking the toe and forcing him to miss a start.

St. Louis Cardinals: A

Best storyline: The reemergence of Marcell Ozuna as a big threat has helped the Cardinals to first place despite playing one of the toughest April schedules. Ozuna was a disappointment last season, but he played through a bum shoulder that affected his output. He's healthy again and among the league leaders in home runs and RBIs. Also boosted by trade acquisition Paul Goldschmidt, the Cardinals now have the punch in the middle of the lineup they lacked last season.

Mulligan: The game plan against reigning MVP Christian Yelich, who has hit .389 with eight home runs and 19 RBIs in 10 games against the Cardinals.

Minnesota Twins: A

Best storyline: Dingers! The Twins homered 49 times in their first 25 games and led the majors in home-run rate and at-bats per home run through Sunday. They look like a lock to beat the franchise record for home runs of 225, set in 1963 -- the longest-standing team home-run record. They've taken advantage of a soft schedule -- they're 10-0 against the Orioles, Royals and Tigers -- but that's the path to a division title. Beat up on the weaklings of the AL and hold your own against everyone else.

Mulligan: Everyone applauded the Marwin Gonzalez signing, but he has been helpless at the plate. Miguel Sano isn't expected to return until late May, but Gonzalez's struggles have opened the door for Sano to get a chance at third base.

Los Angeles Dodgers: A-

Best storyline: Cody Bellinger's opening month for the ages has made him the early leader in the MVP race. He has tied the records for most home runs (14) and most RBIs (37) before May 1. His ridiculous "on pace" numbers at the start of the week: .427, 76 HRs, 194 RBIs, 162 runs.

Mulligan: Free agent Joe Kelly signed a three-year, $25 million contract and was supposed to be the primary setup man to Kenley Jansen, but he has been serving up batting practice so far. Warning: Don't pay a guy based just on what he did in October.

Houston Astros: A-

Best storyline: Justin Verlander keeps rolling along as one of the best starters in the game at age 36 -- continuing to show why he's going to end up in Cooperstown one day. After finishing second in the Cy Young voting in 2016 and 2018, you know he'd love to go one spot higher in 2019 and become the oldest Cy Young winner since 42-year-old Roger Clemens in 2004.

Mulligan: The offense hasn't really kicked into gear yet, ranking in the middle of the AL in runs scored, but you do wonder if the Astros still need another left-handed bat. They signed Michael Brantley, who has been excellent, but their only other lefty bats are Josh Reddick and utility man Tony Kemp.

San Diego Padres: A-

Best storyline: The Padres decided not to screw around with the service time of Fernando Tatis Jr. or Chris Paddack, and both have lived up to their prospect hype -- or maybe even exceeded it in Paddack's case. Tatis has hit for average and power, played an excellent shortstop and run the bases with electrifying speed. What a talent. Paddack has merely been one of the best starters in the league.

Mulligan: Ian Kinsler looked like a solid veteran signing in the offseason, but he has hit .133 in the early going. Luis Urias was called up, but he hit .083 in 29 plate appearances and was sent back to the minors. Now pinch-hit specialist Greg Garcia might get a chance at second base.

New York Yankees: B+

Best storyline: The Yankees have overcome a rash of injuries to get off to a good start -- heck, it has been so bad that even the injury replacements are getting injured. They were fortunate to have a soft schedule in April -- they finished the month having played only four games against teams that currently have a winning record (three against Houston and one against Arizona). Still, the backups played well enough and Domingo German helped rescue the rotation.

Mulligan: Chad Green's April. Green was as good as any reliever in baseball the past two seasons (13-3, 2.18 ERA, 197 Ks in 144⅔ innings), but after giving up 14 runs and four home runs in 7⅔ innings and losing two games, he was dispatched to Scranton to figure things out.

Seattle Mariners: B+

Best storyline: Dingers! The Mariners hit at least one home run in their first 20 games -- a record for the start of a season -- and bashed their way to a 13-2 start. Reality has set in a bit since, but they've continued to slug away, especially Daniel Vogelbach with his early gaudy batting line of .310/462/.732.

Mulligan: In what was supposed to be a rebuilding year, two of Jerry Dipoto's rebuilding trades don't look good so far. He traded Mike Zunino for Mallex Smith to acquire a center fielder, but Smith has hit under .200 and, more troublesome, looked terrible in center field. It's certainly way too early to pin a final evaluation on Justus Sheffield and Erik Swanson, acquired in the James Paxton deal, but Sheffield's command issues remain a concern, and Swanson has been hit hard in his first three starts.

Arizona Diamondbacks: B+

Best storyline: Christian Walker is a 28-year-old journeyman-type first baseman who spent most of the past five years at Triple-A and entered the season with just 99 PAs over four major league seasons. He has hit like Paul Goldschmidt, however, and it hasn't been a fluke as he ranks in the top 10 in average exit velocity and hard-hit percentage.

Mulligan: Zack Godley wants a do-over, that's for sure. He's 1-2 with a 7.58 ERA through his first six starts, with 18 walks in 29.2 innings.

Philadelphia Phillies: B

Best storyline: Maikel Franco has thrived in the eighth spot in the batting order, adding an exclamation point to a lineup that is as deep as any in the majors. It's a tough lineup for pitchers to navigate, with Bryce Harper, Andrew McCutchen and Rhys Hoskins all among the league leaders in walks. You also get the feeling that there is more in the tank here than what we've seen so far.

Mulligan: What's wrong with Aaron Nola? After finishing third in the 2018 Cy Young voting, his usual command and swing-and-miss curveball haven't been there. He has given up two or more home runs in three starts already, after doing that only three times in 2018. He has pitched in a lot of cold weather, so maybe he'll regain his feel once the temperatures get warmer.

Toronto Blue Jays: B

Best storyline: Vladimir Guerrero Jr. is finally here. Aside from his arrival, here's another reason the Jays have a chance to be a sleeper playoff contender: The rotation has a 3.16 ERA through April, second best in the majors. In a season where so many starters are struggling early, maybe Toronto's rotation will be enough (although Matt Shoemaker was off to a good start and he was lost for the season after tearing his ACL).

Mulligan: Was it really necessary to give Randal Grichuk a $52 million contract extension? He's a nice enough player and now he has taken over center field after the Kevin Pillar trade, but he's still doing Randal Grichuk things: a few home runs, not enough walks, a few too many strikeouts.

Texas Rangers: B-

Best storyline: Hunter Pence has always been one of the most enjoyable players to watch with his unique style of play. He also hasn't been very good the past couple of seasons and is coming off a minus-0.9 WAR season with the Giants in 2018. But he's off to a good start at 36 in a part-time role, and though it's unlikely to continue, it's good to see him playing well in his hometown.

Mulligan: This one's for anyone who drafted Rougned Odor high in their fantasy leagues, thinking he had turned the corner after a strong second half in 2018 that included some semblance of plate discipline for the first time in his career. Alas, he's hitting .145 with one home run, a reminder that he's always going to be an inconsistent -- and frustrating -- player.

The C-class

Chicago Cubs: C+

Best storyline: Yes, that's Jason Heyward hitting .312/.433/.519 entering the week with five home runs and more walks than strikeouts. For all the crap that Heyward has taken from Cubs fans the past couple of seasons, the start must be extra gratifying. Is it for real? His exit velocity is up and so is his launch angle, so maybe these mechanical tweaks will actually stick.

Mulligan: Sorry, Yu Darvish was last year's mulligan (and don't write him off just yet). I do wonder if bringing back Addison Russell -- set to return soon from his suspension for domestic violence -- was not only a questionable moral decision, but unnecessary from a baseball standpoint, with Daniel Descalso and David Bote both playing well and Javier Baez obviously capable of handling shortstop.

Milwaukee Brewers: C+

Best storyline: Dingers! Especially Christian Yelich's dingers -- and he has a lot of them. Like Cody Bellinger, his 14 home runs before May 1 tie the all-time record. Like the Twins and Mariners, the Brewers began the week on pace for 300 home runs, even though Jesus Aguilar didn't hit his first one until Monday. They've also weathered a tough early schedule despite bad starts from Aguilar, Travis Shaw and Ryan Braun and some injuries in the bullpen.

Mulligan: Umm, maybe they should have signed a veteran starter? The Brewers got good work last year from a staff of journeyman-type starters, but began 2019 with three second-year pitchers in the rotation. Well, Corbin Burnes pitched his way back to Triple-A, Freddy Peralta is on the IL with a 7.13 ERA and Brandon Woodruff has been inconsistent. They just signed Gio Gonzalez to provide some help.

Detroit Tigers: C

Best storyline: Matt Boyd is putting everything together and is off to a 3.13 ERA with 48 strikeouts and only two home runs allowed in 37⅓ innings. He has the fifth-highest swing-and-miss rate among starters, suggesting he's developing ace-type stuff.

Mulligan: The entire offense. I mean, nobody expected the offense to be any good, but this is one pitiful lineup -- and the Tigers just struck out 20 times in one game against the White Sox. It hasn't helped that Nicholas Castellanos and Miguel Cabrera have combined for only three home runs.

Atlanta Braves: C

Best storyline: The emergence of young starters Max Fried (2.30 ERA in 31.1 innings) and Mike Soroka (1.62 ERA through three starts) gives the Braves a potential one-two dynamo at the top of the rotation -- helping to cover for the bad starts of Sean Newcomb and Kyle Wright that sent that pair back to Triple-A.

Mulligan: Hello, Craig Kimbrel? No, the Braves couldn't have anticipated the season-ending injury to Arodys Vizcaino, the projected closer, but even before that injury there were concerns about this bullpen. Through Monday, the Braves' bullpen ranked 28th in the majors in win probability added -- they've led in 11 of their losses. But, hey, good to see Liberty Media stock going up in value.

New York Mets: C

Best storyline: Rookie first baseman Pete Alonso has showed off some of the best exit velocity and raw power in the game while becoming an instant cult hero in Queens.

Mulligan: The Mets are hanging around .500, but would be in even better shape if Jacob deGrom and Noah Syndergaard had pitched better, as they're a combined 3-6 with a 5.70 ERA. They should pitch better moving forward, but the same can't be said for Jason Vargas. It wasn't a good idea to count him as the fifth starter, let alone not to have a good backup plan in case he faltered.

Cleveland Indians: C

Best storyline: Trevor Bauer trash-talking the Astros after a game in which he walked six and struck out three (although escaped giving up only one run in eight innings and beat Gerrit Cole, his old UCLA teammate). Loathe him or dislike him, Bauer has obviously become one of the best pitchers in the league and enters May as the Cy Young favorite given the weak offenses in the AL Central, plus he's the rare starter who pitches relatively late into games on a regular basis.

Mulligan: Maybe the Indians should have listened to all those Corey Kluber trade offers this past winter. Kluber finished third in the Cy Young voting in 2018, but there were a few red flags in his numbers that suggested maybe he's starting the downward slope of his career. So far, he has struggled with his command, and the results have been a career-worst walk rate (more than double his 2018 rate) and his worst OPS allowed since his rookie season (200 points higher than last season).

Colorado Rockies: C

Best storyline: Signing Nolan Arenado to that eight-year, $260 million extension in spring training. Arenado got off to a slow start with no home runs in his first 15 games -- and, not by coincidence, the Rockies also started 3-12. Since then, however, Arenado has done Arenado things, and the Rockies have climbed back into the vicinity of .500

Mulligan: Ian Desmond in center field was never a good idea. Over the previous two seasons, his OPS+ ranked 197 out of 210 players with at least 800 plate appearances. He actually has been better than expected on defense so far (plus-1 defensive runs saved), but he hasn't hit and the Rockies offense isn't good enough to carry a center fielder hitting .196 with a .235 OBP.

Pittsburgh Pirates: C

Best storyline: As expected, the rotation has been very good while the offense has not -- with the exception of Josh Bell. A one-time top prospect, Bell hit 26 home runs in his first full season in 2017 but fell off to just 12 in 2018, producing a disappointing 0.8-WAR season. He's crushing so far, with a big 4 mph increase in average exit velocity and one memorable 474-foot home run. I'd written him off as a potential All-Star-type player, but maybe he does get to that level.

Mulligan: Not building a better bench. Gregory Polanco began the season on the IL (which the Pirates knew would happen), but Corey Dickerson has played only four games, and the injury to shortstop Erik Gonzalez forced the team to rush prospect Cole Tucker to the majors. This has meant too many plate appearances from the bench, which might waste one of the game's best rotations.

Chicago White Sox: C-

Best storyline: Tim Anderson is a player of the month candidate after hitting .375/.394/.615 with six home runs, 10 steals and 21 runs heading into Tuesday's game. He's riding a .435 BABIP that will obviously decline and he has drawn only two walks as he somehow has become even more aggressive at the plate. Maybe he's the rare athlete like Javier Baez who can produce despite poor plate discipline, but major regression appears likely.

Mulligan: Acquiring Manny Machado's pals. Brother-in-law Yonder Alonso is hitting .190 and best bud Jon Jay has yet to play because of injury. And Machado is having fun in San Diego.

Cincinnati Reds: C-

Best storyline: Luis Castillo entered 2018 with a lot of helium and then posted a 5.49 ERA in the first half. He was very good in the second half, however, including a 1.09 ERA in September, and he arguably has been the best pitcher in the majors in April, going 3-1 with a 1.45 ERA and giving up just two home runs in 43 ⅓ innings. In fact, the entire Cincinnati rotation has been solid, including Sonny Gray, who has been excellent after a bad first outing (although he hasn't won because of poor run support).

Mulligan: Agreeing to take on Matt Kemp as part of the Yasiel Puig/Alex Wood trade. Kemp hit .200 with 19 strikeouts and one walk before landing on the IL. Given his poor defense, he's probably not even worth a roster spot once he returns. In fact, the Reds might want a mulligan on that entire trade. Puig hasn't hit yet and Wood hasn't pitched because of back issues.

Oakland Athletics: C-

Best storyline: Matt Chapman is proving that he's a superstar. His defense is obviously spectacular and he continues to improve at the plate, hitting for power and average while also cutting way down on his strikeouts (he has more walks than whiffs). He finished seventh in the MVP voting last year; he's going to finish higher this season.

Mulligan: The one move the A's made in the rotation was to bring back Mike Fiers. Oops. While he had a 3.56 ERA in 2018, he also gave up 32 home runs and had a 4.75 FIP. Signs pointed to major regression and he has a 7.03 ERA so far.

Hey, at least you passed

Los Angeles Angels: D+

Best storyline: Well, Mike Trout is still awesome.

Mulligan: The Angels gave Matt Harvey a one-year, $11 million contract relatively early in the offseason. That ended up being a slight overpay given the way the market developed. That's not even the issue, however, as Harvey has a 6.54 ERA through six starts. He simply lacks the weapons to put batters away like he did earlier in his career, and his strikeout rate has fallen from 24.9 percent in 2015 (which was still post-Tommy John surgery) to 15.1 percent. Out of 98 qualified starters, he ranks 95th in strikeout rate.

Washington Nationals: D

Best storyline: Well, not the bullpen. Anthony Rendon is earning himself a huge payday in free agency with his monster start.

Mulligan: So, about that Trevor Rosenthal signing ... the problem with the Nationals' bullpen goes much deeper than Rosenthal. Outside of closer Sean Doolittle, there were obvious concerns about the rest of the pen. Rosenthal, coming off an injury, and Kyle Barraclough, who completely fell apart in the second half with the Marlins last year, were the big additions but hardly sure things to set up Doolittle. Mike Rizzo has always had trouble building deep bullpens, and so far this one (5.95 ERA entering Wednesday, 29th in win probability added) has been a disaster.

San Francisco Giants: D

Best storyline: The bullpen is very good, which means the Giants will eventually play a significant role in determining who makes the playoffs -- as in, which NL East team trades for Will Smith?

Mulligan: The Giants already pulled a mulligan on outfielders Connor Joe and Michael Reed, who started the first two games of the season and are already off the 40-man roster.

Kansas City Royals: D

Best storyline: What's weird is the Royals actually have several good storylines despite the awful start. Adalberto Mondesi is one of the most exciting players in the league, Hunter Dozier leads the AL in OPS, Terrance Gore is hitting .438! But Alex Gordon's turn-back-the-clock start is a nice reminder that he was one of the best all-around players in the league from 2011 to 2014, when he averaged 6.1 WAR per season.

Mulligan: I'm not exactly sure why Chris Owings continues to get so much playing time. Arizona kept him around as a semi-regular for years because of his versatility, but he has never hit much, especially on the road (.608 career OPS). Owings has already sucked up over 100 PAs with poor results.

The three who failed

Miami Marlins: F

Best storyline: Caleb Smith is really good and it's not a fluke. He has 37 K's in 29 innings and has held batters to a .167 average. He's seventh among starters in swing-and-miss rate (teammate Trevor Richards is eighth) and is fifth in strikeouts, sandwiched between Max Scherzer and Carlos Carrasco. His changeup is one of the best in the game and his slider has turned into a wipeout weapon.

Mulligan: At one point in the offseason or spring training, I mentioned that it was weird the Marlins were handing a job to Peter O'Brien considering he hit .191 in the minors in 2017 and .216 in 2018 with a zillion strikeouts. Somebody on Twitter tried to defend O'Brien. Well, he played nine games, hit .111, struck out a zillion times and is back in Triple-A.

Baltimore Orioles: F

Best storyline: Chris Davis got a hit ... then a home run ... then two more home runs! That was pretty cool, but we have to go with Trey Mancini, who is raking with a .355 average and 17 extra-base hits heading into Tuesday and might actually give the Orioles a legitimate All-Star candidate.

Mulligan: Dingers! The Orioles gave up 73 home runs in their first 30 games, an incredible pace of 394 over 162 games. The rotation has giving up 39 home runs in just 136⅓ innings.

Boston Red Sox: F-

Best storyline: None, really. Look, relative to expectations, the Red Sox have obviously been the biggest disappointment. It's not just that they're off to a slow start, it's that they've played poorly in all phases of the game. On the bright side, they're almost certain to win at least one Chris Sale start before the season ends.

Mulligan: Taking it easy on the starters in spring training was the cautious approach and maybe the correct one -- but easing into the regular season might be a reason the rotation (other than David Price) has fared so poorly.

The two-time Olympic 800m champion had been seeking to overturn the world governing body’s new regulations on female classification

Caster Semenya has lost her landmark case against the IAAF’s new rules on female classification, which relate to restricting testosterone levels in female runners in certain events on the world stage.

The case concerned the “IAAF Eligibility Regulations for Female Classification (Athletes with Differences of Sex Development)” (DSD Regulations) which had been due to come into effect on November 1, 2018, but were suspended.

The regulations will now start on May 8.

Ruling on the case, the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) dismissed the challenges from both Semenya and Athletics South Africa (ASA) against the new rules, but added that the panel “expressed some serious concerns as to the future practical application of these DSD Regulations”.

As a result two-time Olympic 800m champion Semenya, and other female athletes with DSD, will need to reduce their natural testosterone level in order to take part in certain women’s events in international competition.

The rules for athletes who have DSD will apply to the 400m, 400m hurdles, 800m, 1500m, one mile races and combined events over the same distances.

Athletes who wish to compete would be required to take medication for six months beforehand and then maintain a lower testosterone level. Should they not want to take the medication they would be able to compete in international competitions in disciplines other than track events from 400m to the mile, or they could compete in men’s or mixed gender competitions or domestic (non-international) events.

“I know that the IAAF’s regulations have always targeted me specifically,” read a statement from Semenya, who recently won both 1500m and 5000m titles at the South African Championships.

“For a decade the IAAF has tried to slow me down, but this has actually made me stronger. The decision of the CAS will not hold me back. I will once again rise above and continue to inspire young women and athletes in South Africa and around the world.”

The case had previously been described by CAS as “one of the most pivotal” to have ever been heard by the court.

“The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) has ruled on the requests for arbitration filed by the South African athlete Caster Semenya and Athletics South Africa (ASA) (“the Claimants”) against the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) (collectively, the parties),” read a CAS statement in part.

“The arbitration procedures concerned the “IAAF Eligibility Regulations for Female Classification (Athletes with Differences of Sex Development)” (DSD Regulations) that were due to come into effect on 1 November 2018 and which are currently suspended, pending the outcome of the CAS procedures.

“The CAS has dismissed both requests for arbitration.”

The statement added: “Caster Semenya and ASA requested that the DSD Regulations be declared invalid and void with immediate effect. They consider them as being discriminatory, unnecessary, unreliable and disproportionate. The IAAF contended that the DSD Regulations do not infringe any athlete’s rights, including the right to equal treatment, but instead are a justified and proportionate means of ensuring consistent treatment, and preserving fair and meaningful competition within the female classification. There is no dispute that there should be a separate classification for female athletes – a binary divide between male and female.

“By majority, the CAS Panel has dismissed the requests for arbitration considering that the Claimants were unable to establish that the DSD Regulations were “invalid”. The Panel found that the DSD Regulations are discriminatory but the majority of the Panel found that, on the basis of the evidence submitted by the parties, such discrimination is a necessary, reasonable and proportionate means of achieving the IAAF’s aim of preserving the integrity of female athletics in the Restricted Events.”

However, it added: “In a 165-page award, the CAS Panel expressed some serious concerns as to the future practical application of these DSD Regulations. While the evidence available so far has not established that those concerns negate the conclusion of prima facie proportionality, this may change in the future unless constant attention is paid to the fairness of how the Regulations are implemented.”

An executive summary of the decision has been published by the CAS and can be found here.

A press release issued on behalf of Semenya added: “Ms Semenya shares the view of the dissenting CAS arbitrator that the DSD Regulations are unnecessary. Women with differences in sexual development have genetic variations that are conceptually no different than other genetic variations that are celebrated in sport. The IAAF’s basis for discriminating against these women is their natural genetic variations. Ms Semenya believes that women like her should be respected and treated as any other athlete. As is typically the case across sport, her unique genetic gift should be celebrated, not regulated.

“Ms Semenya also agrees with the concerns expressed by the unanimous CAS panel about: (i) difficulties implementing and complying with the DSD Regulations; (ii) the absence of concrete evidence supporting the inclusion of certain events under the DSD Regulations; and (iii) the negative and harmful side effects of medical treatment experienced by athletes subject to the DSD Regulations who wish to continue in women’s competition.”

The CAS panel has suggested that the IAAF considers deferring the application of the DSD regulations to the 1500m and one mile events until more evidence is available.

The IAAF released a statement in response to the CAS decision, with the governing body saying it was “pleased that the Regulations were found to be a necessary, reasonable and proportionate means of achieving the IAAF’s legitimate aim of preserving the integrity of female athletics in the Restricted Events.”

Regarding the CAS concerns, the statement added: “The IAAF notes the three concerns expressed by the CAS Panel as to the fairness of the implementation of the Regulations. The CAS Panel in the Chand case (CAS 2014/A/3759) found that the previous iteration of the regulations were administered with ‘care and compassion’ by the IAAF, and this will not change.

“As the Regulations expressly state, the IAAF will keep all practical matters of implementation under periodic review. Indeed, the IAAF has already addressed the CAS Panel’s first concern by mitigating the consequences of unintentional non-compliance by an athlete in a new clause 3.15.”

The IAAF regulations can be found here, while a summary of the process for athletes seeking eligibility for the IAAF World Championships in Doha is here.

The CAS added that the decision may be appealed at the Swiss Federal Tribunal within 30 days. Semenya is said to be reviewing the decision with her legal team and considering whether to file an appeal.

British runners Purdue and Hawkins rewarded for performances in London but Mo Farah declines World Champs spot at 26.2 miles

Charlotte Purdue and Callum Hawkins are among half a dozen British endurance runners selected for the IAAF World Championships in Doha.

British Athletics has named Purdue and Hawkins along with Tish Jones and Dewi Griffiths in its marathon team for the big event from September 27 to October 6, while Cameron Corbishley and Dominic King are picked to compete in the 50km race walks.

Mo Farah has declined selection for the marathon, however, increasing speculation that he will target the 10,000m in Doha or perhaps an autumn big-city marathon instead such as Berlin, New York City or Chicago – the latter of which he won last year.

Like Farah, Steph Twell was also eligible for selection after her 2:30:11 marathon debut in December, but she also declined selection.

Purdue and Hawkins both went No.3 on the UK all-time rankings on Sunday at the Virgin Money London Marathon. Purdue clocked 2:25:38 while Hawkins ran 2:08:14 to also break Allister Hutton’s long-standing Scottish record.

Griffiths clocked 2:11:46 in London in only his second marathon while Jones ran 2:31:00 in the women’s race.

Hawkins and Purdue also both ran for Britain in the IAAF World Championships in London two years ago – with the Scottish runner fourth in the men’s race and Purdue 13th in the women’s race.

In the race walks, Corbishley clocked the second quickest 50km time ever by a British athlete of 3:53:20 in Slovakia recently confirm his place while King was also inside the qualifying standard with 3:56:35 in the same race.

On welcoming the first selections for Doha, British Athletics performance director Neil Black said: “Each of the six athletes selected have performed extremely well to confirm their places in Doha, many setting personal bests and establishing themselves among the UK’s best all-time in their events.

“The IAAF World Championships in Doha are a very important marker ahead of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games and we look forward to being as competitive as possible in both events.”

British number one Kyle Edmund lost to American world number 82 Denis Kudla in the first round of the Munich Open, his third straight defeat.

Fifth seed Edmund was beaten 6-4 6-3 in the first ATP meeting between the pair.

Defeat continued an ordinary start to the clay-court season for Edmund, whose only win has been against French youngster Ugo Humbert in Marrakech.

Edmund went out to former Grand Slam finalist Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, then lost in Monte Carlo to Diego Schwartzman.

Now ranked 22nd in the world, the 24-year-old Englishman was unable to turn around his form on a surface on which he has good pedigree against Kudla, who dominated to win in just one hour and seven minutes.

The 26-year-old ended his own losing of streak of five matches by taking three of 10 break points, while Edmund did not manage to muster any opportunities on Kudla's serve.

Konta 'very proud' of gutsy Morocco comeback

Published in Tennis
Tuesday, 30 April 2019 10:28

British number one Johanna Konta saved three match points - on her way to winning 11 straight points - to level her Morocco Open first-round match before going on to claim victory.

Konta, 27, saw off China's Yafan Wang, ranked 56th - nine places below the Briton - in a 4-6 7-6 (7-0) 6-4 win.

She was on the verge of defeat as she trailed 40-0 at 6-5 in the second set, only to stage a remarkable fightback.

"I'm very proud of myself, for the way I competed," Konta said.

"It was a tough match and I'm very happy to have battled through to find a way to win that second set and then come back from 3-1 down in the third.

"I also had match point at 5-3 so there was very little in the match."

Konta will play Romania's 132nd-ranked Ana Bogdan in the next round.

Three-time Grand Slam champion Stan Wawrinka has called on the ATP player council to act after Justin Gimelstob's sentencing for assault and end "a shameful period" for the sport.

Gimelstob, 42, is one of three player representatives on the ATP board.

The American, also a former player, received three years probation and 60 days community service after pleading "no contest" to a battery charge.

Swiss Wawrinka, 33, says players "need to speak out" about the subject.

The player council, led by 15-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic of Serbia, has the power to remove Gimelstob, but would need the consent of at least six of its 10 members.

"It simply cannot be possible for anyone to condone this type of behaviour and, worse, support it," Wawrinka, who has won Australian Open, French Open and US Open titles, posted on social media.

"In any other business or sport we would not be discussing this.

"The ATP council needs to do something about this and finally end this conversation and shameful period in our great sport."

Wawrinka's comments come after Britain's Andy Murray became the first leading player to call on Gimelstob to quit his role on the ATP board.

Gimelstob, who has also worked as a coach and TV commentator, was sentenced in Los Angeles last week.

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.

Mrs Kaplan went on to have a miscarriage, which the couple believe was a result of the stress of the attack.

"I don't see, with everything that has gone on, how it's possible for him to remain in a position of authority or management at the ATP right now," Murray told The Telegraph.

Following Gimelstob's sentencing, the ATP said his future was a "subject for review by the board and/or the player council".

It added: "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."

Baldwin Chan Ho Wah, the no.11 seed, accounted for New Zealand’s Nathan Xu, the no.3 seed (11-8, 3-11, 11-9, 6-11, 11-9, 11-6) to cause the biggest upset of the day; a notable performance, the previous day the young man from Hong Kong had finished in second place in the group stage behind Chinese Taipei’s Huang Yu-Jen, the no.4 seed.

Conversely, Li Hsin-Yu, the no.9 seed, as well as Wong Qi Shen, the no.12 seed and Amos Ling Yi Heng, the no.13 seed, had all excelled expectations, remaining unbeaten in their respective groups. All continued their good form.

In the opening round, Amos Ling Yi Heng beat Australia’s Raymond Zhang, the no.15 seed, Wong Qi Shen overcame Hong Kong’s Lau Chun Nok, the no.14 seed (11-7, 11-2, 12-10, 7-11, 11-6; Li Hsin-Yu ended the hopes of New Zealand’s Jack Chen (11-2, 11-3, 11-5).

Success against the odds in the opening round, for Chinese Taipei’s Tai Ming-Wei and Huang Hu-Jen, as for Hong Kong’s Pau Yik Man, it was success as anticipated. Major title contenders, Tai Ming-Wei, the top seed, beat Hong Kong’s Yu Nok, the no.5 seed (11-8, 6-11, 11-9, 11-5, 11-3), a players who the previous day, contrary to expectations, had finished in second place in his group .

Likewise Pau Yik Man, the no.2 seed, accounted for Malaysia’s Mak Tin Ian (11-6, 11-7, 11-9, 13-11); Huang Yu-Jen ended the hopes of Choy Chu Kit, the no.5 seed (6-11, 11-6, 6-11, 11-7, 12-10, 9-11, 11-6), who like colleague Yu Nok, had concluded the initial stage group matches in runners up spot.

Meanwhile, as the group phase of play concluded in the cadet boys’ singles competition, the top four names all secured first places in their initial stage group matches and thus advanced directly to the quarter-final round. It was a successful day for Yiu Kwan To, Yu Nok and Hong Kong colleague Baldwin Chan Ho Wah, as it was from Australia’s Finn Luu.

Play concludes in Darwin on Wednesday 1st May.

Notably Ma Yat Sum and Wong Hoi Ting finished in first positions in their respective groups; the good form continued in the opening round.

Ma Yat Sum and Wong Hoi Ting both overcame adversaries from Malaysia. In a contest between players who have no world ranking, Ma Yat Sum beat Li Ying Im (11-5, 12-10, 11-2, 11-4), Wong Hoi Tung, the no.11 seed, accounted for Lim Jing Shuen (11-7, 11-6, 13-15, 11-4, 11-3).

Meanwhile, for Ma Yat Sum who had finished in second position in her group behind colleague Cai Fong-En, the no.2 seed, she booked her quarter-final place courtesy of against Canada’s Patricia Hui, the no.10 seed (11-5, 11-8, 11-7, 11-6).

Success for Hong Kong, for the host nation it was mixed fortunes. Parleen Kaur, the no.3 seed and Michelle Wu, the no.4 seed, finished in second places in their respective groups; progress to the main draw, for Parleen Kaur it was defeat at the hands of Chinese Taipei’s Yu Tsiu-Ting, the no.5 seed. Conversely for Michelle Wu it was success in opposition to Hong Kong’s Kong Tsz Lam (12-10, 11-6, 4-11, 5-11, 5-11, 15-13, 4-11, 4-11, 11-6).

Problems for the Parleen Kaur and Michelle Wu but not for Chinese Taipei’s Chien Tung-Chuan and Cai Fong-En, the respective top two seeds; first place in the group secured, both recorded convincing opening round wins. Chien Tung-Chuan beat Malaysia’s Lee Peng Look (7-11, 11-4, 9-11, 11-6, 2-11, 11-6, 11-5); Cai Fong-En accounted for Hong Kong’s Phoebe Hui Wai, the no.7 seed (10-12, 11-4, 11-7, 11-6, 11-9) who had finished in second place in her group.

Imposing from Hong Kong in the junior girls’ singles, it was exactly the same in the cadet girls’ singles event; the top four names Phoebe Hui Wai, Yenn Ho Ching, Chelsea Shiu Lam and Ma Yat Sum all secured first places in their respective groups and thus progressed directly to the main draw.

Commencing with the quarter-final round play in the junior girls’ singles and cadet girls’ singles events will be played to a conclusion on Wednesday 1st May.

Titles defended in Darwin

Published in Table Tennis
Tuesday, 30 April 2019 13:52

The task facing Melissa Tapper in Darwin is that of regaining her crown; she won women’s singles class 6-10 at the Oceania Para Championships in 2013 in Canberra and in 2015 in Bendigo.

Meanwhile, for Australia’s Chen Junjan, Caleb Crowden, Trevor Hirth and Nathan Pellissier alongside colleague Rebecca Julian and Fiji’s Merewalesi Vakacegu Roden, the task is to retain the hard earned titles won two years ago in Suva.

In the men’s singles events, Chen Junjan won class 2-3; Trevor Hirth secured the class 6-7 title, whilst Nathan Pellissier emerged the class 8-9 champion. Likewise, in the women’s singles competitions, Merewalesi Vakacegu Roden succeeded in class 2-5, Rebecca Julian in class 6-8.

However, if that is to happen, all will need to overcome adversaries striving for revenge.

Significantly in the men’s singles events, the runner up in 2017 in class 2-3, the name of New Zealand’s James Goulding appears on the entry list, as does that of Fiji’s Iakoba Taberanibou Taubakoa, the silver medallist in class 4-5; an event which could well witness a Suva repeat. Notably, bronze medallists Tuvalu’s Ioane Hawaii and Shadrack Timothy are on Darwin duty.

Similarly, respective silver and bronze medallists in Suva in class 6-7, Australia’s Jake Ballestrino and Yaser Hussaini are listed to compete, as are New Zealand’s Victor Kamizona and John Christopher, bronze medal winners in class 8-9 two years ago.

Aiming to better the efforts in Suva; it is the same in the women’s singles events. Silver medallist in class 2-5 Australia’s Amanda Tscharke is on duty in Darwin as is bronze medallist, also from the host nation, Lisa Di Toro. Likewise, silver medallist in Suva in class 6-8, Fiji’s Laniana Ere Serukalou, will be in action.

A total of 25 men and 13 women will compete at the 2019 Para Oceania Championships.

Para Oceania Championships 2019: Entries (Tuesday 30th April)

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