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VanderBeek Breaks Through At 81 Speedway

Published in Racing
Friday, 26 April 2019 04:01

PARK CITY, Kan. — After several near misses in the early going this season, Zack VanderBeek found the road to victory lane and garnered his 48th career USMTS win at 81 Speedway Thursday night.

The 34-year-old from New Sharon, Iowa, hasn’t employed any drastic measures to get faster, just plugging away.

“We made some little changes, but we’re just working hard and not giving up,” he said. “It’s a heck of a lot easier when you can start in front of these guys.”

Local favorite and Wichita native Cody Schniepp snagged the Sybesma Pole Award, but VanderBeek muscled his familiar No. 33z Casey’s General Stores VanderBuilt Race Cars USMTS Modified into the top spot to lead the first lap.

About 20 minutes and 40 laps later, ‘The Z-Man’ finally had a checkered flag to take home from C. Ray Hall’s historic facility-a place where VanderBeek had piled up several near-misses over the last decade.

“King of America was tough, and then going down south there’s a lot of good cars,” VanderBeek added. “We’ve been kind of right there but you just have to get in the right position. I think we’ll have some more wins this year.”

Conversely, Rodney Sanders has a series-best four triumphs at the 81 Speedway and two wins under his belt this season already. This time, however, “The Sandman” had to follow his long-time nemesis to the finish line.

Sanders chased Schniepp for the first half of the main event before eventually working his way into second, but he was never able to mount a serious challenge on the leader despite two caution flags late in the race.

“Once I got to second, I knew Zack was probably not going to make a mistake,” said the 2013 and 2014 USMTS National Champion. “At that point, I was just trying to save my right rear tire and just kind of hang on.”

For his part, Schniepp kept pace with the lead duo until the end, coming home with a career-best third-place USMTS finish, holding off Ryan Gustin over the final laps.

Jake O’Neil returned to USMTS action after nearly a month off to recover from an apparent staff infection in his legs, and snatched a top-five finish.

The finish:

Zack VanderBeek, Rodney Sanders, Cody Schniepp, Ryan Gustin, Jake O’Neil, R.C. Whitwell, Dereck Ramirez, Hunter Marriott, Joe Duvall, Chad Wheeler, Tanner Mullens, Bryce Schniepp, Tyler Wolff, Austin Siebert, Dustin Hodges, Scott Green, Mike Striegel, Cole Traugott, Nathan Hagar, Terry Phillips, Adam Kates, Jake Nightingale, Dan Powers, Josh Lanterman, Tyler Davis, Darron Fuqua.

Last-Lap Pass Lifts Thomas Kennedy

Published in Racing
Friday, 26 April 2019 04:11

EAGLE, Neb. — Leading the only lap that pays, Canadian Thomas Kennedy made a stunning last-lap pass of Matt Covington to win with the Lucas Oil American Sprint Car Series presented by the MAVTV Motorsports Network Thursday night at Eagle Raceway.

“I knew I had the fastest car; it was just a matter of time and I was either going to make it or break it,” said Kennedy. “Luckily traffic held him [Matt Covington] up a bit and I was able to get underneath him, but this is awesome. Especially starting 13th and wheeling my ass all the way to the front.”

The Buffalo Wild Wings No. 21k rolled to the white flag with a nearly half straightaway disadvantage to the A-Rock Materials No. 95 of Covington. Finding his lane blocked by slower cars through the first and second turns, the brief slowdown by Covington was just enough for Kennedy to pounce. Rushing the bottom of the high-banked oval, Kennedy made the pass off the second turn.

Racing into the final two turns, Covington tried to retake the top spot but would have to settle for second.

“Last week it was lapped traffic that won me the race, and tonight I lost it. I just took it too easy on them. These guys out here are fast, and you have to go every lap and I just got conservative and gave it away,” explained Covington.

Wayne Johnson finished third with Cody Ledger and Josh Baughman rounding out the top five.

A field of 35 was on hand for the Track Enterprises promoted event.

The finish:

Feature (30 Laps): 1. 21K-Thomas Kennedy, [13]; 2. 95-Matt Covington, [4]; 3. 2C-Wayne Johnson, [11]; 4. 35L-Cody Ledger, [9]; 5. 17-Josh Baughman, [3]; 6. 28-Scott Bogucki, [14]; 7. 81-Jack Dover, [17]; 8. 11-Roger Crockett, [6]; 9. 15H-Sam Hafertepe Jr, [22]; 10. J2-John Carney II, [8]; 11. 23-Seth Bergman, [18]; 12. 47X-Dylan Westbrook, [19]; 13. 5J-Jamie Ball, [1]; 14. 9X-Jake Bubak, [10]; 15. 17W-Harli White, [20]; 16. 23S-Stuart Snyder, [21]; 17. 82-Jason Martin, [15]; 18. 44-Chris Martin, [23]; 19. 92-Jordan Weaver, [5]; 20. (DNF) 21P-Robbie Price, [2]; 21. (DNF) 84-Brandon Hanks, [7]; 22. (DNF) 1-Travis Rilat, [16]; 23. (DNF) 52-Blake Hahn, [12]; 24. (DNF) 77X-Alex Hill, [24]

High Bank Holdup Weekend Washed Out

Published in Racing
Friday, 26 April 2019 05:16

FULTON, N.Y. – A poor forecast with temperatures in the 30s and 40s has forced Fulton Speedway and Super DIRTcar Series officials to cancel the High Bank Holdup Weekend scheduled for Friday and Saturday.

No rescheduled dates for either event have been scheduled at this time.

The Super DIRTcar Series returns to action on Tuesday, May 7 for the Ultimate Outlaw 100 at Outlaw Speedway in Dundee, N.Y.

Stanley Cup Playoffs Daily: Bruins, Blues strike first

Published in Hockey
Friday, 26 April 2019 05:25

After a shocking first round, who is ready for more? The second round is officially underway and looks to bring just as much excitement despite both higher seeds winning on Thursday night (for a change).

Here's a recap of last night's action (check out replays of every playoff game on ESPN+) and what to watch for tonight, in today's edition of ESPN Stanley Cup Playoffs Daily:

Jump ahead: Last night's games | Three Stars
Play of the night | Today's games | Social post of the day


About last night ...

Game 1: Boston Bruins 3, Columbus Blue Jackets 2 (OT) (Bruins lead the series, 1-0). The Bruins came out hot. The Blue Jackets looked like a team settling in after a week off. But then, Columbus scored two goals in 13 seconds (by Brandon Dubinsky and Pierre Luc-Dubois, after the scoresheet was corrected) and we had a game. In the end, it was third-line center Charlie Coyle who played hero to the home crowd at TD Garden and all the hometown fans back in Weymouth, Mass.

Game 1: St. Louis Blues 3, Dallas Stars 2 (Blues leads the series, 1-0). Vladimir Tarasenko's first of two goals came on the power play (for a penalty he drew), and his second proved to be the game-winner. It's the first power-play goal the Stars have allowed this postseason. It wasn't the best night for Dallas goalie Ben Bishop, who allowed a goal to Robby Fabbri on the opening shot, then heard his hometown St. Louis crowd chant his name derisively for most of the night.

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0:47

Tarasenko nets 2 goals in Game 1 win vs. Stars

Vladimir Tarasenko helps the Blues take a 1-0 series lead against the Stars by scoring two goals to secure the 3-2 Game 1 win.

Three Stars

1. Charlie Coyle, C, Boston Bruins

Hometown boy comes home, does good. Coyle, who fell out of favor in Minnesota, has been everything you'd want in a trade deadline acquisition; at times, he was the Bruins' best forward in the first round series. Now he scores the game-tying and overtime goals to open Round 2.

2. Vladimir Tarasenko, RW, St. Louis Blues

Tarasenko started the season slowly as he recovered from offseason shoulder surgery. He's as hot as ever, with two goals on Thursday. Only two Blues players in history have more playoff goals than Tarasenko: Brett Hull and Bernie Federko.

3. Jordan Binnington, G, St. Louis Blues

The kid continues to impress. He stopped 16 of 17 shots in the third period alone (including a few wild ones). Binnington's five postseason wins are now the most by a St. Louis rookie goaltender.

Play of the night

That's how you drive to the net.

Dud of the night

Uhh... not cool, Brad.

On the schedule

Carolina Hurricanes at New York Islanders, Game 1, 7 p.m. ET

These are two plucky underdogs battling it out, but there's one storyline you'll hear more than any other one heading into Game 1: the Canes are likely exhausted -- physically and emotionally -- after grinding out their series against the defending champion Washington Capitals two days ago. The Isles have been resting up for a week. Our take? That might make for a sloppy first period, but things should settle after that.

Colorado Avalanche at San Jose Sharks, Game 1, 10 p.m. ET

The Sharks are a bit banged up, and will be without captain Joe Pavelski for at least one game. The Avs, meanwhile, are getting healthier. Defenseman Samuel Girard, who missed the last three games of the Calgary series, is healthy and ready to go. Could we see both Girard and Cale Makar on a power-play unit together (as suggested in practice on Thursday)? Derick Brassard (illness) is available too.

Social post of the day

View this post on Instagram

It's been a crazy past two weeks but here are my wife's words! (she says it perfectly) #AGTG -Hey everyone..we have a DAUGHTER! ?? -Man oh man. Adoption is, by far, the most amazing, difficult, beautiful, exhausting, emotional, exciting, incredible journey that we have ever embarked on. But it all led us to THIS. It all led us to HER. God's plans were SO MUCH BETTER than anything that we could have dreamt of. -There really aren't words to describe the feelings that are felt when the absolute strongest woman that you have ever met chooses to trust you to raise her child. E's birthmom is easily the bravest person we know. She chose life for this precious baby girl. She selflessly chose to carry E for 9 months, knowing that she would not be the one to take her home. I'm crying as I type this because my feelings and connection with her run just as deep as they do with our daughter. She is our hero and she is our family. -And oh, baby E. This girl. This beautiful, perfect, snuggly baby girl. Being chosen to be her parents is an honor that we will never grow numb to. She is the absolute best thing in our world. Our bond with her was instantaneous. She is the greatest gift of our lives. WE are the lucky ones in this story. ??? -And finally, God. Our loving Father. My goodness, how much I feel His love for me as I love on her. To know that He adopted me into His family is something that hits me so much harder than it did 2 weeks ago. He sought after me and took me as His own child. He gives me (and all of the other saints) the same inheritance as His own Son. We were brought into His family by no doings of our own, but by His love and mercy. And that, too, is something that pray will never grow old to us. ✝️ -We ask that everyone be respectful to the privacy of E and her birthmother, as we cannot and will not disclose their stories to the world... because they are THEIR stories. We also cannot post pictures of E's face or her name until the finalization of the adoption, which could be many months. (Which sucks because the world deserves to see this precious face!!!?) Please keep us all in your prayers as we go through this journey and transition!

A post shared by Jaccob Slavin (@jslavin74) on

A sweet moment for Canes defenseman Jaccob Slavin and his family.

Quotable

You never want to be caught carrying a big suitcase full of yesterdays.

Ben Foakes is set to make his England white-ball debut in Dublin next week, after being called up for the one-off Ireland ODI as a replacement for Sam Billings, who suffered a dislocated left shoulder while fielding for Kent against Glamorgan on Thursday.

Foakes, whose 71 from 80 balls for Surrey against Middlesex on Thursday was his third half-century in consecutive Royal London Cup games, is also set to keep wicket in the T20I against Pakistan in Cardiff on May 5, in the absence of England's first-choice keepers, Jos Buttler and Jonny Bairstow, who are being rested after their stints in the IPL.

His inclusion comes after a cruelly timed injury for Billings, one that would appear to have ruined his own chances of playing any part in England's World Cup campaign.

Although Billings had not been named in England's provisional 15-man squad for the World Cup, which gets underway in just over a month's time, he had seemingly put himself at the head of the queue of batting reserves, should anything befall the men ahead of him in the pecking order between now and the climax of the tournament on July 14.

Instead, having played just once for Chennai Super Kings in this year's IPL (and scored a duck in that solitary outing), Billings' start to the English season lasted just a matter of minutes.

Fielding at mid-off in Harry Podmore's opening over in Cardiff, he dived to intercept a drive from Glamorgan's Australia allrounder, Marnus Labuschagne, and landed awkwardly on his left shoulder.

In obvious pain, Billings was left prone on the outfield for several minutes, and treated with oxygen before being helped from the field.

He was taken to hospital, where the shoulder was relocated, and though he is scheduled to undergo scans when he sees a specialist on Friday, Billings was under no illusions about the extent of his injury when he returned to Sophia Gardens after the incident.

"Without a doubt, it's the most painful thing I've experienced," he told BBC Radio Kent. "An hour and 20 minutes with your shoulder not back in its right place isn't a great time for anyone."

ALSO READ: Back spasms and personal issues: England World Cup watch

Opportunity knocks, however, for Foakes, who was Man of the Series on his maiden Test tour of Sri Lanka last year after being called up - again as an injury replacement - after Bairstow turned his ankle playing football.

Speaking ahead of the announcement, Surrey's coach, Michael di Venuto, admitted that Foakes' calm, accumulative approach meant that he didn't stand out in the way of some of his rivals in white-ball cricket, but said that his one-day county performances over the past three years would fully merit an England call-up.

"I think he averaged 91 here [at the Kia Oval], he averaged 60 last year, he's doing the same this year," said di Venuto. "In white-ball cricket he's probably one of the form players in the country, it's just unfortunate that England are blessed with batsman-wicketkeepers who do it more explosively than he does."

Billings' injury is one of a number of concerns for England, particularly among their batsmen, as they build towards the World Cup opener against South Africa at The Oval on May 30.

Jason Roy has missed Surrey's last two London Cup games, after suffering a back spasm earlier this week, while Eoin Morgan sat out Middlesex's match at The Oval after complaining of sore shins.

Kent's other England selection, Joe Denly, was not included for the trip to Glamorgan after himself suffering a back spasm while batting against Gloucestershire on Tuesday.

Alex Hales, meanwhile, has been put on indefinite leave by Nottinghamshire for personal reasons, but is expected to link up with the England squad for a pre-season training camp in Cardiff this weekend.

His hitting exploits have already made him a social media sensation. He has a Hall of Fame father, a dynamic swing and an electric presence. His at-bats promise to be must-see viewing from the very start -- and the very start is now.

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. will make his much-anticipated major league debut for the Blue Jays Friday at Toronto against the Oakland Athletics. We asked three of our national baseball writers for their takes on what the moment means and what they expect from Baby Vlad.

When was the last time you were this excited for a prospect to reach the majors?

Jeff Passan: June 8, 2010. I remember traveling to Nationals Park for Stephen Strasburg's debut fueled by a concoction of curiosity and hype. And when he struck out 14 Pirates amid seven glowing innings, the home run he gave up to Delwyn Young didn't spoil anything. This was curiosity sated and hype warranted. It felt like the beginning of something special. It has not become that. Strasburg, now 30, isn't that transcendent pitcher he seemed that night. But it's still a game that resonates clearly nearly a decade later.

David Schoenfield: Kris Bryant was the biggest story of spring training in 2015. He'd hit .325 with 43 home runs in the minors in 2014 -- and, remember, that was a season when offense across the majors collapsed to its lowest levels in more than three decades. Bryant was the best power-hitting prospect in a long time, plus there was the soap opera of whether he would make the Opening Day roster. He didn't and made his debut on April 17, going 0-for-4 with three strikeouts. But he homered the next game and was the MVP as a sophomore as the Cubs ended their World Series drought.

Bradford Doolittle: Excited might be a strong word, but I must admit I had a very similar feeling of anticipation this season for the arrival of Eloy Jimenez as I do for Baby Vlad. It's probably because I haven't seen Guerrero play in person yet, although his epic moonshots that people have shared on social media have been great. I saw Jimenez for the first time in spring training last year, though, and the ball coming off his bat was just notably different. So I couldn't wait to see him in Chicago, and I have to say, so far I have not been disappointed. There could be a great race between Jimenez and Guerrero for this year's AL rookie award.

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0:24

Vlad Jr. takes 1st batting practice with Blue Jays

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. takes batting practice at the Blue Jays' facility prior to his 1st MLB appearance.

Who was the last prospect to enter the majors with this much buzz around their name?

Passan: Has to be Bryce Harper, right? The kid who was on the cover of Sports Illustrated at 15 years old and skipped his senior year of high school and slayed the minor leagues before debuting in the majors at 19. And remember, Harper really played only one full season in the minors. We've had to wait nearly two extra years for Vlad Jr.

Schoenfield: Bryant or Harper. In Harper's case, his buzz surpassed Vlad Jr.'s, given all the attention given to him since that SI cover. Heck, I remember listening to the radio broadcast of his first minor league game.

Doolittle: I'm going to keep waving the Eloy Jimenez banner. The kid is special.

Who does Vlad Jr. remind you most of as a hitter?

Passan: To say his Hall of Fame father would be fair because so much of what Junior does well -- hit the ball hard, go to all fields, make contact -- mirrors Pops. I'm going to go with a contemporary of the elder Vlad: Manny Ramirez. The swing is powerful and consistent. The eye isn't otherworldly but good enough. The bat-to-ball ability is keen. It's just Vlad Jr. being Vlad Jr.

Schoenfield: The comparisons to his dad are pretty obvious, but I'm going to bring up Mike Piazza. I always described Piazza as looking like he's swinging a sledgehammer up there. That's what Junior reminds me of, whipping a big ol' hammer through the zone. Piazza started with the bat more straight up while Guerrero has it flatter behind his head, but the swing and follow-through are similar. Piazza was a great contact hitter with power (he never struck out 100 times), and that's what Guerrero projects to be as well.

Doolittle: It's easy to say his father, and there are some obvious similarities. But I don't think Vlad Sr. had the same kind of raw power, and his swing was longer. Junior's combination of exit velocity with elite bat-to-ball skills is hard to match. Statistically, Miguel Cabrera is a pretty good match, or at least a good target for Junior to shoot for. Guerrero doesn't release his top hand on his swing like Miggy does, though. I guess the best combination of numbers forecast and swing mechanics is probably Manny Ramirez.

What's your favorite Vlad Jr. viral moment/story from his career so far?

Passan: The Montreal home run. Barely 19 years old, playing in an exhibition game in the stadium his father owned once upon a time, Vlad Jr. broke a scoreless tie in the bottom of the ninth with a majestic home run off a pitcher, Jack Flaherty, who looks more and more like an elite major leaguer. It was a perfect snapshot of what Vlad Jr. can be and what he can do -- all in front of a crowd that by the time he's a veteran could have a team of its own.

Schoenfield: Definitely the home run in Montreal. Proof that he probably should have been in the majors last season.

Doolittle: Ditto the Montreal home run. When was the last time there was that kind of memorable moment in one of those end-of-spring exhibition games?

Predict Vlad Jr.'s 2019 stat line.

Passan: .301/.372/.515 with 22 home runs, 78 RBIs, 72 runs scored, 3 stolen bases and 18 errors.

Schoenfield: FanGraphs projects a .306/.371/.517 line with 19 home runs in 106 games. Assuming he stays healthy, he'll play more than 106 games, so he may go over on the power -- although I wonder if it will take another season before the power fully arrives as he'll learn to better launch the ball in the air. So I'll go .315 with 18 home runs.

Doolittle: .295/.358/.490 with 23 homers, 76 RBIs and minus-11 defensive runs saved.

Predict Vlad Jr.'s next five years: How many All-Star appearances and MVPs -- and what category will he lead the majors in first?

Passan: Four All-Star appearances, one MVP and he'll win a batting title first.

Schoenfield: I'll go five All-Star appearances (hey, look at the Blue Jays roster, he could make it this season), no MVPs (not enough of an all-around game and the Jays don't look close to playoff contention) and I see him as a batting title guy more than a home run title guy.

Doolittle: Four All-Star appearances. Zero MVPs. A batting title seems inevitable. He's a .346 hitter for his career in the minors at a time when the AL and NL have a hard time populating a top 10 with .300 hitters.

Across any sport or beyond sports, who's your all-time favorite Junior?

Passan: Sorry, Vlad, but you've got a long way to go to top Martin Luther King Jr.

Schoenfield: How are you supposed to follow up Martin Luther King Jr.? Cuba Gooding Jr.? Ed Begley Jr.? Junior Spivey? How about Junior Ortiz. I once lost a sim league playoff game when Junior Ortiz hit a home run -- in a season in which he hit zero home runs in real life. Not that I'm still bitter or anything 29 years later.

Doolittle: Kurt Vonnegut Jr. Not to overstate my own literary accomplishments, but his work had meaningful impact in how I view writing. His father, by the way, was an architect.

Tennis Scotland says it's on track to deliver at least 10 new indoor facilities in the next six years.

Chief executive Blane Dodds gave an update on the £15m plan at Thursday's annual general meeting in Stirling.

Building work at Greenock's Rankin Park is expected to begin later this year while four other proposals are at the technical design and planning permission stage.

It is hoped two facilities per year can be established between 2020 and 2025.

Tennis Scotland recorded income of £1.97m for 2018, up £110,000 on the previous year.

"Overall it was a very strong 2018 and we have carried that positive momentum into this year, which is already showing a significantly improved financial performance to reinvest in tennis across Scotland," said Dodds.

Eleven-time champion Rafael Nadal gave a much improved performance to beat David Ferrer 6-3 6-3 and reach the quarter-finals of the Barcelona Open.

Nadal, 32, lost a set at the event for the first time in four years in his win over Leonardo Mayer on Wednesday.

His struggles followed defeat by Fabio Fognini in Monte Carlo on Saturday, but here he dominated Ferrer.

The Spaniard will now play Jan-Lennard Struff after the German beat Stefanos Tsitsipas 6-4 3-6 6-2.

"I had to improve on yesterday, not just the result but overall," said Nadal, who needed four match points to seal the win.

"It was important to do better and play with more energy than yesterday. I did that so I can go back to my hotel feeling much happier."

Elsewhere, Japan's Kei Nishikori eased into the last eight with a 6-1 6-3 victory over Felix Auger Aliassime and will play Spain's Roberto Carballes Baena.

Queen's wheelchair tournament to be ranking event

Published in Tennis
Friday, 26 April 2019 03:07

The 2019 Fever-Tree Wheelchair Tennis Championships at Queen's will be the first grass-court ranking tournament to take place outside of Wimbledon.

Wheelchair tennis made its Queen's debut as an exhibition event in 2018.

The tournament will take place from 21-23 June and ranking points will contribute towards qualification for the Tokyo 2020 Paralympics.

"Last year's tournament was a huge success," said tournament director Stephen Farrow.

"We are delighted to be able to run it as a tour event with ranking points this year. Wheelchair tennis is a great sport for fans to watch, and the event is a fantastic addition to the Fever-Tree Championships.'

In 2018, Britain's Paralympic gold medallist Gordon Reid and silver medallist Alfie Hewett reached the singles semi-finals at Queen's, and finished second in the round-robin doubles tournament.

Raonic, Dimitrov and Wawrinka to play Queen's

Published in Tennis
Friday, 26 April 2019 01:05

Former Wimbledon finalist Milos Raonic says Queen's is the "best way to prepare" for the All England Club after signing up to play this year's event.

Three-time Grand Slam champion Stan Wawrinka and 2014 Queen's winner Grigor Dimitrov have also been confirmed.

"We are excited about the line-up of established champions and talented young players we have assembled," said tournament director Stephen Farrow.

The Fever-Tree Championships take place at Queen's from 17-23 June.

British number one Kyle Edmund, Australia's Nick Kyrgios and Greece's Stefanos Tsitsipas, plus Canadian youngsters Denis Shapovalov and Felix Auger-Aliassime, are also set to be among a strong field.

Former world number one Andy Murray has a career-long commitment to the ATP 500 event, but is recovering from hip surgery.

BBC Sport will have live coverage from the west London club across television, radio and online.

Wimbledon starts at the All England Club a fortnight later on 1 July.

Farrow added he expected "more big names to be revealed" when the entry list is finalised next month.

Meanwhile, Great Britain will play the United States in a new junior team competition named in honour of former British Davis Cup captain Paul Hutchins, who died last month.

The Paul Hutchins Trophy, which will become an annual event, will be played on 21 and 22 June, with four junior players from each nation representing their respective countries.

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