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Why Mariano Rivera is two Hall of Famers in one

Published in Baseball
Friday, 18 January 2019 06:38

Mariano Rivera was the greatest regular-season reliever of all time and the greatest postseason reliever of all time. That's why he's a first-ballot Hall of Famer. Simple enough.

But Bill James' old line about Rickey Henderson -- "If you could split him in two, you'd have two Hall of Famers" -- got us wondering: If Mariano Rivera had never thrown a postseason pitch, would he still have been a first-ballot Hall of Famer? And, similarly, if he'd somehow never thrown a regular-season pitch, would he still have been a first-ballot Hall of Famer?

We think we can answer these questions, which -- considering this article made it to print -- are almost certainly going to be answered "yes."

1. If Mariano Rivera had never thrown a regular-season pitch, would he have been a Hall of Famer? Would he have been a first-ballot Hall of Famer?

Just get past the basic unreasonableness of the premise. You don't watch the whole movie saying, "But why would a radioactive spider bite give him spidey sense?" He never threw a regular-season pitch because he just didn't.

In which case, here's the guy's career: 141 innings. No pitcher has ever made the Hall of Fame throwing fewer innings, unless you count Stan Musial and George Sisler. But these are the instructions given to voters:

5. Voting: Voting shall be based upon the player's record, playing ability, integrity, sportsmanship, character, and contributions to the team(s) on which the player played.

His playing ability, integrity, sportsmanship and character are unaffected in this scenario. His record would obviously be limited but still something to behold:

  • His postseason ERA (0.70) is the lowest in postseason history, minimum 30 innings. (The only people even close all threw about 31 innings, or were Sandy Koufax.) Put it this way: There have been only three seasons in history in which a pitcher had a regular-season ERA of 0.70 or lower with a minimum 50 innings pitched; Rivera's postseason career was essentially two of those, in the highest stakes and against the best teams.

  • He has the most saves in postseason history, almost two and a half times as many as the next guy and almost triple the active leader.

  • He has the most win probability added in postseason history, and this one's a doozy: Rivera's postseason WPA is 11.7. The next-highest player had 4.1 WPA. The highest by a hitter -- of all the hitters in history! -- is 3.2. Rivera, in fact, had more WPA than the second-, third- and fourth-best postseason careers put together. Remember Madison Bumgarner's postseason run in 2014, when he seemed to single-handedly pitch the Giants to the title? Rivera's career WPA is like seven of those.

That all fits under "record," but it's not exactly intuitive how much that translates to the final factor in the Hall of Fame instructions, "contribution to team." It's a contribution to a team, but how do we possibly put those 141 innings on a scale alongside Hank Aaron's 10,000 (regular-season) plate appearances, or on a scale alongside Bob Gibson's 4,000 regular-season innings and 81 postseason innings? We do it, friends, with championship win probability added (cWPA).

As published by The Baseball Gauge, cWPA takes the premise of win probability added but applies it across a season: Given the standings, or the stage of the postseason, and the situation of the game, how likely is a given play to affect a team's chances of winning the World Series? A bases-empty single on Opening Day is worth only a tiny bit of cWPA; a single that drives in David Justice and Sid Bream in Game 7 of the NLCS -- turning a ninth-inning deficit into a walk-off win -- is worth .340 cWPA, more than a third of a whole championship, because those 1992 Braves' chances of winning it all improved from roughly 1 in 6 before the hit to roughly 1 in 2 after it.

Rivera's championship win probability added, just in his postseason appearances, adds up to 1.792 -- meaning that if an average pitcher instead of Rivera had been New York's closer, the Yankees could have expected to have won two fewer World Series. That 1.792 is a record, unsurprisingly, well ahead of second-place Bumgarner's 1.230 cWPA in postseason play and third-place Rollie Fingers' 1.150 and fifth-place Babe Ruth's 0.905. Rivera's cWPA is higher than the combined cWPA of the pitchers with the second-, third-, fourth-, fifth- and sixth-most saves in postseason history. Double, in fact.

But Rivera, in this scenario, has no regular-season contribution, while everybody else would. So add in the regular season -- the thousands and thousands of plate appearances Hall of Famers racked up in their careers -- for everybody except Rivera, and Rivera's cWPA would still be among the all-time leaders:

1. Mickey Mantle, 3.099
2. Ruth, 2.887
3. Lou Gehrig, 2.217
4. Willie Mays, 1.916
5. Stan Musial, 1.814
6. Rivera, postseason only, 1.792
7. Duke Snider, 1.779

Now we're on the same scale: In terms of adding championships, relative to average players, Rivera's contribution to his team in the postseason alone is topped by only five players, all five of them among the dozen greatest players of all time. Assuming in this weird premise that voters don't hold it against Rivera for limiting his brilliance to the postseason, it's clear his contribution ranks among the very, very inner circle of major leaguers. Further, his place on the cWPA leaderboard isn't the result of a single start (à la Jack Morris) or a single play (like Hal Smith) but sustained greatness over 16 postseasons, 96 appearances and five World Series titles. He's in!

2. If Mariano Rivera had never thrown a postseason pitch, would he have been a Hall of Famer? Would he have been a first-ballot Hall of Famer?

The answer to the first part is easy. Trevor Hoffman is an uncontroversial Hall of Famer from the same era as Mariano Rivera, and their Hall of Fame arguments are roughly similar/clearly in favor of Rivera:

  • Hoffman: 1,089 innings, 2.87 ERA, 601 saves, seven All-Star games

  • Rivera: 1,283 innings, 2.21 ERA, 652 saves, 13 All-Star games

Rivera threw almost 200 more innings than Hoffman and allowed 38 fewer runs. The difference between Rivera's ERA+ and Hoffman's is bigger than the difference between Hoffman's and Todd Van Poppel's. It's not even close. And while in this scenario Rivera threw a pitiful zero postseason innings, Hoffman's case depended not one bit on his postseason performance: 13 innings, 3.46 ERA, four saves and two blown saves. And no rings.

But Hoffman didn't get in until the third ballot. Other than Dennis Eckersley -- who won 150 games as a starter, and serves as the exception to prove this rule -- no reliever has ever made it in on the first ballot:

  • Rollie Fingers, second vote

  • Hoyt Wilhelm, eighth vote

  • Goose Gossage, ninth vote

  • Bruce Sutter, 13th vote

Lee Smith was never voted in, but was elected to this year's class by the Today's Game Era committee. So maybe too many voters just won't vote for even an elite closer -- a mere relief pitcher -- on the first ballot unless they have no other choice. In which case our no-postseason Rivera has to be not just as good as these Hall of Famers, but much better. He has to be as valuable as a non-reliever.

The first part is subjective, but Rivera had 12 seasons with an ERA+ over 200 -- that is, seasons where his park-adjusted ERA was twice as good as the league average. Hoffman, Gossage, Sutter and Eckersley had two each. Smith had one. Rivera's 12 best years combined the very best two years of those five Hall of Famers, plus the three best seasons of Aroldis Chapman.

But does that make him as valuable as a non-reliever? His career WAR -- 56.2 -- is borderline, among the lowest for a non-reliever in the Hall and especially low for a modern candidate. But relievers' workloads are artificially limited so they can be saved for high-leverage situations. Their low workloads are strategy, not flaws. The WAR scale breaks down for relievers, because teams are essentially saying that one WAR in a close ninth inning is worth more than one WAR in any other generic situation.

They give us an idea of just how valuable, because they offer relievers contracts to sign with them. Over the past decade-plus, teams have spent about $5 million per win from a starting pitcher or a position player. They've spent almost $11 million per win from a relief pitcher. Either teams are all terrible at spending their money, or they think high-leverage WAR are a lot more valuable than run-of-the-mill WAR. Maybe even twice as valuable.

If "twice as valuable" is right, then Rivera's 56 WAR would be, to a front office, to a team, as valuable as around 110 WAR by a starting pitcher or position player. That's an inner-circle Hall of Famer: Greg Maddux, Mickey Mantle.

Now, that rests on some assumptions, and it might be overly generous to the relievers, but it's also fairly consistent with Hall of Fame voting. For non-relievers, 60 WAR is about what it takes to get into serious discussion, and 70 or 80 makes a player close to a lock. Some players sneak into serious candidacies with 50 WAR.

For relievers, those standards are all about halved: 25 is the floor (Sutter, Fingers), 30 is a serious candidate (Hoffman and Smith), 35 or 40 makes a lock (Gossage, Wilhelm). The average Hall of Fame reliever had 38 regular-season WAR. Rivera had 50 percent more than that.

Of course, in this scenario he had no postseason appearances. Neither did Ernie Banks, famously, and Rivera's regular-season cWPA (.341) aces Banks' (.213). Rivera's regular-season cWPA is the 131st-highest ever, just behind Randy Johnson and Pedro Martinez and just ahead of David Ortiz and Chipper Jones. Indeed, his cWPA -- without any postseason contribution -- would be just about the median Hall of Famer's cWPA including the postseason. Not every Hall of Famer improved his contribution in the postseason. Regular-season Rivera would be ahead of the total cWPA contributions of Wade Boggs, Tom Seaver, Greg Maddux, Mike Piazza -- and Eckersley, the first-ballot Hall of Famer, whose cWPA took a sizable hit on October 15, 1988.

Rivera's took an even bigger hit on Nov. 4, 2001, when Tony Womack had (by cWPA) the third-biggest hit in baseball history. A lesser reliever might not have lived that down. But Rivera is the greatest reliever of all time. Both of 'em.

A guide to the under-20 action in Borås, including preview, finals timetable and TV info

Many athletes to have claimed medals at the European U18 Championships in Győr last year will be among those seeking success in Sweden over the coming days as European Athletics U20 Championships action takes place in Borås from July 18-21.

Thomas Keen and Keely Hodgkinson both gained gold in Győr and feature on the Great Britain team again in Borås, while Ireland’s Sarah Healy will be looking to build on the 1500m and 3000m double she achieved last year.

The entry lists feature 12 world under-20 leading athletes, including high jumper Yaroslava Mahuchikh of Ukraine, who has cleared 2.00m this summer, and Tilde Johansson, who recently set a Swedish under-20 record of 6.73m in the long jump. Both Mahuchikh and Johansson also got gold in Győr.

The British team will expect to come back with a clutch of medals, with their new world under-18 200m record-holder Amy Hunt possibly one of the stars of the event.

Her massive breakthrough when clocking 22.42 in Mannheim last month makes her a strong favourite for that event, while she will lead a strong team in the 4x100m too.

READ MORE: Amy Hunt reflects on blistering sprint record

The sprint events ought to be productive for Britain all round, with Jeremiah Azu more than a tenth of a second quicker than anyone else over 100m and Immanuela Aliu in the mix for medals on the women’s side.

In the 400m hurdles, Alastair Chalmers is the quickest in Europe with Seamus Derbyshire also likely to be battling for medals.

Over the flat 400m, Ethan Brown lines up second fastest this year. Likewise, Joe Ferguson is second quickest behind Ireland’s Aaron Sexton on the 200m entries.

Josh Zeller leads the way in the 110m hurdles, while Lucy-Jane Matthews is a podium contender in the women’s equivalent.

Even with European youth record-holder Max Burgin absent through injury, Britain has the fastest three in the men’s 800m. Ben Pattison, Finlay McLear and Oliver Dustin are the trio going for medals.

It is a similar story on the women’s side where Isabel Boffey and Hodgkinson will be favourites if Switzerland’s Delia Sclabas, entered also for the 1500m and 3000m, does not run.

Britain’s Joshua Lay is fastest over 1500m with European youth 3000m champion Keen stepping down this time around. Grace Brock is fastest of the 5000m entries.

Holly Mills will be in with a shout of medals in both the long jump and heptathlon and has been named the GB team co-captain alongside Commonwealth Youth Games discus silver medallist James Tomlinson.

“It’s an amazing honour to be named captain out of all these amazing athletes,” said Mills. “From where I was at last year, to be able to come back to this point and now to be named captain of the team is really fantastic.

“We both captained the team at Loughborough International and I feel that has served as a really good stepping stone for this championship and I’m really excited to be one of the leaders of such a great team.”

GB team and entry lists

MEN
100m: Jeremiah Azu, Chad Miller, Tobi Ogunkanmi; 200m: Joe Ferguson, Praise Olatoke; 400m: Ethan Brown; 800m: Oliver Dustin, Finley McLear, Ben Pattison; 1500m: Thomas Keen, Joshua Lay; 3000m: Max Heyden, Ben West, Joe Wigfield; 5000m: Rory Leonard; 110m hurdles: Jack Sumners, Josh Zeller; 400m hurdles: Alastair Chalmers, Seamus Derbyshire; 3000SC: Remi Adebiyi, Kristian Imroth; LJ: Stephen MacKenzie, Alessandro Schenini; SP: Lewis Byng; Discus: James Tomlinson; HT: Bayley Campbell, Ben Hawkes; Dec: Joel McFarlane, Jack Turner; 4x100m: Fraser Angus, Jeremiah Azu, Joe Ferguson, Chad Miller, Sagesse Nguie, Tobi Ogunkanmi, Praise Olatoke; 4x400m: Ethan Brown, Alastair Chalmers, Lewis Davey, Callum Dodds, Michael Fagbenie, Ben Hawkes, Ben Pattison

WOMEN
100m: Immanuela Aliu; 200m: Georgina Adam, Amy Hunt, Hannah Kelly; 400m: Amber Anning, Louise Evans; 800m: Isabelle Boffey, Sarah Calvert, Keely Hodgkinson; 1500m: Molly Canham, Erin Wallace; 3000m: Saskia Millard, Eloise Walker; 5000m: Grace Brock, Izzy Fry; 100m hurdles: Lucy-Jane Matthews, Marcia Sey; 400m hurdles: Marcey Winter; 3000mSC: Holly Page; LJ: Holly Mills, Josie Oliarnyk; SP: Sarah Omoregie, Serena Vincent; HT: Charlotte Payne, Charlotte Williams; Hept: Olivia Dobson, Holly Mills, Amaya Scott; 4x100m: Georgina Adam, Immanuela Aliu, Amy Hunt, Hannah Kelly, Jazmine Moss, Cassie-Ann Pemberton; 4x400m: Amber Anning, Nayanna Dubarry-Gay, Louise Evans, Hannah Foster, Natasha Harrison, Maisey Snaith

The final entry lists can be found here.

Timetable and results

The action gets under way on Thursday July 18 and runs until Sunday July 21, with a full timetable and live results available here.

Finals
Times given are local time (an hour ahead of UK time)

Friday July 19
17:05 Long Jump M
17:50 Discus Throw W
18:30 800m Heptathlon
18:45 Shot Put M
19:35 Hammer Throw M
20:19 100m M
20:35 100m W

Saturday July 20
16:25 High Jump W
16:35 3000m M
17:33 3000m SC W
17:50 Pole Vault M
18:00 800m W
18:15 1500m M
18:19 Triple Jump W
18:25 200m W
18:35 200m M
18:44 Hammer Throw W
18:46 400m W
19:00 400m M
19:16 100mH W
19:31 110mH M
19:45 1500m Decathlon

Sunday July 21
10:00 10,000m Race Walk W
10:05 Discus Throw M
10:30 Shot Put W
11:05 10,000m Race Walk M
11:18 Long Jump W
12:05 400mH W
12:14 Javelin Throw M
12:20 400mH M
12:30 3000m W

15:54 3000m SC M
16:12 High Jump M
16:18 Pole Vault W
16:20 5000m M
16:37 Triple Jump M
16:47 4x100m W
17:00 4x100m M
17:25 5000m W
17:45 Javelin Throw W
18:00 800m M
18:33 1500m W
18:50 4x400m W
19:25 4x400m M

Finals timetable correct at time of publication. Click here for live event timetable.

TV guide

The championships will be streamed live on the European Athletics website here and coverage will also be shown on Eurosport.

Charlie Grice on his magical metric mile in Monaco

Published in Athletics
Wednesday, 17 July 2019 14:31

Beating Steve Ovett’s 1500m time in Monaco was a performance a decade in the making, Charlie Grice tells AW

Ten years ago Charlie Grice appeared in AW’s ‘rising stars’ magazine column as a promising 15-year-old middle-distance runner and spoke about his ambition to one day emulate the achievements of fellow Brighton Phoenix clubmate Steve Ovett. At the time Grice’s 1500m PB was 3:58.35 and a few months earlier he placed a mere sixth in the English Schools final, but this month he achieved his dream by beating Ovett’s best time of 3:30.77 with 3:30.62 in Monaco.

Ovett’s mark was a world record in 1983, whereas Grice’s performance places him No.4 on the UK all-time rankings behind Mo Farah, Steve Cram and Seb Coe – all of whom have broken the 3:30 barrier – and puts Grice in the frame for a potential podium place at the IAAF World Championships in Doha this year, not to mention the Tokyo Olympics in 2020.

“I’m very aware of the history,” he says, “and ever since I spoke to AW for the article all those years ago that mentioned what Steve Ovett had done, his time has been ingrained in my head so to get it is like a dream come true.”

Grice says fellow Phoenix member Paul Collicutt keeps Ovett and his former training partner Matt Paterson up to date with results and adds: “The whole club was excited to see me race in Monaco because they knew I was in good form. Paul called Steve straight away without realising it was early hours of the morning in Australia and I think Steve was out for dinner but he replied with a few words saying ‘congratulations’.”

Since that early article in AW, the past decade has seen Grice change his name to Charles Da’Vall Grice. After that early sixth place in the English Schools final, he later went on to win two English Schools golds and a bronze medal in the 2010 Youth Olympics in Singapore at 1000m. In 2013 he took silver in the European Under-23 Championships at 1500m as his improvement continued under the coaching of Jon Bigg. Several British 1500m titles followed and in 2016 he reached the Olympic final in Rio, placing 12th in a slow, tactical race won by Matt Centrowitz.

That same year he ran 3:33.60 for 1500m – again in Monaco – and that time survived as his PB until last week when he sliced three seconds off his best. “I think I’ve been capable of this kind of time on paper,” he says, “but it’s just been a case of actually putting it down.”

Amazingly his performance was achieved despite spending much of the spring period wearing a protective boot due to injury. “I tore my plantar fascia tendon after the indoors and I was in a boot for two months,” he explains, “so to be running this well off that kind of build-up is great.”

He jokes: “Running less is the way forward! I went away to Flagstaff in May and was out there for five and a half weeks and raced in Portland (June 9) but at the start of the camp I was only allowed to do 100m strides in my heavy running shoes in 15-16 seconds so I had to take baby steps. Then out there I got pretty fit.”

When he was injured he kept fit doing cycling in a home-made altitude chamber in England, plus swimming. “I guess I’ve also had years of training banked and am lot stronger,” he says.

Since his teenage years he has increased his mileage gradually every year under the patient supervision of Bigg and he has been a regular at British Athletics altitude camps where, compared to some athletes, he is recognised as being a big ‘responder’ to altitude work.

“Nothing happens overnight,” he says on his training and improvements. “It’s taken years and years of hard graft. Jon (Bigg) was always very good back then in holding me back. I would always want to do more and more but he had a long-term plan for me.

“I’ve had a lot of messages from people wanting to know what training I’ve done in the past few weeks but it’s not about that. It’s about the months and years leading up to a race. It’s quite funny how people always think there’s some kind of magic session or a magic camp where you can go away on one altitude camp and then you’ll run amazingly.”

Grice is speaking to AW from St Moritz, where he is enjoying a few days of training at altitude with friend and training partner Adam Clarke, among others. Rather than being homesick or treating it as ‘work’, Grice says he enjoys the lifestyle of training camps. “I like being away at altitude,” he says. “No distractions. Simple living. Plus St Moritz is such a beautiful place and it’s good to hang out in places like this with mates like Adam.”

Being an elite athlete also often means there is uncertainty when it comes to racing and Grice only got a last-minute invite to the 1500m in Monaco. The new world rankings system means he has struggled to get into Diamond League races lately and instead has raced in meetings in places like Watford and Marseille, although he does not necessarily think it has done him any harm. “It’s good for confidence to get some wins,” he says.

He also feels his 3:33.60 in Monaco in 2016 hinted at more to come. “When I ran that time I was overtaking Mo (Farah) on the back straight and got this sudden surge of ‘wow’ and thought ‘is this really happening?’ I remember my hand then clipping Mo’s trail leg and I nearly tripped him and then I bolted off and died the last 100m (Farah finished fifth and Grice ninth). I was on for about 3:32 but I faded and loads of runners came past me.”

Similarly, he feels his 3:30.62 in Monaco last week was not perfect and suggests there is more to come. “I was running a little wide at some points and I got a load of spike marks up the back of my leg because I was running into the back of people a little,” he says.

“I knew if I had the opportunity of racing in Monaco then I could get a PB of maybe 3:31,” he continues. “But I’d not raced there since 2016, when I ran my PB, so I didn’t want to set a limit on what I could do.

“I knew I had to hurt early. In races this year I’ve only gone through 800m in 1:54 or so but this one I was going to have to suffer early on and I went through 800m in 1:52 and 2:21 at 1000m. I honestly think I can go quicker. It probably won’t happen this year now but hopefully next year I’ll go back.”

It also wasn’t perfect that his coach was unable to watch him. Bigg was at the European Under-23 Championships in Sweden and stayed in a hotel near to Stockholm so he could potentially fly to Monaco, but close to the event he realised it was impossible to get there in time so he watched on a live stream instead.

In addition, Grice could barely have picked a worse weekend to run his fast time. With Wimbledon, the Cricket World Cup and British Grand Prix it meant athletics was drowned by other sports and struggled to get any coverage. “I think back in the day they stopped the news to play these big races whereas athletics doesn’t really hold any real weight these days,” he says. “It is a bit annoying but I guess it is what it is.”

If his form continues, though, he will surely get the recognition eventually. After this weekend’s Diamond League in London, where he is set to race 800m, his next big target is the Müller British Championships in Birmingham where he will face one of the strongest fields of the weekend – including Josh Kerr, Chris O’Hare and Jake Wightman – in the battle for Doha qualification.

“I can’t wait for it. I hope it’ll be a good turn-out,” he says. “You go to Birmingham and sometimes it’s not a great atmosphere. Races like Highgate have shown what more can be done. But the British Champs has the potential to be a crazy race with six or seven people with the qualifying time and that’s what my focus will switch towards soon.”

So what motivates him most in future? More fast times and records, or a podium place at a global championship? Without hesitation he replies: “Definitely medals. Fast times are great and I’ll 100% be going for a British record one day. It probably won’t happen this year with this weird season. But myself and Jon have always said it’s all about the medals.

“The next two years are huge with a Worlds and Olympics and the 1500m time the other night shows that I can be in the medals.”

T2 Diamond Series: Get ready for Johor Bahru!

Published in Table Tennis
Wednesday, 17 July 2019 07:32

Let the show begin!

The stars will be shining bright for the next four days in Johor Bahru, Malaysia, where the top 16 women’s and top 16 men’s athletes will compete for silverware and precious world ranking points. These will come especially handy for qualification to the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games. In addition, there is an attractive total prize purse of $1.5 million across the three T2 Diamond events scheduled during 2019, which fans can watch live on itTV.

The refurbished T2 Diamond series has returned to where it was inaugurated in 2017. The famous Iskandar Malaysia Studios (IMS) in Johor Bahru will be host to what is being called one of the progressive tournaments in table tennis, and rightly so. This competition provides a more fast-flowing format of the sport, whereby the elite athletes taking part have more than just their opponent to worry about, as the time limit of 24 minutes looms. In case there is no winner after 24 minutes, a FAST5 format will be introduced with the first player to five points winning each remaining game. Existing games in progress at the 24th minute mark will continue to 11 points.

Coloured rubbers will also be allowed, with reigning T2 Diamond women’s champion, Bernadette Szocs, the first to seize on this new ITTF initiative by going with pink rubber for one side of her bat. Other players are expected to follow suit as the season progresses.

“Table tennis continues to be one of the leading sports in the world, with our world class athletes delivering exciting and compelling fast-paced action at the table. We hope to see that the T2 model will prove to the market how best to commercialise table tennis. At the ITTF we are flexible and open to new ideas of taking the sport to a new level and success for the T2 events would demonstrate that there is a much better chance for table tennis to grow as fast as we’d like.” ITTF CEO, Steve Dainton

“From our founding T2 APAC and its innovative team play, we now move the competition a notch higher with the world’s top players needing to play consistently well just to qualify for each of our three lucrative events. Our exacting format means players will need to be at their very best to win and we expect fans to be treated to table tennis of the highest quality in T2 Diamond.” Chairman of T2 Diamond and Special Adviser to ITTF President, Mr Frank Ji

“It is fitting that Malaysia hosts the opening event of the world’s most riveting table tennis tournament – Seamaster T2 Diamond 2019 Malaysia. The T2Cavern at IMS was where history was made in 2017 and where table tennis will chart new heights with the world’s top 16 men’s and women’s players. The combined prize purse of US$1.5 million is an added bonus as these world class players also stand to gain additional ITTF World Ranking points in the tight battle for 2020 Tokyo Olympic qualification.” T2 CEO and Commissioner, Jeff Chue

Champions get the action started

As if that was not enough to get everyone excited, China’s Olympic champion Ding Ning, who has enjoyed somewhat a revival in recent weeks, is set to meet Bernadette Szocs from Romania in the very first round. Ding, who is nicknamed ‘The Queen of Hearts’, has reached two consecutive finals on the ITTF World Tour (Korea and Australian Opens) but failed to convert the silver into gold.

Over to the men’s draw, German legend Timo Boll will be unable to defend his title, given his recent hip injury in the build-up to the tournament. His quality will be missed, however his compatriot Dimitrij Ovtcharov will look to keep the German flag flying high against world no.1, Xu Xin. The Chinese star dubbed ‘Xu-perman’ has now won three World Tour titles in a row. Will anything or anyone stop him in Johor Bahru?

Another Chinese champion  last week in Geelong, Sun Yingsha will be looking to maintain her good run of form against Chen Szu-Yu from Chinese Taipei. Women’s world no.1 Chen Meng will need to be careful versus one part of Hong Kong’s doubles champion in Geelong, Doo Hoi Kem, who has repeatedly shown that she is not to be taken lightly.

Just days after defeating the legendary Ma Long in Australia, it remains to be seen if the ‘Dragon-slayer’ Wang Chuqin can work his magic against Lin Gaoyuan in the opening game on Thursday. Brazilian rising star Hugo Calderano will want to avoid any form of backlash from Fan Zhendong, as the former top-ranked Chinese looks to turn the tide of an underwhelming year so far for him.

The next four days call for eyeball-glued action with the top 32 in the world out in force. Stay tuned on all the action as it unfolds by following the links below:

Overton Stars At Smoky Mountain

Published in Racing
Wednesday, 17 July 2019 03:30

MARYVILLE, Tenn. — Brandon Overton won Tuesday night’s Schaeffer’s Oil Southern Nationals Series presented by Sunoco Race Fuels late model feature at Smoky Mountain Speedway.

Madden took the lead on lap 22 and never looked back en route to a $3,500 payday.

Overton’s victory was his second win on the tour in 2019 and his 12thcareer Schaeffer’s Oil Southern Nationals Series triumph.

The start of the race would see Michael Chilton grab the race lead, with Donald McIntosh, Dakotah Knuckles, Brandon Overton, and Jake Knowles giving chase. The only caution of the race would appear on lap two for debris on the track in turn three.

The restart would see Chilton maintain the race lead, while Overton would take the third position and one lap later, eighth place starting Tommy Kerr would grab the fourth position. Chilton would begin to stretch his lead over McIntosh at this point, while Overton would close in on McIntosh and begin to challenge him for the second position.

Ashton Winger would make his way into the top five at this point and would take the fourth position on lap 14.

Meanwhile, Chilton would open about a three-quarters of straightaway lead over the battle for second between McIntosh and Overton as Chilton would start working slower traffic on lap 17 and Overton would overtake McIntosh for the second position on the same circuit.

Overton would quickly begin to close the gap between himself and Chilton at this point and would pull alongside Chilton on lap 21 and take the race lead one circuit later.

Overton would slowly drive away from Chilton in the remaining laps of the event to claim the victory by 2.369 seconds over Chilton, with McIntosh finishing in the third position. Winger and Knuckles would complete the top five finishers

The finish:

Brandon Overton, Michael Chilton, Donald McIntosh, Ashton Winger, Dakotah Knuckles, Jake Knowles, Tommy Kerr, David Crabtree, Tanner English, Robby Moses, Cla Knight, Bobby Giffin, Stacy Boles, Craig Greer,Kyle Strickler

PHOTOS: Badger 40 At Wilmot Raceway

Published in Racing
Wednesday, 17 July 2019 07:00

Allmendinger To Drive Kaulig No. 10 At The Glen

Published in Racing
Wednesday, 17 July 2019 08:00

LEXINGTON, N.C. – Kaulig Racing announced Wednesday that part-time driver AJ Allmendinger will compete in the No. 10 Chevrolet at Watkins Glen Int’l on Aug. 3.

Allmendinger is a previous winner at Watkins Glen, having earned a victory in 2014 in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series for JTG-Daugherty Racing.

“It’s an honor to be able to compete for Kaulig Racing at one of my favorite tracks, Watkins Glen Int’l,” Allmendinger said. “I’ve been fortunate enough to win there in the Cup Series and had a strong run finishing second last season in my only Xfinity start there.

“Matt Kaulig, Chris Rice and all of the guys made Daytona so enjoyable and fun, and I can’t wait to get to The Glen.”

In his lone Xfinity Series start at the New York road course, Allmendinger collected one stage win and led 11 laps en route to a runner-up finish.

So far this season with Kaulig Racing, the veteran driver has led 33 laps and crossed the finish line in third, all in his first start with the team at Daytona Int’l Speedway on July 5.

As previously announced, Allmendinger is also scheduled to join the No. 10 team at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course on Aug. 10, Road America on Aug. 24 and at the Charlotte Motor Speedway ROVAL on Sept. 28.

The primary partner for the No. 10 Chevrolet at Watkins Glen will be released at a later date.

Sweet Remains National 410 Rankings Leader

Published in Racing
Wednesday, 17 July 2019 09:00

CONCORD, N.C. — Despite a winless week, Brad Sweet remains atop the National Sprint Car Rankings after the week ending July 14.

With an average finish of 5.154 in 39 starts, Sweet – who also leads the World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Car standings – holds the top spot over Donny Schatz and Buddy Kofoid, who makes his debut in the national rankings after making his 20th start over the weekend.

Danny Dietrich and David Gravel round out the top five.

Dietrich leads the Eastern region on the strength of 11 victories, while other regional leaders are Kofoid (Great Lakes), Billy Balog (Great Plains), Dominic Scelzi (West), Jacob Patton (Mid-America) and Jack Sodeman Jr. (Ohio-PA).

Dietrich leads the country with 11 victories, while Sweet follows with 10 wins. Aaron Reutzel, Freddie Rahmer and Lance Dewease have each won seven main events.

Eighty-nine drivers have combined to win 199 features run through July 14.

To view National and regional rankings, click below.

Question remains: When will Open return to Trump Turnberry?

Published in Golf
Wednesday, 17 July 2019 03:00

PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland – The R&A held its annual meet-and-greet with the media on Wednesday at Royal Portrush and it didn’t take long for the usual question about The Open’s possible return to Trump Turnberry to come up.

The Open hasn’t been played at Turnberry, on Scotland’s west coast, since 2009. For some in the United Kingdom, the question has become politically charged since the course is owned by U.S. President Donald Trump and the R&A doesn’t seem to be in a hurry to return to the layout.

“We've talked about this many times in terms of it being part of the pool of courses; nothing's changed from the previous points and comments that I've made on that in respect to taking The Open there,” said Martin Slumbers, the R&A’s chief executive. “But it's absolutely one of the pool of 10 courses.”

Unlike the U.S. Open and PGA Championship, which are scheduled years in advance, The Open is currently slated to go to Royal St. George’s next year, St. Andrews in 2021 and Royal Liverpool in ’22.

The Open has been played at Turnberry four times but with the addition of Royal Portrush, the site of this week’s championship, to the rotation and St. Andrews slated to host the event every five years, it’s going to become increasingly difficult for Ailsa Course to move back into the lineup.

PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland – For most, Harry Diamond is simply identified as Rory McIlroy’s caddie. Some might take it a bit deeper and point out the two were best friends growing up in Northern Ireland and that Diamond was the best man at McIlroy’s wedding.

But as McIlroy explained Wednesday at Royal Portrush, site of this week’s Open Championship, Diamond was an accomplished amateur whose experience could be particularly helpful this week.

“I think that's one of the things people don't realize, Harry has played more rounds of golf on this golf course than I have, and definitely more competitive rounds,” said McIlroy, who shot a course-record 61 as a 16-year-old in the North of Ireland Amateur held at Portrush in 2005. “He's just as comfortable on this golf course as I am. So that is a big help this week.”

Diamond was beaten in the North of Ireland finals in 2011 and won the West of Ireland Amateur the next year.

Although McIlroy has played his share of rounds on the Dunluce Links, the first coming as a 10-year-old, he admitted that he will be relying on Diamond this week on a course that’s changed quite a bit in the last 10 years, including two new holes for this year’s Open.

“With Harry's experience around here, not that I don't let him have any say any other week, but I think with his experience around here, my ear will be a little sharper to what he has to say,” McIlroy said.

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