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SIX GAMES, SIX LOSSES. Nothing season-defining, nothing heartbreaking, nothing even memorable, just a nearly weeklong mid-April shrug that ended with the Seattle Mariners trudging toward the clubhouse six times while the Astros or Indians shook hands. But near the end of it, before loss five, Mariners manager Scott Servais found himself in an odd position: forced to explain why a team that was never supposed to win suddenly stopped winning.

He couldn't say what must have been on his tongue -- What did you expect? -- so that part stayed unspoken but understood. The Mariners started the season with 13 wins in 15 games, and they hit homers as if it were a choice, and they had everybody wondering how a team could dump nearly every recognizable name on its roster and come out on the other side with something approaching historic greatness.

It was the type of streak that causes people with a lot of time on their hands to point out that every other team that won 13 of its first 15 also won the World Series, and the type of streak that made six straight losses in mid-April far more newsworthy than anybody would have guessed.

Through those first 15 games, Servais had gone through every known variant of an equally unlikely question: What happens when a team that's not supposed to win suddenly does? Now, five losses in and fielding a nearly infinite number of corollaries, he decided to let the walls of his office do the talking for him.

He turned his head to the right and pointed his chin at a poster opposite a framed Vince Lombardi quote ("The Man on Top of the Mountain Didn't Fall There") and a bit to the right of a sign that bears the Mariners' logo and some "Process Driven" pabulum you might find in a Walmart breakroom.

"Look at that," he said, and everyone in the room dutifully followed along, mentally vectoring the chin and the wall to discover Servais' target: a large Mariners calendar schedule.

There it was, game after game, week after week, month after month. Home games in white, road games in blue, more miles flown over the course of the season than any team in baseball. A show-us-what-you-got trip to Cleveland, New York and Boston to start May. A Detroit-Toronto-Tampa trip in mid-August. Mid-August: a lifetime from now. "Look at all those games," Servais said, as if noticing it for the first time. "That's one long season."


JERRY DIPOTO IS positive and certain in a way that makes you wonder if he ever doubts. The Mariners' GM says, "The glass is always half full," and then laughs, but that doesn't begin to cover it. This is a man who never leaves the house wondering whether he locked the doors or turned off every burner on the stove, a man who always has exact change for bridge toll. The glass in Dipoto's mind overflows.

It's the type of certitude that enabled him to spend the offseason practically flinging players -- Robinson Cano, Edwin Diaz, James Paxton, Jean Segura, Alex Colome, Nelson Cruz -- from the roster of an 89-win team that hasn't made the postseason for 17 years, the active MLB record. He replaced them by implementing what might be termed an accelerated rebuild. Try to fix everything, from the aging roster to the lousy chemistry, without waiting around for the better part of a decade to see if any of it worked.

"If a rebuild usually takes five to eight years, we wanted to do it in half the time," Dipoto says. "We decided to focus on birth certificates. If the normal way" -- Dipoto later called it the Astros way -- "is to acquire 21- and 22-year-olds and hope they grow to be strong contributors at 26 and 27, what if we just go out and acquire guys who are 25, 26 and 27?"

Sounds simple. Completely overturn a roster by taking big swings at unproven guys who might need just a hug and a chance. Why didn't anyone else think of it? Plus, and this isn't a minor point, the strategy falls right in line with baseball's trend toward valuing youth and club control over just about everything else. Players older than 30 feel the squeeze: less money, fewer years, no more one-final-huge-contracts out there to finish a career. The Mariners remain in baseball's upper half for player salaries, but the core is unproven and cheap -- by design.

Dipoto and Servais discussed this, how they could construct a team around talented players who languished behind stars in other organizations. Daniel Vogelbach -- arms like legs, legs like piers -- was stuck behind Anthony Rizzo in the Cubs organization, and now he's slugging his way through all the stereotypes. Domingo Santana posted an .875 OPS in his one full season in Milwaukee but found himself struggling to find a consistent role in an outfield with Christian Yelich and Ryan Braun. Catcher Omar Narvaez was a 1.9 WAR player as a part-timer with the White Sox last season; he's catching nearly every day for the Mariners and hitting with power (a .875 OPS in April).

"It didn't really feel gutsy," Dipoto says. "It felt like we were doing the smart thing. But we knew the reaction might be a little ... I'd say tepid. But I've done enough that's been received by smiles and laughter, and enough where I'm sometimes hit in the head with fruit. You're not always going to be popular, but we did something to chart our own future instead of having to react to what an aging roster told us we had to do. We decided to create something that looks different."


HOW DIFFERENT CAN a big league ballclub look? Start with what happens a couple of hours before nearly every game, when the Mariners turn the clock back about 30 years and take a full-blown infield. They field grounders and throw to first, they turn double plays, the catchers throw to the bases. If someone screws up -- and since the Mariners were the worst fielding team in baseball through April, the extra work is warranted -- he goes again. It's all very elementary of them.

There's a hitting simulator in the tunnel between the Mariners' clubhouse and dugout at T-Mobile Park. A huge screen beams a life-size video of that night's opposing pitcher, throwing on an endless loop, and Seattle's hitters stop to stand in and get a feel for release point and, to a lesser extent, pitch movement. The simulator is just down the hall from a big banner with the team's motto: Kaizen, which is a Japanese term for the pursuit of daily, incremental improvement.

"They pretty much think of everything around here," Vogelbach says.

Even after another four-game swoon, not unlike the one Servais deflected in April, through the season's first 32 games, the Mariners lead the majors in every meaningful offensive statistic. They went 18-14 and averaged nearly six runs and two homers per game, and the production was as much patience as aggression. The Mariners' analytics department brought a new focus on pitch location and strike-zone awareness -- not only whether a pitcher is more likely to throw certain pitches for strikes, but where those pitches are most vulnerable within the strike zone. The new approach is best exemplified by second baseman Dee Gordon. This year, he has worked six walks in his first 111 plate appearances. Last year: nine in 588.

For a sport that prides itself on the daily dirge of failure and repentance, it's a convivial atmosphere. Sage vet Jay Bruce and Vogelbach -- seriously, it's impossible to overstate the size of the dude's glue-stick biceps -- are inseparable at one end of the clubhouse. At the other, where the relievers sit in their perpetual state of wait, rookies Brandon Brennan and Connor Sadzeck are reliving a pitch Brennan threw a couple of nights earlier. "Dude, I was sitting down there and everybody thought it was a slider," Sadzeck said. "I had to tell 'em: that's his changeup."

"We know there are a lot of people who don't think we're going to be any good," outfielder Mitch Haniger says. "Because of that, everybody in here roots for each other."

Haniger is a 28-year-old outfielder who might have started this whole thing by being warehoused behind A.J. Pollock in Arizona before being traded to Seattle after the 2016 season. He's now as close as the Mariners get to having a young, fully formed star.

"We call Mitch our champion because he truly is," pitcher Marco Gonzales says. "On and off the field, he does everything the right way. He cheers for everybody, and he's one of the best teammates."

Champion. In the context of a big league clubhouse, where the sarcasm is omnipresent if not always elevated, could they be serious?

"It's not at all sarcastic," Gonzales says. "Every time he gets a hit, we're like, 'That's our champion, that's our guy.'"

Haniger reacts about as enthusiastically as you might expect. "I ignore it," he says in a polite tone that still manages to suggest he will also choose to ignore further questions on the topic. "I will say, though, I did talk to some guys in the offseason about making sure this isn't one guy's clubhouse. We knew we had to make it the whole team's clubhouse."


ON A COLDER-than-it-looked mid-April evening, pitcher Mike Leake lay on the clubhouse carpet, stretching out before a start against the Indians. He's 31 years old but looks as if he could have ridden a skateboard to the ballpark. In a few hours, he'll walk off the mound after giving up two runs over six innings in a game the Mariners will lose 4-2.

The next afternoon, Leake says, "The way this team is built seems to be the business way to go right now. There are still some guys at home who could help a team compete, but the way they like to run it here is a business style. You can either accept it and play the game of baseball, or fight the system and they'll probably ship you out. They're trying to push the young. It's cheaper for them and it's more pliable. A veteran guy is going to want to do things his way. He's not going to accept new information if it's not going to make him better."

Leake wasn't naming names, probably because it was unnecessary. A bullpen as untested and inconsistent as Seattle's could use the unsigned Craig Kimbrel at the back end. A rotation assembled with as much twine and wire as Seattle's could drop Dallas Keuchel into the No. 2 or even No. 1 spot and be at least two games better over the course of a season.

"If we did sign them, then we would please the analytical world and the Twitter world," Dipoto says. Could Kimbrel and Keuchel, unsigned into May, possibly be cheap enough for the Mariners to be interested? "I have no idea," Dipoto says. "We're swimming in a different pond. Right now our pond is Connor Sadzeck, it's Brandon Brennan, it's Omar Narvaez. It's finding guys who need an opportunity and giving it to them."

Young, cheap and desperate for a chance is the new market inefficiency. Sadzeck is a 27-year-old rookie who walked 11 in 9⅓ innings with the Rangers last season and was acquired in an April 1 microtrade after he was designated for assignment by Texas. Where some might see stuff that behaves like an irrational toddler -- a fastball that tops 100 mph, a nearly unhittable 91 mph slider that has found a backstop or two in its day -- Dipoto sees the kind of prodigious talent that just might mature into a closer.

Dipoto's standard introduction, one he used with Sadzeck and backup catcher Tom Murphy, who was released by two teams this spring, reflects both his relentless optimism and his Father Damien outlook on player acquisition. "It looks like you're a big league player who hasn't been given the opportunity," he tells the new guys, "and we're going to give it to you."

Narvaez, a catcher traded from the White Sox for Colome, says, "That meant everything to me. Everything I've been working for. It's almost like a dream come true to be the No. 1 guy. It gives me a lot of pride in myself, and now I have to take care of it and take advantage of it."

The gratitude expressed by several of the new Mariners underscores the motivation behind Dipoto's frenzied offseason: flushing the toxins from the team's system. Despite the 89 wins last season, the entire enterprise went from stale to poisonous. Games would end -- win or lose -- and everyone would disperse like employees and not teammates. "Not many team gatherings," Gonzales says wryly. The tension peaked in early September, when Gordon and Segura fought in the clubhouse before a game.

"The first half of last season couldn't have gone better for us," Dipoto says. "Everyone was excited about it, but then the lights would go out at the stadium, the guys would grab their food and head out. Then they'd show up the next day for batting practice. The second half of the season, when we weren't getting the same breaks, you could see the fractures. It's nice to win 89 games, but if we truly thought we were an 89-win team, we wouldn't have done what we did."

They've proved that failure is sustainable, so why not take a shot at success?

"We have an unwritten future," Gonzales says. "And I think we're all on board with writing the best one that we can." The schedule, all those games in all those places, looms out there in the distance; all you have to do is follow the chin. But no matter where the endless blocks of blue and white boxes ultimately lead, they'll never erase the rarest of species: the baseball team that managed to pull off the wildly entertaining rebuild.

New Diamond League season starts in Doha

Published in Athletics
Thursday, 02 May 2019 07:45

Dina Asher-Smith, Caster Semenya and Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake among those in action as the 10th edition of the IAAF Diamond League kicks off in Qatar

The road to Doha begins in the Qatari capital itself five months ahead of the season finale at the IAAF World Championships.

It is a very long journey back to the Middle East too, as the choice of Doha for the global championships has pushed it back to late September due to climate issues.

Nevertheless, the 10th edition of the IAAF Diamond League is again likely to see some of the best athletics of the whole season and the emergence of new stars.

The season-opener in Doha on Friday (May 3) will take place, for the first time, in the Khalifa Stadium, which will host the World Championships.

Britain’s Dina Asher-Smith had a memorable 2018 in which she won three European titles, and in Doha she will look to get her international season off to a flying start over the half-lap. However, last year’s world No.1 will have a tough challenge against Phyllis Francis of the United States, among others. Shannon Hylton joins her fellow Briton in the field.

In the men’s 200m the top two at the European Championships last year go head-to-head again in the shape of Ramil Guliyev of Turkey and Britain’s Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake. Ecuador’s Alex Quinonez, Canada’s Aaron Brown and Jereem Richards of Trinidad and Tobago are other sub-20 athletes who have been confirmed.

Much attention will be on the women’s 800m following the addition of South Africa’s Caster Semenya to the field. The two-time Olympic champion was not included on the original entry list but is now set to race, a couple of days after the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) announced its decision on her case against the IAAF’s new rules on female classification.

As reported on Wednesday, the CAS dismissed the challenges from both Semenya and Athletics South Africa against the new rules but added that the panel “expressed some serious concerns as to the future practical application of these DSD Regulations”.

The regulations will come into effect on May 8.

In the Doha 800m field on Friday, Semenya will be joined by Britain’s Lynsey Sharp, Kenya’s Margaret Wambui, USA’s Ajeé Wilson and Francine Niyonsaba of Burundi, among others.

The shot put is also set to be a highlight. After achieving the best throw of the last 29 years so early in the season, USA’s Ryan Crouser will be looking to build on his 22.74m as he takes on world champion Tom Walsh of New Zealand, plus USA’s Darrell Hill, European champion Michal Haratyk of Poland and Czech thrower Thomas Stanek.

Also in action in Doha will be Britain’s Lorraine Ugen and Shara Proctor in the long jump, Meghan Beesley in the 400m hurdles and Charlie Myers in the pole vault, plus Kenya’s Hellen Obiri and Ethiopia’s Genzebe Dibaba in the 3000m, and USA’s Brianna McNeal and Sharika Nelvis in the sprint hurdles.

Johanna Konta through to Morocco Open quarter-finals

Published in Tennis
Wednesday, 01 May 2019 11:48

British number one Johanna Konta reached her second WTA quarter-final of the season with another hard-fought, three-set victory at the Morocco Open.

Konta, who saved three match points in her opening match in Rabat, won 6-1 6-7 (6-8) 6-2 against Romanian Ana Bogdan.

Konta, 27, led 4-1 in the second set, only for 132nd-ranked Bogdan to raise her game and win a tie-break to level.

But seventh seed Konta regained control in the decider to earn another win in her first clay-court event of the year.

The Briton again showed her strength of character to earn a fourth straight three-set victory.

She will face Taiwanese second seed Hsieh Su-wei in the next round after she beat Lara Arruabarrena of Spain 4-6 7-5 6-3.

Valuable learning experience in Singapore

Published in Table Tennis
Wednesday, 01 May 2019 09:52

Eddy Tay has been the team manager for the Singapore national team since 2008. Notably since his appointment, Singapore won the women’s title at the Liebherr 2010 World Team Championships in Moscow; in addition he received the Coaching Commendation award in 2003 from the Singapore Sport Council

“It has been a good learning journey for me to be a course conductor. I feel honoured and I am delighted to share my experiences and contribute to table tennis in Singapore.” Eddy Tay

Vast experience in coaching and management for the national team made Eddy Tay the ideal candidate to be an ITTF/PTT Level One coaching course conductor.

All responded to the efforts of Eddy Tay, none more so than Tay Jit Kiat, 24 years old, a former Singapore team youth player.

“I feel the coaching course and the instructor taught me a lot of basic knowledge while keeping it interesting. The para portion was very new to me because I never experienced it before and I feel it is quite challenging. The course was conducted in a very professional way with a lot of knowledge.” Tay Jit Kiat

Likewise former junior international, Yin Jingyuan, 22 years old, was most positive.

“This course allowed me to explore different types of coaching styles. The course conductor was also able to share his vast experience and explain the latest developments in table tennis. I have also learned a lot about the application of sport science in table tennis and various factors to consider when conducting training and competitions which will go a long way to help me to be a better coach. Most importantly, I met other coaches. My instructor, Eddy Tay, shared with me the experiences as a coach and team manager, broadening my horizons.” Yin Jingyuan

Overall, a total of 17 participants passed the course.

Major media coverage in Kinshasa

Published in Table Tennis
Wednesday, 01 May 2019 09:59


Notably in addition to the hosts, players and coaches from Burundi, Congo Brazzaville and Gabon attended.

Overall the initiative proved a great success, all the players and coaches responded; the local media taking a great deal of interest in proceedings.

Most notably there were 12 features on television; also, six radio stations in addition to four local newspapers covered the event. In particular,on Sunday 28th April from 3.30 pm to 6.10 pm there was live television coverage.

Present for the occasion was Jean Marie Okouna Olandzobo, President of the African Central Region, as well as President of the Congolese Table Tennis Federation.

It was a great opportunity to discover African talents; thanks are extended to the International Table Tennis Federation, the Africa Table Tennis Federation and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Proceeding concluded with the Challenge tournament, one in which the host nation excelled. Exauce Ngefuasa and Lily Dinanga won the respective cadet boys’ singles and cadet girls’ singles title. Similarly, Malola Fernando secured the under 12 boys’ singles title. The one title to elude the Democratic Republic of the Congo came in the under 21 girls’ singles competition, the event being won by Burundi’s Gateka Yakin.

A busy week, most rewarding and one from which the region has most certainly benefitted; the potential was evident, the task is nurture and develop the unquestioned talent.

The next competition in Kinshasa is the Continental Cadet, Hopes Week and Challenge to be stage at the Pullman Hotel from Saturday 8th to Saturday 15th June.

2019 Central Africa Regional Cadet, Hopes Week and Challenge: Full Results (Sunday 28th April)

Reaching the pinnacle in New Delhi

Published in Table Tennis
Wednesday, 01 May 2019 10:24

Overall, a total of 30 coaches attended, most significantly there was a vast age range, the youngest member being 16 years old, the most senior 60 years of age.

“The Delhi Public School has a distinct focus on table tennis with a world class facility. The school’s table tennis facility is fast becoming famous globally as a high quality table tennis destination and has a name of its own “Pinnacle Table Tennis Academy”. In past the school has produced many junior and senior level champions and boasts names of the many coaches who are Level One and Level Two certified.” Harpreet Singh

Supported by Mrs Rajoo Mann, the Chair; the Head of Sport at the Delhi Public School is Dr. Virender Rana, a National Institute of Sports graduate and former table tennis player. He leads a young and dynamic team, focusing very much on the development of the individual whether it be players or coaches.

“When we started to build the table tennis facility, people were ok to have a small facility but we never settle for second best. We ensured that we created one of the best facilities for table tennis in India.” Rajoo Mann

A most successful initiative, it is one that sets a splendid example.

“The Pinnacle Table Tennis Academy in Sonipat has set the standards in India for residential table tennis academies and shown a way for other schools as well how to set up such facilities which will produce champions.” Harpreet Singh

All responded to the efforts of Harpreet Singh in what was a ground breaking venture.

“Even though it was a first time experience for the Delhi Public School to conduct an ITTF/PTT Level One course; the team of Miss. Komal Dhamija, Mr.Ashutosh Sharma and Mr. Mohan from Tenvic were able to pull everything together with great efficiency.” Harpreet Singh

A fruitful endeavour and one appreciated by M.P. Singh, Secretary General of the Table Tennis Federation of India.

“The Table Tennis Federation of India is committed to encourage such enthusiasm for creating world class table tennis facilities in India, which will enable all players and coaches to have right environment to practice the sport and be the best in the world.” M.P. Singh

Enthusiasm combined with effort was plentiful; it was for all a most rewarding experience.

Leading host nation names impose authority

Published in Table Tennis
Wednesday, 01 May 2019 11:23

Furthermore, it was success for the host nation. Nathan Pellissier, Trevor Hirth and Joel Coughlan secured top spots without experiencing defeat.

Nathan Pellissier, the top seed, accounted for colleague Jake Ballestrino (11-6, 11-7, 11-7) and New Zealand’s Matthew Britz (11-2, 11-5, 11-4). Similarly Trevor Hirth, the no.2 seed, was in form. He beat Connor Holdback (11-6, 8-11, 11-7, 11-4) also from Australia, prior to overcoming Fiji’s John Christopher (11-7, 11-5, 11-4). Meanwhile, Joel Coughlan, the no.3 seed, prevailed in opposition to Tonga’s Iotili Loamanu (11-5, 11-3, 11-2) and when facing New Zealand’s Victor Kamizona (11-8, 11-2, 11-6).

First places determined, the question in the one remaining match in each group is as to who gains second place and thus progress to the main draw.

Similarly, in women’s singles class 6-10 where there are two groups in the initial stage of play, the leading names, both from the host nation, posting convincing wins in their one and only matches on the opening day. Both opened their accounts with successes against compatriots. Melissa Tapper, the top seed, beat Rebecca Julian (11-2, 11-4, 11-1), Andresa McDonnell accounted for Christine Wolf (11-4, 11-2, 11-4).

Outcomes as very much anticipated but in the one further event that witnessed play on the opening day, there was a surprise. In men’s singles class 3-5, Shadrack Timothy, the top seed, was beaten by Australia’s Caleb Crowden (11-8, 11-8, 11-8); an upset but not in the corresponding group, also from Australia, Chen Junjian, the no.2 seed and winner two years ago in Suva of the men’s class 2-3 title, was in no mood for charity. He beat New Zealand’s Patrick Todman in three straight games (11-2, 11-3, 11-2).

Play concludes in Darwin on Saturday 4th May.

Para Oceania Championships 2019: Latest Results & Draws

Uganda dominant in Kigali

Published in Table Tennis
Wednesday, 01 May 2019 12:03

Each day play commenced at 8.00 am and ended at 6.00 pm, matters concluding with the traditional competition from which the leading players progress to attend the Continental Hopes Tournament scheduled to be staged in June in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Uganda emerged the most successful nation. Amaniyo Flavia and Kasoma Tendo won the respective under 15 girls’ and under 15 boys’ events; Wabugoya Juma emerged the under 12 boys’ champion. The one interloper was Rwanda’s Hirwa Kelia, she won the under 12 girls’ event.

Understandably, Jiagwe Robert, President of Uganda Table Tennis Association, was delighted, the success a reward for the efforts made in the past two years.

“This marks the very first time in the history of Ugandan Table Tennis that we are sending a team of cadet and hopes players to the Continental African Championships. There has always been some neglect of these young ones but we have now put good eyes on them and these are the fruits of our efforts and the extra ordinary work being done by our coaches, clubs and schools.” Jiagwe Robert

Delighted with the results, Jiagwe Robert was most positive about the future.

“This performance is proof that table tennis now has a very clear and admirable future. We have very many young players now and to have these young ones performing. We are extremely excited that it is the young ones who have helped Uganda to finally conquer our Eastern Zone of Africa.” Jiagwe Robert

KNUTSON: Remembering Ayrton Senna

Published in Racing
Wednesday, 01 May 2019 09:00
Dan Knutson

BLOOMINGTON, Minn. — May 1 marked 25 years since the death of racing legend Ayrton Senna.

The weekend of the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix was a horrible one. Roland Ratzenberger was killed in an accident during qualifying and then Senna lost his life in a single-car crash during the opening laps of the following day’s race.

Back in 2004, 10 years after Senna’s accident, McLaren team boss Ron Dennis met with a small group of journalists, including yours truly, to reflect on the life and times of the Brazilian who drove for McLaren from 1998 through 1993 and won three world championships with the team.

“When he joined our team, he did not have a sense of humor,” Dennis recalled. “That doesn’t really go down well in our team. Some of you consider us gray and uninteresting and lacking passion and ‘esprit de corps.’ But it is just not like that inside the team. If I reflect back, he didn’t have a sense of humor, and it was important that he had one.

“I started the process of trying to give him an understanding of the value of laughter, and what a great way it was to break tension in a situation. Of course, it became an amusing mission for (teammate) Gerhard Berger and myself. Practical jokes ran consistently through the team and they were sometimes extreme.

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“Once he (Senna) realized that this had an element of competition about it, who could do the most outrageous thing to the other, then he very entered into the spirit,” Dennis added. “Of course, the end result was that it broke the tension down and was a good adhesive in the relationship between the drivers and management. He really entered into it because that gave him the environment to open up a little bit.”

The practical jokes between Senna and Berger were wild indeed.

“In Australia, Gerhard stole Ayrton’s passport,” Dennis said, “and we surgically removed the picture from the passport and cut out of a very dubious magazine an equivalent sized photo of male genitalia and carefully put it back with cello tape so that at a glance you didn’t realize that anything had taken place.

“When Ayrton came back to Europe he immediately got on an airplane and flew to Brazil. He had to go through Argentina and that was the first time anybody looked at his passport. They were not amused and he spent 24 hours in Argentina because they would not allow him to pass through Argentina without the passport being rectified.”

Senna was a tough negotiator when it came to contract time. During one negotiation, Dennis and Senna were half-a-million dollars apart.

“It became a point of principle — who was actually going to win that last part of the negotiations,” Dennis said. “His English wasn’t perfect at that stage, so the moment came when I suggest to breaking the deadlock by tossing a coin. It was something that clearly didn’t happen in Brazil — the concept of tossing a coin to break a deadlock. So it took a while to explain it. Then, of course, it got quite serious because we realized that if we were going to do this as a way to break the deadlock we should be very clear about the rules. I literally had to draw a picture of a head and a picture of a tail and select a coin and say this is you and this is me, it can’t land on the side. It has to be flat.

“When we got the rules and had been over them several times, then it was who was going to toss the coin, were we going to catch it, was it going to fall to the ground?” Dennis explained. “We had a couple of practice runs. It was a very small office with a brown shag carpeting, so it was not a particularly good surface on which this coin was going to land.  We threw the coin, and it rolled under the curtain. He lifted the curtain and it was flat, it rolled off the side of the curtain onto the parquet flooring. I won the bet.

“It wasn’t until I was driving away that I realized that it was a three-year contract and in fact $1.5 million that we had thrown a coin for,” Dennis added. “I somewhat doubt that anyone has tossed a coin for $1.5 million. That sounds like we were disrespectful for money, but it was nothing to do with that, it was simply a way to break the deadlock.”

Memories Of Richard Hoffman Shared On Social Media

Published in Racing
Wednesday, 01 May 2019 10:00

CONCORD, N.C. – On Tuesday, multi-time AMSOIL USAC National Sprint Car Series champion car owner Richard Hoffman passed away after a recent illness.

Hoffman was a major part of the United States Auto Club pit area for more than six decades, following in the footsteps of his father Gus, and the immense outpouring of memories and support on social media in the wake of his passing directly reflected his impact within the racing industry.

SPEED SPORT has collected a sampling of those Twitter messages, which can be viewed below.

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  • FISB

    Federation Internationale de Speedball

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