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The BCCi's Committee of Administrators has appointed the former Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) of India, N Gopalaswami, to take charge of the board's upcoming elections. He has been named electoral officer for the electoral process, which is set to conclude with the polling on October 22.

Gopalaswami had worked as CEC between 2006 and 2009.

The BCCI is set for elections after a prolonged tussle over the implementation of the Lodha Committee's reforms, which was part of the fallout of the 2013 IPL corruption scandal. While the BCCI and its members - the state associations - wrangled over which Lodha recommendations to implement and in what form, the court had appointed a Committee of Administrators (CoA) to oversee the running of the Indian board in early 2017. The CoA supervised the BCCI for nearly 30 months before it announced in May that the board was ready to go ahead with elections.

Gopalaswami will perform his role as electoral officer for the BCCI out of the board's headquarters in Mumbai. He has till June 30 to prepare the electoral protocol for the elections, in consultation with the CoA, and communicate it to the state associations. Then, in the next step of the process, the states will need to appoint electoral officers of their own and hold their elections by September 14 at the latest. The states will then send the BCCI their list of representatives, and the list of candidates for the BCCI's election will need to be finalised by September 30.

It remains to be seen which of the current lot of office-bearers at the state and BCCI levels are eligible to contest the elections, given the cap on number of years in office and cooling-off period introduced by the Lodha Committee. As per the new rules, an office-bearer can work for 18 years as long as the cooling-off period of three years, which comes into play after two consecutive terms of three years each, is exercised.

Pakistan v Sri Lanka Match abandoned
As it happened

Persistent rain and a damp outfield forced the first washout of the 2019 World Cup as the game between Pakistan and Sri Lanka was abandoned without a ball being bowled. Although the rain wasn't heavy, it was enough to force a delay of more than five hours and render several parts of the outfield too wet to play on.

Umpire Ian Gould and Nigel Llong made the final call at 3.45pm local time. The teams split points, which ensured Sri Lanka moved to third on the table by virtue of a superior run-rate (-1.517). Pakistan, like Sri Lanka, have three points from as many games, but they only have a net run-rate of -2.412.

The (no) result means Sri Lanka will have to wait even longer to break their World Cup duck against Pakistan. The head-to-head reads 7-0.

Pakistan will now enjoy a five-day break before facing Australia in Taunton while Sri Lanka will run into Bangladesh on June 11 in Bristol.

PARIS -- Ashleigh Barty won 17 of the initial 18 points in her French Open semifinal against 17-year-old Amanda Anisimova to lead 5-0 after 12 minutes -- and yet somehow lost that set.

Barty then lost the initial 12 points of the second set to trail 3-0 -- and yet somehow won it.

So it was fitting, perhaps, that Barty not only fell behind by a break in the deciding set before coming back to take control, but also that she required a half-dozen match points to finally close things out.

Barty, an Australian seeded No. 8, reached her first Grand Slam final by steadying herself and emerging to beat Anisimova, an American ranked 51st, by a score of 6-7 (4), 6-3, 6-3 in a topsy-turvy contest on a windy, rainy Friday.

"I played some really good tennis. I played some pretty awful tennis," said Barty, a 23-year-old who took nearly two years away from the sport starting in 2014 to switch to cricket before returning to the tour.

"I'm just proud of myself the way I was able to fight and scrap and hang in there and find a way," she said, "when I kind of threw away that first set."

After ending Anisimova's breakthrough run, Barty now takes on another unseeded teen for the championship Saturday: 19-year-old Marketa Vondrousova of the Czech Republic.

Vondrousova, ranked just 38th, reached her first major final by overcoming a shaky start in each set and eliminating No. 26 Johanna Konta of Britain 7-5, 7-6 (2).

Vondrousova has not dropped a set in the tournament and can become the first teenager to win the French Open since Iva Majoli in 1997.

"Best week of my life so far," Vondrousova said. "I'm just very happy with everything."

That was Barty's mood at the outset of her semifinal, which then took quite a turn. Several, actually.

With Anisimova serving down 0-5, 15-40, Barty held two sets points. From there, Anisimova began playing the way she did in her quarterfinal upset of defending champion Simona Halep -- and Barty suddenly lost her way. Anisimova took six consecutive games. In the tiebreaker, more of the same: Barty went up 4-2, but Anisimova collected the last five points.

"Pretty tough to come to terms with," Barty said of her first-set collapse. "Probably never done that to myself before."

When Anisimova claimed that set with a forehand winner, she raised both arms aloft, looking like someone who had just won the entire match. Not quite, kid.

Still, that momentum carried her to a lead in the second set, before Barty went on a seven-game run of her own to go ahead 1-0 in the third.

Not ready to quit, Anisimova broke to lead 2-1 and had just fended off three break points when, at deuce, her coach signaled from the stands that play should stop because the rain picked up. Anisimova paused while the chair umpire climbed down to check whether the lines were slippery, but determined play could continue.

The little pause might have been enough to break Anisimova's concentration. Sure played as if it did.

Barty broke there and went on a four-game burst. As the match slipped away, Anisimova had distress written all over her face. After one lost point, she clutched her racket against her chest like a pillow. After another, she balled up her right hand into a fist and landed a punch on each thigh.

"She just outplayed me, basically," Anisimova said.

Vondrousova did not start her major semifinal debut well, either. She double-faulted twice in the opening game while ceding the first 10 points, and faced three set points down 5-3.

On Konta's first chance, she badly missed a swinging forehand volley.

"That's what I would do nine times out of 10. And probably nine times out of 10, it probably would go in," Konta said. "I definitely don't regret anything."

Perhaps, but she never recovered in that set. And in the second, Konta again blew a 5-3 edge.

Konta, the only member of the women's final four with previous Grand Slam semifinal experience, is now 0-3 in that round at majors. This time, she was undone by Vondrousova, a left-hander who appears to possess every shot there is, with an enviable variety of speeds and angles.

"She's a tricky player," Konta said. "That's what she does well."

The semifinals were played in difficult conditions, in drizzle, wind that reached 12 mph (20 kph) and temperatures of about 60 degrees (15 Celsius). The matches also were played at unusual courts -- scheduling that was criticized by women's tennis tour CEO Steve Simon as "unfair and inappropriate."

Normally, all French Open singles semifinals are held in Court Philippe Chatrier, with the women on Thursday and men on Friday. But after a full day of play was washed out by rain Wednesday, tournament officials shuffled the schedule. The women's semifinals were held simultaneously at the second- and third-biggest courts at Roland Garros instead of the main stadium, starting just after 11 a.m.

Asked whether this felt like a major semifinal, Konta replied: "I mean, in terms of the surrounding and the occasion, probably not. ... In terms of the match itself, probably."

Nadal tops Federer to reach 12th French final

Published in Breaking News
Friday, 07 June 2019 08:27

PARIS -- Rafael Nadal made quick work of Roger Federer in their first French Open meeting since 2011, beating his rival 6-3, 6-4, 6-2 Friday in strong wind to reach his 12th final at Roland Garros.

Nadal has never lost a semifinal at the clay-court Grand Slam tournament. Never lost a final, either.

And he's never lost to Federer in Paris, improving to 6-0. Overall, Nadal leads their series 24-15. Federer had won their past five meetings, but those were all on hard courts.

It's a whole different task to take on Nadal on clay, in general, and at the French Open, in particular, where he's one victory from a 12th championship. That total would be more than any man or woman has won at any of the Grand Slam tournaments.

In Sunday's final, the No. 2-seeded Nadal will take on No. 1 Novak Djokovic or No. 4 Dominic Thiem.

This was the first time since 2011 the four top-seeded men were in the semifinals at Roland Garros.

Like so many times before, Nadal's topspin-heavy lefty forehand, relentless ball chasing and return game gave Federer fits. The generally stoic Federer was so frustrated that he smacked a tennis ball toward the stands after getting broken to trail 2-1 in the third set.

It was soon over.

Federer, who was playing at Roland Garros for the first time since 2015, hadn't lost a set through five victories over the past two weeks. With an aggressive, head-to-the-net style, he had been broken only four times total by those opponents.

Nadal easily exceeded that in a span of three sets across less than two-plus hours, winning six of 13 return games.

The 37-year-old Federer, whose 20 Grand Slam titles are a record for a man, was serenaded off the court by spectators' chants of his first name. He raised his right arm for a quick wave as he walked away -- perhaps for the final time. He missed the tournament in 2016 with a bad back, then skipped it the next two years to prepare for grass and hard courts.

He looked quite good in his return until running into his old nemesis.

OAKLAND, Calif. -- Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Morey popularized the 5% theory. It goes something like this: If you believe your team has even a 5% chance of winning the championship, then you should go all in to try to make it happen. Morey explained the 5% theory to Grantland's Zach Lowe back in 2012.

A year ago, the Toronto Raptors weren't even a 5% theory team. The oddsmakers had them as a 2.5% team. At one time last summer, the Raptors were 40-1 to win the NBA title.

Then they traded for Kawhi Leonard, traded for Danny Green, traded for Marc Gasol, got an explosive breakout from Pascal Siakam, saw the birth of a child give Fred VanVleet superpowers and had the friendliest rim bounce in history.

Add in a strained calf, a pulled hamstring, some torn cartilage for the Golden State Warriors, and the Raptors are two wins from giving the 5% theory a new name: the Raptors Rule.

It didn't happen overnight, and it isn't just about the Kawhi Leonard blockbuster that GM Masai Ujiri pulled. It was a long road to get to that 5%.

Here's a look at some moments that put them on this serendipitous ride:

Lakers laid people off

Alex McKechnie was one of North America's most respected athletic trainers and scientists. NBA players pilgrimaged for years to visit him in Vancouver when they had injuries or needed rehab. For example, he's credited with helping save Shaquille O'Neal's prime years by treating O'Neal's abdominal injuries in the late 1990s. O'Neal was so effusive that the Los Angeles Lakers hired the Scottish native, and he was with them for five titles between 1999 and 2011.

But when the NBA lockout hit in 2011, the Lakers allowed numerous staff members' contracts to expire so they didn't have to pay them during the lockout. The richest team in the league then lost its prized trainer when the Raptors, then led by general manager Bryan Colangelo, swooped in and hired McKechnie after the Lakers left him unemployed.

Now, seven years later and with more than 40 years' experience in the field, McKechnie was the point man when the Raptors took on the challenge of caring for Leonard. Providing good care for Leonard and building trust with him was absolutely vital after those bonds eroded in San Antonio.

Nuggets controlled costs

Denver Nuggets owner Stan Kroenke -- his son Josh is vice chairman and runs the team now -- studied at the side of his father-in-law for decades. He became a self-made billionaire in doing so and one of the most successful sports team owners on the planet.

His father-in-law happened to be Sam Walton, the founder of Walmart. Walton believed, almost above all else, that controlling costs is vital to beating competition and growing business. Kroenke has operated his sports teams this way whenever possible.

In 2013, when the Raptors went looking for a GM, then-CEO Tim Leiweke was obsessed with getting Ujiri away from the Nuggets, where he had shown great promise. After getting denied permission to interview him several times, Leiweke finally secured it and offered Ujiri a multimillion-dollar-per-season raise. The Nuggets, controlling costs, declined to match, and he left.

Ujiri went to Toronto, and the team hasn't missed the playoffs since, slowly building to these Finals.

Iman Shumpert got hot

It's well known that the Raptors wanted to trade star point guard Kyle Lowry to the New York Knicks in the 2013-14 season to start a roster makeover. The deal was negotiated. It was to be Raymond Felton, Iman Shumpert and a future first-round pick for Lowry, who was in the final year of his contract.

Lowry wanted to go. Carmelo Anthony lobbied Knicks management to make the deal. The Raptors, after rounds of talks to get the terms of when they'd get the first-round pick, were ready to schedule the trade call.

For years, Knicks owner Jim Dolan has been blamed as the one who stopped the trade. The previous summer, the Knicks had traded a first-round pick to the Raptors to acquire former No. 1 overall pick Andrea Bargnani, and the deal had turned sour, and the Knicks had been bashed for it. A story went around that Dolan didn't want to do another deal with Raptors GM Masai Ujiri after that.

Knicks insiders, however, insist that has always been incorrect. Ultimately, the Knicks' front office didn't take the trade to Dolan for approval. Some background research on Lowry revealed that he can be difficult to manage -- this was absolutely true, as Lowry has admitted, though he also was a future All-Star and locker room leader -- which gave them pause.

As the Knicks were deciding, their team went on a road trip to Texas in early January 2014. As the team went through the triangle, Shumpert caught fire. He scored 27 points and hit six 3-pointers in a win in San Antonio, and then played great again the next night in Houston, making six more and putting in 26. Over a five-game span, Shumpert averaged 16 points and shot a sizzling 61 percent on 3-pointers.

About 18 months off a torn ACL, there was thought that Shumpert was turning the corner. Numerous teams wanted to trade for him. The Knicks started having second thoughts about moving him for Lowry. With the other concerns, the trade died. Lowry stayed in Toronto, where he became a franchise player, a captain and a cornerstone of this Finals team.

Siakam's sister lived in South Africa

Siakam is from a basketball family -- his three older brothers played college basketball. But he was the youngest, and although he played as a child, he really preferred soccer. He was identified as a player with promise after being seen at a camp run by Luc Mbah a Moute in their native Cameroon and was invited to the prestigious Basketball Without Borders camp run by the NBA in 2012.

Siakam didn't want to go because he wasn't really interested in playing more basketball. But when he found out that the camp was in South Africa, it gave him pause. His sister Vanessa lived there, and he hadn't seen her in several years. The NBA was going to pay for the trip. That's what got him to change his mind and say yes.

When he got there, other campers were making a fuss over one of the counselors. He asked one of the other campers who the guys was and was told it was Serge Ibaka. Siakam had never heard of him.

Siakam was seen at the camp by Ujiri, who had been attending for more than a decade, plus other scouts. It created a chain of events that led to Ujiri's selecting Siakam with the 27th pick in the 2016 draft, just four years later.

Now he, Ibaka and Siakam are playing for a title.

The Clippers wanted to trade Avery Bradley

For days last February, the Memphis Grizzlies were in trade talks about Gasol. The Raptors were one of the teams making an offer for him. There was competition, especially from the Charlotte Hornets. Plus, the Raptors were looking elsewhere, including talking to the New Orleans Pelicans about Nikola Mirotic.

Finally, on deadline day, the Raptors improved their offer to Memphis, and the Grizzlies decided to take their deal. It was a large trade with Jonas Valanciunas, Delon Wright, CJ Miles and a 2024 second-round going for Gasol. But there was an issue: The trade required the Grizzlies to take on salary for this season and put them in danger of going into the luxury tax. That was a dealbreaker.

Memphis had to find another trade where they could offload salary. The Grizzlies had talked to the LA Clippers about Avery Bradley, but they couldn't tell if the Clippers were truly interested. The Grizzlies called the Clippers back. LA was interested, and the teams put together a deal with Garrett Temple and JaMychal Green, which lowered their payroll to a position where they were comfortably out of the tax.

So Gasol was off to Toronto, the veteran last piece for this team that is now on the cusp of a title.

Their chances are now way greater than 5%.

Can the Raptors possibly keep shooting this well?

Published in Basketball
Friday, 07 June 2019 06:24

Three games into the 2019 NBA Finals, the two biggest factors in the series are the Golden State Warriors' injuries and the Toronto Raptors' shooting. While the Warriors are trying to win their third straight title with a depleted group of banged-up superstars, the Raptors' shooting numbers have toggled between incredible and awful.

It's a mixed-up series on basketball's biggest stage, and late word from Oakland is that Klay Thompson will play Friday night, but Kevin Durant will miss Game 4 at Oracle Arena (9 p.m. ET on ABC), while Kevon Looney is officially listed as questionable. Thompson's reappearance is good news for a team that desperately needs to shore up its perimeter defense, which has been uncharacteristically bad so far in this series.

The Dubs need to find ways to slow down a Toronto team that has scored at least 118 points twice, while Golden State has scored 109 points in each of the first three games.

With Looney, Thompson and Durant out, the Raptors needed to win Game 3, and they did so by taking advantage of Golden State's poor defense and putting on a clinic in shooting efficiency. Toronto became just the third team in Finals history to shoot 50% from the field, 40% from 3 and 90% from the free throw line, joining the 2017 Warriors and the 1986 Boston Celtics. The entire Raptors squad was red-hot -- every player who attempted a bucket for Toronto shot at least 50% from the field.

The Raps ended the night with an astronomical effective field goal percentage (eFG) of 62.8. How good is that? When a team has an eFG that high, it's almost certainly going to win:

  • Since 1984, playoff teams with an eFG between 62 and 63 are 42-4.

  • In the Finals, teams that log an eFG of 62 or more are 14-0.

Toronto's shooting also was terrific in the Game 1 win, with a 59.1 eFG. Since 1984, playoff teams with an eFG between 59 and 60 are 72-17. If the Raptors sink jumpers the way they did in Games 1 and 3, it might not matter who does and doesn't play for Golden State.

The Warriors have logged 109 playoff games since 2014. Their overall record is a cool 70-39, but even this team's success depends a lot on how well its opponents shoot the ball. Since 2014, Warriors playoff opponents have logged an eFG over 59 in just 12 of those 109 games -- 11 of which were Warriors losses. Toronto has done it twice already. If the Warriors had been giving up this many clean looks on defense since 2014, they wouldn't be a dynasty.

It's unlikely this is purely shooting luck on the Raptors' end. Given both the shot quality and the shooter, Toronto had an expected eFG of 53.4% on 3s in the regular season, per Second Spectrum tracking. That has bumped up to 54.3% in the playoffs and 55.3% against the Warriors. The Raptors outperformed their shot quality in their two wins, but they are creating legitimately good opportunities.

As much as Thompson and Durant help on offense, their talents and experience are just as vital on the other end. The Warriors' dynasty will rightfully go down as one of the best perimeter offenses the world has ever seen, but this group owes just as much of its success to dominant perimeter defense. Here's a troubling couplet:

  • When the Warriors won their first title in 2015, they had the best defense in that postseason in part because they shut down the 3-point line, holding opponents to 6.8 made 3s per game (second best of 16 playoff teams) on just 30.4% shooting from beyond the arc (best such mark that year).

  • In the 2019 playoffs, the Dubs' defense ranks 10th out of 16 postseason teams in part because it can't stop 3s. The Warriors are allowing 13.5 made 3s (15th out of 16 playoff teams) per game, and their opponents are hitting 36.7% of their triples (11th out of 16 playoff teams).

The absences of Looney, Durant and Thompson have meant more playing time for players such as Jordan Bell, Alfonzo McKinnie, DeMarcus Cousins, Jonas Jerebko and Andrew Bogut. In turn, Golden State's defense has been slower and less competent, especially on the perimeter.

That was on full display in Game 3, as Toronto became the third team in Finals history to drain 17 3-pointers, and many of those triples resulted from poor defensive actions. The Raptors enjoyed 12 uncontested looks from beyond the arc Wednesday, per Second Spectrum tracking. In their previous 108 playoff games, the Warriors had allowed more than 12 uncontested 3s only once (May 1, 2018, against the New Orleans Pelicans).

No player on either team took more than three uncontested 3s in Games 1 and 2. But on Wednesday night, Danny Green launched five of them and Fred VanVleet added four more. As a team, Toronto converted on six of those 12 golden opportunities, producing 18 key points in its 14-point win. Toronto has now made 41 3s in this series. Golden State has made 37.

Green is the bellwether. His 3-point attempts almost always punctuate effective ball-movement sequences -- after all, he made his name playing for San Antonio Spurs teams known for beautiful passing. Over 91% of Green's 3s are assisted. So if Green is getting clean looks like he did in Game 3, it means Toronto's offense is firing on all cylinders and the Warriors' defense is strained.

Thanks to all the injuries, coach Steve Kerr has been using lineups that rarely if ever have played together. That's bad news, especially on the defensive end, where familiarity and communication are prerequisites for the kinds of teamwork needed to execute in tandem.

The Warriors' Game 3 starters of Shaun Livingston, Stephen Curry, Cousins, Andre Iguodala and Draymond Green had a net rating of minus-23.8 in Game 3 in part because these dudes have barely played defense together before -- just 16 regular-season minutes and one in the postseason. The Finals are hard enough. All these injuries are forcing the Warriors into lineups that have hardly played against anyone before, let alone the best team from the Eastern Conference.

It's a make-or-miss league, and in the Raptors' two wins so far, they've been doing a whole lot of making. But the series is still young. If Thompson and his team can rediscover their defensive identity in Game 4, not only will they force Toronto to miss more shots, they'll also climb their way right back into this series.

BOSTON -- The first time the Red Sox played the Tampa Bay Rays this season proved to be the launching point from which Boston pulled out of its early-season slump.

Including that three-game, mid-April sweep in St. Petersburg, the Red Sox -- who started 6-13 -- have since gone 27-16.

Still, Tampa Bay came to Boston a week later and returned the favor, sweeping the Red Sox in a rain-shortened two-game set.

Will this weekend bring another defining series? Before the Red Sox and Rays play four games in three days at Fenway Park, here's where the two teams stand.

1. The Red Sox have work to do

In five games against the Rays, no Red Sox starting pitcher has allowed more than three earned runs. Even in their two losses, Boston's starters were solid: David Price allowed two runs in his six innings, a strong effort in which the offense struggled to a 2-1 defeat; and Chris Sale survived a shaky first two frames to go seven innings in a 5-2 Rays victory.

Since the up-and-down first month of the season, Red Sox starters have bounced back. Boston's pitching staff as a whole entered last month with a 5.00 ERA but posted a 3.99 ERA in May, up from 25th to 12th in baseball. Sale went from a growing concern to his old ways again, striking out 66 hitters in 38⅓ innings pitched, with a 2.82 ERA. Price has been the most consistent pitcher on the staff over the entire season, with a 2.83 ERA and a 1.04 WHIP, and he carried it through a tough April.

But the Red Sox have had some issues elsewhere.

"Pitching, we're way close to who we are, although the results the first 10 or 11 days of the season, that wasn't us," manager Alex Cora said after last weekend's New York Yankees series, in which Boston lost two of three. "Defensively, we've been a lot better early in the season. Baserunning, the last 10 days have been sloppy. Offensively, although people don't see it that way, that's where we need to get better."

The defense has made strides in the field, most notably by Rafael Devers at third base. The 22-year-old misplayed several routine grounders in April but took a large step forward in May, improving his footwork considerably while making several spectacular plays moving to his left.

As for the offense, after sweeping the Kansas City Royals this week, Cora said the Red Sox are making progress, but they're still not quite where they need to be. Cora is looking to find more lefty-righty balance in his batting order.

"When we decided to hit Mookie [Betts], Benny [Andrew Benintendi] 1-2, and then Raffy [Devers] fourth, Brock [Holt] sixth and JBJ [Jackie Bradley Jr.] eighth, you see the balance. It's good for us.

"[Opponents] have to think about whether you bring out the specialist for the lefty or the righty because the lefty is right behind him."

The offensive production did look good against the Royals, as Boston scored 23 runs in three games in Kansas City -- but again, it was against the Royals, who have the second-highest staff ERA in baseball.

These are the Rays, who boast reigning AL Cy Young Award winner Blake Snell and the best pitching staff in baseball so far this season. While the Red Sox will miss Charlie Morton, who has posted a 2.30 ERA in 13 starts this season, they'll face off against Snell in the series finale. The 26-year-old lefty has a 3.22 ERA in eight starts against Boston in his career, but he has not faced the team yet this season.

2. The Rays have a new look -- again

The Rays change the foundation of their roster frequently and in often surprising ways. So far this season, Tampa Bay's two biggest offensive contributors have been outfielders Austin Meadows and Tommy Pham -- both of whom were playing for different teams at this point last year.

Meadows, who came to the Rays from the Pittsburgh Pirates in the Chris Archer trade, was taken by Pittsburgh with the ninth pick of the 2013 draft, two slots after Boston selected high school lefty Trey Ball, who has a 7.58 ERA in 34 relief appearances at Double-A Portland this season.

The 24-year-old played well in his debut last season in Pittsburgh, hitting .292/.327/.468 in 49 games there before the trade; but Meadows really has taken off at the plate this year, hitting .349/.424/.646 with a team-high 12 homers, 38 RBIs and 2.4 WAR, which has him tied for 16th in baseball.

Pham also has continued his strong performance with Tampa Bay, building off the momentum following his July trade from the St. Louis Cardinals, when he hit .343/.448/.622 with seven homers in 39 games with the Rays. It has been more of the same this season, as he is hitting .293/.406/.471 with eight homers, 25 RBIs, nine doubles and two triples.

Also worth keeping an eye on is rookie second baseman Brandon Lowe, who has impressed so far this season with a .272 average and 11 homers in 54 games and already is 3-for-10 with a homer against Boston.

For the Red Sox, rookie third baseman Michael Chavis faces the Rays for the third time after making his debut April 20 at Tampa Bay with a double off Jose Alvarado in his first MLB at-bat, setting up the winning run. Chavis, named the American League's Rookie of the Month for May after hitting seven homers, is going through his first prolonged slump in The Show, hitting .107 in his past seven games.

3. This weekend could shake up the AL East race

For the optimists who believe the Red Sox have underperformed so far this season, a sweep of the Rays would be a major step toward Boston eventually sitting atop the American League East.

The Red Sox enter the series five games behind the Rays, who themselves trail the first-place Yankees by a game and a half.

This weekend also gives Tampa Bay an opportunity to retake the division lead, while halting Boston's climb into contention.

And if neither club can catch the Yankees, Boston and Tampa Bay also could be on a collision course to meet in the winner-takes-all wild-card game.

For the Red Sox, a wild-card berth would significantly raise the level of difficulty in defending their World Series title -- but, say the pessimists out there, there's no guarantee they'll even get that far. The Red Sox enter the series in a virtual tie (they trail by a single percentage point) for the second wild-card slot with the Texas Rangers, who start a three-game series at Fenway on Monday.

When Boston last played Tampa Bay at the end of April, the Red Sox left the series six games under .500 and 7½ games out of first place. Fast forward nearly a month and a half later and Boston has climbed over .500. Yet they're in just about the same place they were in the division.

You'll often hear Cora and his players repeat, especially after a loss, that all wins and losses count the same, even if head-to-head matchups with division rivals carry significantly more emotional baggage. But as the trade deadline inches closer, the Red Sox will need to decide how much to stick with their current group of players and how much they'll need from the trade market. For one, closers such as Will Smith of the San Francisco Giants, Sean Doolittle of the Washington Nationals or Ken Giles of the Toronto Blue Jays could be options to add a lockdown arm to the current bullpen group after Craig Kimbrel departed as a free agent this past winter.

Cora already has started tweaking his lineup, and the results from this weekend -- against a potential wild-card opponent and a key division rival -- could dictate the kind of changes still to come.

England 10,000m titles to race for at FASTFriday

Published in Athletics
Friday, 07 June 2019 03:45

The event aims to embrace the spirit of modern-day distance track racing with street food, trackside bars, live race commentary and a lively crowd

Adam Hickey, Jack Gray, Ollie Lockley and Tracy Barlow are among the entries for FASTFriday in Walthamstow on June 7, with the event incorporating the England Athletics 10,000m Championships, plus quality 5000m races.

The programme, which kicks off with the ‘D’ 10,000m race at 18:30, features six events, with a women-only race with more than 20 entries being held for the first time.

Here marathoner Barlow, who has a road 10km PB of 33:21, races the distance on the track for the first time as she goes up against the likes of Phoebe Law, who has a PB of 33:00.84 and ran 35:58.26 in Loughborough in April, plus marathoner Dani Nimmock, Sophie Cowper, Lucy Reid and triathlete Lucy Charles-Barclay of the host club.

In the men’s championship race, Lockley (pictured) defends his England Athletics title as he forms part of a field featuring Hickey and Gray, plus the likes of Sam Stabler, Tom Evans, Paul Navesey and Will Mycroft.

“Once again we will be embracing the spirit of modern-day distance track racing with street food, multiple trackside bars, live race commentary,” says organiser Barney Foot from Orion Harriers, “and a lively crowd of 300-400 in lane three providing the runners with continuous support.”

Race programme

18:30 10,000m D race
19:15 10,000m C race
20:00 FAST 5000m
20:20 FLAT OUT 5000m
20:40 Women’s England Athletics 10,000m Championships
21:20 Men’s England Athletics 10,000m Championships

Full entry lists can be found here.

Trail runners get set for global test in Portugal

Published in Athletics
Friday, 07 June 2019 04:09

Jasmin Paris and Jon Albon are on the GB team for the IAU/ITRA Trail World Championships

A strong British team will look to be challenging for medals at the IAU/ITRA Trail World Championships in Portugal on Saturday (June 8), boosted by Jon Albon and Jasmin Paris (pictured).

Albon, the skyrunning ultra world champion, was fourth last year as Britain gained silver medals behind Spain.

However, someone who will find the 44km distance more to his liking will be Wales’ Commonwealth Games marathon runner Andrew Davies.

Bolstering the team will be Ricky Lightfoot, the 2013 IAU world ultra-trail champion, plus Sebastian Batchelor, Andy Symonds and Carl Bell.

Paris, who found national mainstream fame when she set an outright course record for the Montane Spine Race in January, will wear a GB vest for the first time.

However, more experienced at this level is world long-distance mountain running champion Charlotte Morgan.

Last year’s Lakeland 50 winner Katie Kaars-Sijpesteijn is on the British team for the third year in a row, hoping to improve on her 23rd and 21st-place finishes. She will be joined by Jo Meek, who was 17th two years ago, Georgia Tindley and Meryl Cooper.

Both defending champions are back.

Luis Alberto Hernando inspired a home win for Spain last year and crosses the border seeking a fourth straight world title – along with team-mate Cristofer Clemente, who was second last year, and Zaid Ait Malek.

USA’s Mario Mendoza, France’s Ludovic Pommeret, Romania’s Robert Hajnal and Italy’s Marco De Gasperi will be other challengers.

Since winning convincingly last year Ragna Debats of Netherlands has won the Marathon des Sables and will be a strong contender here.

Spain, with Laia Canes and Gemma Arenas, who were second and fourth last year, plus skyrunning specialist Sheila Aviles, will put up a good defence of their title.

Adeline Roche of France, the 2017 winner, New Zealand’s Ruth Croft, Sweden’s Sanna El Kott Helander, Poland’s Magdalena Laczak and USA’s Kelly Wolf should be in the mix, too.

The course starts and finishes in the town and has 2150m of ascent. Team results are based on the best three times.

Rain Brings Early Halt To Texas IndyCar Practice

Published in Racing
Thursday, 06 June 2019 19:59

FORT WORTH, Texas – It was supposed to be a two-hour practice session that would replicate track conditions for Saturday night’s DXC Technology 600 at Texas Motor Speedway.

Instead, it was a 41-minute practice that was halted by a torrential downpour.

Former Texas winner Scott Dixon was the fastest in the session with a lap at 219.308 mph in the No. 9 PNC Bank Honda.

“We had the test here, the tire test in March, and I think that just helps a lot of us kind of roll off,” Dixon said. “We had a few issues I think with balance. I think a lot of people have just with the added temperature, especially from when we tested here. That was interesting for us.

“Unfortunately we got the weather. We didn’t really get to run as much as we would have liked. Hopefully they can add some additional time tomorrow. All in all, the Penske car feels good out of the gate.”

IndyCar announced an additional 15 minutes of practice time to Friday’s schedule so that teams can scuff in sets of tires for the race.

Takuma Sato was second at 219.262 mph in the No. 30 for Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing.

“I think it’s a bit early to say for the tires and downforce and stuff,” Sato said. “I don’t know if Scott told, but we had only few laps, to be honest. Even one set of tires, did not even get through, I don’t know, half of the stint I wouldn’t think.

“I think Firestone did a great job to bring the tire that’s really good feeling, solid feeling, more downforce than last year. But not only for that, I think Firestone doing a great job.

“I was obviously looking forward to a little bit more traffic runs, go through the stint, how the balance shift will be. But obviously the rain, we cannot do anything at the moment.”

Sato’s teammate, Graham Rahal, was third at 218.311 mph, followed by Charlie Kimball at 217.503 mph. Will Power rounded out the top five at 217.196 mph.

IndyCar and Firestone brought two different compounds of racing tires to Texas including the primary tire and an optional tire if the primary tires began to blister. Because of the shortened schedule, there weren’t enough laps run on a full set of tires to determine if blistering would occur.

The only way the optional tires would be used was if the primary compound showed signs of widespread blistering across the field of race cars.

“I think there were some blistered sets out there, I’m not sure how they’re going to address that,” Dixon said. “I know there was an option tire, but I haven’t heard. I think from what I heard; they are kind of happy with what they saw. Again, it’s early days, right? They’ll probably go through everybody’s tires tonight and figure out a plan for tomorrow.

“Conditions were kind of ideal. I think today as far as Texas goes; it actually wasn’t even really that hot. Running this late in the day, the track temp was down almost a hundred degrees, which is very low.”

Dixon was asked what he would like to see done with the tires and he quipped, “We’d like a tire that works really well with the 9 car,” referring to his PNC Bank Honda.

“We had zero issues with blistering last year, yet there seemed to be a few teams that had some major issues and were falling off pretty hard,” Dixon said. “I feel like in that scenario, you should be able to adapt to it. You shouldn’t have to change it for the situation of maybe a few cars or few drivers.

“But Firestone are always trying to make the tire better. I think for us this year, the problem is, once you have a new surface and a new track, the falloff comes pretty quickly in the first two, three, four years. That’s what we’ve seen.

“The grip is a lot lower than what we saw last year. IndyCar reacted with adding downforce on that. I think that’s the right direction.

“The end of the race last year I thought was quite good. I think for the drivers, we want to have a car that’s difficult to drive, something that you can make a difference. The last thing I want to see is pack racing. It’s easy for everybody, jut creates issues. Maybe the person that takes the biggest risk, if they pull it off, is going to be rewarded.

“I think a balance of what we had last year and maybe a bit closer would be good.”

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