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Sussex sign Australia's Alex Carey for Vitality Blast

Published in Cricket
Thursday, 30 May 2019 03:48

Sussex have signed Alex Carey, the Australia wicketkeeper-batsman, for their Vitality Blast campaign. Carey will link up again with Jason Gillespie, his coach at Adelaide Strikers, for the tournament in England, which begins after the conclusion of the World Cup.

Carey is Australia's vice-captain and first-choice gloveman for the 50-over tournament, and has been capped 38 times in the white-ball formats since debuting in 2018. He helped Strikers to the 2017-18 Big Bash title and has experience of playing club cricket in England with East Grinstead.

"I'm very excited to get the opportunity to play with Sussex," he said. "I played for East Grinstead in the Sussex Premier League a few years ago and now to play for the Sharks in the Blast is super exciting.

"I've heard the fans are the best in the country and I can't wait to join Dizzy and the guys in July."

A pocket-rocket batsman and tidy keeper, Carey has a T20 career strike rate of 128.93 and scored his maiden hundred in the format last year. His arrival comes after Sussex allowed Michael Burgess, who kept wicket during the club's run to Blast Finals Day last season, to leave for Warwickshire.

"We're delighted to be able to offer this opportunity to Alex and excited for him to be linking up with us," Gillespie, Sussex's head coach, said. "He's been impressive opening the batting for the Strikers in the Big Bash and now he's getting experience in the middle order with Australia.

"He can certainly clear the ropes but he's also able to read and adapt to different conditions. That versatility will give us options on how best to utilise his batting in this year's Blast. Alex is also a world-class keeper so to have a player like him joining the Sharks is a real coup for the club.

"I know Alex well from the Adelaide Strikers and he knows Sussex well from his time playing league cricket in the county, so I've no doubt he'll fit in nicely in our dressing room."

Taking part in an "unauthorised" T20 tournament in Abu Dhabi has landed Uttar Pradesh batsman Rinku Singh in trouble, with the BCCI suspending him for three months.

The tournament in question was the Ramadan T20 Tournament, organised by Abu Dhabi Cricket earlier this month, in which Rinku led his team Deccan Gladiators to the title by smashing a 58-ball 104 and then picking up two wickets against New Medical Centre.

"Mr. Singh did not seek permission from the BCCI before taking part in the T20 league hence directly violating the BCCI rules and regulations," a BCCI statement said. "As per the BCCI norms, a player registered with the Board cannot play in any tournaments abroad without the Board's permission."

Rinku, the 21-year-old middle-order batsman and part-time offspinner, was in the India A squad for the ongoing four-day series against Sri Lanka, but the BCCI said he had been withdrawn for the second and final game, which starts on May 31 in Hubli. He didn't figure in the XI in the first game, which the Indians won by an innings and 205 runs.

"Mr. Rinku Singh therefore has been suspended with immediate effect for a period of three months starting June 1, 2019. He has been removed from the current India A squad set to play a multi-day game against Sri Lanka A starting May 31, 2019.

"The BCCI will not tolerate such violations in the future and strict actions will be taken if a player is found violating the BCCI rules and regulations."

Rinku, who made his name initially as more of a white-ball dasher, had a breakout season in the Ranji Trophy this past season, piling up 953 runs in ten games at an average of 105.88 with four centuries and three fifties. He was the third highest run-getter overall.

Derbyshire 139 and 214 (Madsen 51) beat Leicestershire 120 (Palladino 5-29) and 168 by 65 runs

Derbyshire's seamers needed less than a session to take the six wickets needed to wrap up a 65-run win in their Specsavers County Championship match against Leicestershire at the Fischer County Ground.

Leicestershire resumed their second innings on 110 for 4, needing another 124 runs to win. Hassan Azad and Harry Dearden played solidly enough in the first half hour to give the home dressing room hope, although Azad did not add to his overnight score of 44 before he was dismissed.

With the score on 123, Derbyshire captain Billy Godleman asked for the ball to be changed. It was a risk, given it was his second, and therefore under the new rules this season, final such request, but the ball was changed and Luis Reece immediately obtained a little more swing, the left-armer finding the edge of Azad's bat and Wayne Madsen taking the catch. Reece then picked up the wicket of Dearden, winning a leg before decision with a full delivery into the pads.

Matt Critchley, at third slip to the bowling of Logan van Beek, juggled an edge from Dieter Klein four times before eventually hanging on. Lewis Hill and Will Davis edged Ravi Rampaul out-swingers to wicketkeeper Harvey Hosein, and last man Mohammad Abbas was bowled by Tony Palladino. It was the second wicket for the innings for Palladino, who turns 36 next month, and his seventh for the match as he added 2 for 30 to his first-innings 5 for 29.

Madsen, who made 47 in Derbyshire's first innings was the highest scorer for the match with his 51 in the second.

Green: My role 'completely changes' without KD

Published in Basketball
Thursday, 30 May 2019 05:11

As the Golden State Warriors try to navigate the beginning of the NBA Finals without star Kevin Durant, team leader Draymond Green acknowledged that his role within the framework of the team is dramatically different without Durant on the floor.

"It completely changes," Green told ESPN's Rachel Nichols in an interview that will run Thursday on The Jump. "I have to be more of a scoring threat when Kevin's not out there. I have to -- I really try to push the pace more when he's not out there. When Kevin's out there, we all have the luxury of just saying, 'OK, that set didn't work, we still got this guy to just throw a ball into it and get out of the way.' That luxury isn't there anymore, and also I think with Kevin being out, we're trying to make up 37 points again."

Before Durant injured his right calf against the Houston Rockets in Game 5 of the Western Conference semifinals on May 8, he averaged 34 points a game in the postseason. Durant's availability for the Finals remains in question as he continues rehabbing the injury.

"We're not going to make those 37 points again up just by walking the ball up the floor and thinking we're going to have the same trust running the set as if Kevin is on the floor," Green said. "So how do you make up those points? Get extra possessions, get the pace to where you want it to be, get some easy buckets. That's how you make it up."

In Durant's absence, Green is playing arguably the best basketball of his career. In 16 postseason games so far this year, Green is averaging 13.6 points, 9.9 rebounds and 8.2 assists per game. Despite their success without Durant -- they've won five consecutive games without him, including a four-game sweep of the Portland Trail Blazers in the Western Conference finals -- Green brushes off the idea that the Warriors are having more fun winning without the certainty that Durant brings to the game.

"I wouldn't necessarily say more fun, but it's just like anything in life," Green said. "If you go into something with a little more uncertainty, when you come out of it, it feels a little better. Because you got over the doubt. Whatever doubt it was that you was facing, you got over that. When Kevin's with us, I walk into the arena and I know how this game is gonna go. I know we're gonna win and whatever else you wanna add in to that, I know already. When he's not, I'm still extremely confident that we're gonna win, I'm still extremely confident that we're the best team walking in. But you gotta figure a little more out in order to win as opposed to when he out there. And so I think it gives you a little more joy initially when you finish that game.

"So you may have seen us over the course of the last few weeks celebrate the Houston series in the second round a little bit more than we would normally celebrate a second-round series win. You may have seen us celebrate sweeping Portland a little bit more than we would normally celebrate sweeping someone, because it's a different feeling. You go into those games, and it's like, 'Yeah, we're very confident that we're gonna win,' but it's not as certain as it is when Kevin is with us."

Green also doesn't believe the Warriors should be concerned about the notion of whether they are including Durant enough in their day-to-day activities as he continues the rehab process.

"I personally don't really put too much thought into making Kevin feel included, because this is his team," Green said. "He's a part of this ... everything we've done here, he's a part of. So I think there's so much noise that comes about, like, 'Oh, are they better or worse without Kevin?' Can we stop the conversation? Because it's idiotic. Do we play a different brand of basketball when Kevin's not out there? Absolutely. But you'd be idiotic to think that we shouldn't. We have to play a different brand of basketball, but the whole notion of, 'Are they better or worse with or without,' that's where all the noise comes from.

"And so it's like, 'Oh, you all need to keep Kevin a part of it.' Well, I disagree with that, because Kevin is a part of this. He's been a part of this and everybody else creates the narrative of, 'It's us.' And then, 'It's Kevin' or 'It's the Warriors.' And then, 'It's the Warriors with KD.' No. It's still the same team."

To that point, Green reiterated that he and Durant have moved on from their verbal altercation in November at the end of an overtime loss to the LA Clippers at Staples Center.

"I think I just have looked at it from a different perspective," Green said. "It wasn't necessarily that him being a free agent bothered [me]. We all go through that in this profession. It was more so the fact of, 'Are you with us or not?' That bothered me. But what I'll say is, after I had that moment, one thing Kevin told me is, 'Dude, you have to block out all of that. You see me coming here and work every day. You see me give my all to this team. You see everything, every second of every day. The media is gonna say what they want, but you see everything, you know I'm here, you know I'm with you.'

"And it allowed me to focus on that. It allowed me to focus on what I see, what I can control and not what I can't see per se and what I can't control. And so I think that was just the point for me of where I had to look at it from a different standpoint. I had to stop listening to all the noise."

In the short term, Green, who told Nichols he has lost almost 25 pounds over the past few months, said he is only focused on trying to win the organization's third straight NBA championship. He knows Raptors star Kawhi Leonard is a very talented player, but he still doesn't believe Leonard and the San Antonio Spurs could have beaten the Warriors in the 2017 Western Conference finals, even if Leonard had stayed healthy. Leonard injured his left ankle in Game 1 and did not play again after coming down on Warriors then-center Zaza Pachulia's foot.

"I don't know," Green said. "I mean, possibly, but I personally don't think that Spurs team had a chance to beat us. But they were playing well in that game. It's a seven-game series. But nonetheless, I'm sure he feels that in some way, shape or form, but he's still got to go out and play the game, as do we."

The 2019 NBA Finals pits a dynasty against an upstart franchise making its historic debut on basketball's biggest stage.

The Golden State Warriors enter Game 1 (Thursday, 9 p.m. ET on ABC) as the favorites in part because they are led by three of the best jump shooters on the planet. The Toronto Raptors have Kawhi Leonard, the first non-LeBron star to get his team out of the Eastern Conference since 2010. And both teams boast top-five offenses thanks to terrific shooting.

In a make-or-miss league, these two teams are still standing because their stars make a ton of big shots. Let's highlight the six shot types that will swing the NBA Finals -- the most important looks for each each team's most important players.


Don't let Steph get looks on the left wing

Inside Stephen Curry's most important shot:

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Steph Curry is even more dangerous from his favorite spot

The moment Steph Curry walks into the gym, he's in his range. But on catch-and-shoot 3-pointers from the left wing, he's unstoppable.

Curry's keys to the Finals

Since Kevin Durant went down against the Houston Rockets, we've witnessed the resurrection of the full Steph Curry experience, which is electrifying to watch and terrifying to try to stop. Just ask the Portland Trail Blazers. They watched Curry break the NBA record for points scored in a sweep by averaging 36.5 per game.

Portland had no answer for Curry out on that left wing or in the pick-and-roll. Curry orchestrated more than 31 picks per game against Portland, yielding a ridiculous 1.23 points per chance, per Second Spectrum tracking. Toronto has to do better than that, and it starts on the perimeter. If Curry is getting his 3s, the Warriors are very difficult to beat. If he's not, Toronto could shock the world. Golden State is 37-8 in playoff games when Steph hits five or more 3-pointers, but just 38-23 when he makes fewer than that.

Who will spend the most time defending Curry? Over the past three seasons, no Raptor has checked him more than Kyle Lowry. Curry is averaging 33 points per 100 possessions when that happens and the Warriors are generating 124 points per 100 as a team, according to Second Spectrum tracking. That's not good enough. But until KD comes back, the Raptors have one less superstar to worry about, and they can allot more defensive resources to the Splash Brothers.

In Durant's absence, Toronto may choose to put Lowry on Andre Iguodala and devote a bigger, longer defender like Danny Green to Curry. Green has a ton of experience against these Warriors and should be able to suppress and contest some shots that Lowry can't.

The Raptors have a lot of good options for a tough situation, especially if Durant is sidelined. Nick Nurse made the biggest adjustment in Canadian basketball history when he pivoted Kawhi Leonard to Giannis Antetokounmpo in Game 3, stifling the world's best interior force for the rest of the series. Nurse and the Raps now must find ways to shut down the league's best perimeter scorer.

Could we see Leonard take a shot at defending Curry in crunch time?


Then there's Klay on the right side

Inside Klay Thompson's most important shot:

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Don't let Klay Thompson shoot from the right side

Klay Thompson is a lights-out 3-point shooter, but he does most of his damage from the right side, where he's the best in the league.

Thompson's keys to the Finals

As if those Curry 3s weren't scary enough, the Raptors also have to worry about Klay Thompson.

The Splash Brothers fit together like a glove, and opponents must confront the terrifying symmetry of their long-range shooting. Just as Curry led the NBA in scoring from the left-wing 3 area, Thompson led the NBA in scoring from the right-wing 3 area. It's not fair that one team has both of these fellas! Just ask the Blazers, who watched as the Steph and Klay averaged more than 27 points per game on 3s alone in the Western Conference finals.

Stopping Thompson means preventing clean catch-and-shoot looks. Again, easier said than done, but if Toronto can find ways to clog passing lanes and stay close to Klay off the ball, they'll have a chance of hindering his production from downtown.

Yet another side effect of the Durant injury is how Klay gets his looks. Nobody assisted on more Thompson 3s this season than Durant, whose passes led to 67 of Klay's made triples, according to Second Spectrum data. With Durant out, Draymond Green has been the primary assister on 3s for both backcourt stars, so any efforts designed to suppress splashes need to account for Draymond's dishes. If the Raptors fail to contain them, their chances are bleak -- the Dubs have a 12-3 playoff record when Curry and Thompson score at least 25 points each.

Between the regular season and the playoffs, the Splash Brothers have combined to sink more than 5,000 3s. While many teams have designed defensive game plans to slow down these daggers, few have ever succeeded.


What about KD?

Inside Kevin Durant's most important shot:

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Kevin Durant is the best midrange scorer on the planet

When Kevin Durant returns, he will add an unrivaled element to the Warriors' potent offense: the most efficient 2-point repertoire in the game.

Durant's keys to the Finals

The Splash Brothers are the most dangerous 3-point shooting duo the league has ever seen, and they are scary enough by themselves. But another thing that makes this dynasty so nasty is they also have the world's best 2-point scorer in Kevin Durant.

Recall, Durant was the leading scorer in these playoffs before getting hurt. If Durant plays, the Raptors have three guys to throw at him. While Durant is dangerous coming off those midrange picks, Toronto can at least try to switch between these dudes:

Toronto and Golden State played twice early in the season. One was a Raptors blowout win without Leonard, the other an OT victory for Toronto. There's only so much we can read into these two games -- Marc Gasol was still in Memphis, for instance -- but Durant was unstoppable.

He scored 81 points on 53 shots. Those points came from all over the floor. The Raptors forced him into tough looks, and it just didn't matter. The average player would have been expected to shoot a 46.1 effective field goal percentage (eFG) given the shot quality, but KD had a 64.2 eFG, per Second Spectrum tracking. So even if the Raptors open this series with some answers for the best shooting duo in NBA history, KD will present his own kind of problem whenever he's back.

Curry (No. 1), Durant (No. 2) and Thompson (No. 5) made up three of the top five players in quantified shooter impact this season, according to Second Spectrum tracking. This means that of the 52 NBA players who attempted at least 1,000 shots, Golden State's star trio was among the very best at producing a significantly greater eFG than expected given the shot quality.

The Raptors can't let these guys get to their favorite spots.


Kawhi right in the midrange

Inside Kawhi Leonard's most important shot:

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Kawhi Leonard's incredible playoff run hinges on pull-ups

He can hit the 3 or get to the hoop, but the key to Kawhi Leonard's success in the NBA Finals will be pull-up jumpers, especially on the right side.

Leonard's keys to the Finals

Leonard is by far the Raptors' most important player on both sides of the ball. On defense, he saved their season by stifling Antetokounmpo in the last four games of the Eastern Conference finals. On offense, he is averaging 31.2 points per game in the postseason. No other Raptor is even averaging 20. To call him their MVP would be a massive understatement.

Leonard's shot chart is similar to Durant's -- he can and will score from everywhere. How will the Warriors try to contain him until KD returns?

In the playoffs, Leonard's 55.9 overall eFG falls to 46.0 percent on isos -- and that number gets even worse when he's forced into a jumper (39.2 percent), per Second Spectrum. Iguodala, Thompson and Draymond Green need to do their best to keep Leonard out of the paint when they're left alone against him.

The same goes when Kawhi is the ball-handler in pick-and-roll -- a play that lead to 1.09 points per chance for Toronto (trailing only Steph Curry among players with at least 200 postseason picks). Leonard can hit that midrange pull-up, but if it's contested it might be the least bad of the evils facing Golden State's defense.


Lowry's egalitarian shot creation

Inside Kyle Lowry's most important shot:

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Kyle Lowry must spread the wealth in the Finals

Shooting numbers don't capture the full scope Kyle Lowry's game. His ability to create open looks for others will be crucial in the Finals.

Lowry's keys to the Finals

If the Raptors have any chance against the Warriors, players other than Leonard need to be great. Even if Durant doesn't play, Golden State still has two incredible scorers that we know can get it done in the playoffs. Who will be Toronto's second fiddle?

Lowry is a good candidate. After all, he's a five-time All-Star. However, Lowry is not a big-time scorer, and he's nursing a thumb injury. Lowry is averaging 14.7 points per game in the playoffs while shooting worse than 45 percent from the field. His greatest impact happens elsewhere -- all those assist opportunities, a great 30.1 assist rate, Toronto's second-best net rating.

As a shooter, Lowry is most active at the top of the arc. During the regular season, over a third of his shots come from that area. But out of 44 players who tried at least 200 3s from up top, Lowry ranked 41st in efficiency. So while he loves that look, it's an unrequited love affair.

That's his personal swing shot in this series.


Siakam's tricky corners

Inside Pascal Siakam's most important shot:

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Pascal Siakam will make or break the Raptors from the corner

Pascal Siakam was one of the NBA's best shooters from the left corner this season, but he's suddenly become unreliable from his signature spot.

Siakam's keys to the Finals

Lowry's favorite target as a passer this postseason has been Siakam, a man with a simple shot chart. Blending corner 3s and rim attacks is a strange mix, but it's a combo that has propelled Siakam to new heights. He's the Raptors' No. 2 scorer and a matchup problem if he can find that corner range.

He'll also be critical to Toronto's pick-and-roll defense, which has been the best of any team in the playoffs.

The Raptors are giving up a postseason-best 0.74 points per chance on 1,038 total picks. Leonard, Siakam and Danny Green are the primary defenders on ball-handlers, and all three of those guys are terrific ball-screen stoppers. If Siakam nails his corner 3s and slows down Golden State's screens on the other end, Toronto can hang.

Leonard is the postseason MVP, but Toronto needs to generate shotmaking elsewhere to have a chance at an upset. Siakam and Danny Green must hit corner 3s, Lowry can't disappear and role players such as Serge Ibaka and Fred VanVleet must provide meaningful contributions.

There's no room for error against these Warriors, but there wasn't much against the Bucks either.

Live Report - England v South Africa

Published in Cricket
Thursday, 30 May 2019 00:56

Welcome to ESPNcricinfo's coverage of the World Cup 2019 opener between England and South Africa, being played at The Oval. Please refresh the page in case the blog doesn't automatically load for you.

Australia Test captain Tim Paine says he is not a man of faith but admits he has prayed more than once in recent times for a fully fit James Pattinson ahead of the Ashes series in England.

While Australia's ODI side is about to begin their World Cup defence in England, Paine is on the other side of the world quietly preparing to plot England's downfall in the Ashes series which follows in August.

"I'm not a religious man but I have said a few prayers when I've gone to bed at night in the last couple of months to make sure he's fit because I think he can clearly add a lot to our Test match team," Paine said in Melbourne on Thursday.

"I think the England guys have seen him bowl a lot in county cricket in the last couple of years. At times he's been quite devastating and I think that will be at the back of their minds. I think at times in this Ashes series, if he's fully fit, he's going to be a real weapon for us."

Pattinson is in England currently as well, on a stint with Nottinghamshire which is due to end on June 15 when he joins the Australia A one-day team for five 50-over games and three four-day games in the UK that will take place during the World Cup and prior to the Ashes, although those could well change.

Pattinson has not played since Nottinghamshire's Royal London 50-over Cup match against Northamptonshire on May 6 due to a niggling side strain, missing Notts' semi-final loss to Somerset and two four-day county championship fixtures in the meantime, but he is close to making a return.

ESPNcricinfo understands that Pattinson met with Australia coach Justin Langer in Southampton last week to map out a plan over the coming months, which is likely to include more four-day cricket for Nottinghamshire before the Australia A four-day matches in July.

Pattinson played his last Test for Australia in February 2016, a full 20 months before Paine was even reinstated as Australia's Test match wicketkeeper following a seven-year absence.

Pattinson hasn't played a Test in England since the 2013 Ashes series but a successful spine surgery after years of repeated stress fractures has helped him back to the cusp of Test cricket following a sensational finish to the Sheffield Shield season for Victoria.

Paine was also enthused by the news that Josh Hazlewood was in career-best shape following his World Cup selection snub.

"I think he was a bit stung," Paine said. "He's got a pretty good case, his numbers in one-day cricket are outstanding. He's a World Cup winner. I must admit when I've seen him speak about missing out, I think he is a bit dirty.

"I've seen some footage and some numbers on his fitness in the last three or four weeks, he's in the best condition he's ever been in and I think he's going to be cherry ripe come the first Ashes Test which is going to be really exciting for us."

Paine believes Hazlewood is primed for a big Ashes campaign after taking just 16 wickets in the unsuccessful 2015 series when much was expected of him.

"I think Josh knows himself, he was the one who brought it up. He said he didn't handle it well and I'm sure he's learnt a hell of a lot," Paine said. "He's a hell of a bowler and he's now had four more years of international cricket and I'm sure he knows exactly what he needs to fix to improve how he went in the last Ashes [in England]."

Paine himself has enjoyed a lengthy break having not played since Tasmania's Sheffield Shield season ended late March. He will captain the Australia A four-day squad in England but that does not commence until July 3. Next week, Paine will head to Brisbane with all members of the two Australia A squads taking part in a training camp with the exception of those, like Pattinson, who are currently in England.

HOUSTON -- Look at her face. Look at the little girl, orange bow in her hair, fear in her eyes, pain and suffering evident. Look at her. Really look at her, no matter how difficult it may be. And then look at the people surrounding her, the adults with hands covering their mouths, because a little girl -- a little girl with an orange bow in her hair -- got hit with a line drive that screamed into the stands at the Chicago Cubs-Houston Astros game Wednesday.

Look at the entire scene, ugly and awful and entirely preventable, and then tell me Major League Baseball teams don't need to extend protective netting from foul pole to foul pole. It's time. It's well past time, actually. There is no argument against this, no humane argument at least, not when this keeps happening again and again and again and again and again -- and children wind up in the hospital, where the girl was taken following the incident, according to the Astros.

What will it take? Someone dying? Actually, that happened last August, when Linda Goldbloom, celebrating her 79th birthday and 59th wedding anniversary at a Los Angeles Dodgers game, was hit in the head with a foul ball and died of a brain hemorrhage. If a woman dying in the stands is not enough to convince MLB and its 30 teams to expand netting up and out, what will? The death of a child?

This is harsh, and this is blunt, and it has to be. Because the scene at Minute Maid Park on Wednesday after Cubs outfielder Albert Almora Jr.'s foul shot struck the girl was equal parts alarming, disconcerting and heartbreaking. In the fourth inning, the right-handed Almora yanked a Wade Miley pitch down the left-field line, just past the netting that currently extends to the far end of both dugouts. While the exit velocity on the swing was not made public, Statcast reported that it traveled 160 feet in 1.2 seconds, meaning it was going at least 90 mph. The pall it cast over the stadium was immediate.

Almora dropped to a knee. His eyes welled. He has two little boys. Tears spilled out. Miley tried to calm him. Manager Joe Maddon and teammate Jason Heyward consoled him. Nothing helped. "As soon as I hit it," Almora later said, "the first person I locked eyes on was her."

He saw her, the little girl with the orange bow.

MLB needs to see her, too, just as a reminder that every game without more protective netting runs the risk of more incidents. The 30 teams in the major leagues need to see her, too, to understand that no matter how much the law indemnifies them for foul-ball injuries, the moral imperative is to protect fans. The baseball-viewing public needs to see her, too, so it understands why more netting would only enhance the in-person viewing experience.

That's always the argument from the dwindling segment of fans who oppose netting. It's entirely ridiculous, of course. Fans sitting behind home plate tolerate netting without any complaint. When all 30 teams extended it to the ends of the dugouts last year, multiple team officials say, the concerns were limited to an insignificant number of fans. More netting would cost teams money and perhaps present logistical challenges. To which the proper response is: And?

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Passan: Almora was as distraught as I've seen any baseball player

Jeff Passan explains the mood in the Cubs dugout after a young fan was hit by a foul ball from Albert Almora Jr.

Figuring out a solution -- protecting people -- is more than well worth whatever time and expense it takes. Stadiums in Japan and Korea feature netting from foul pole to foul pole, so it's clearly possible. And when players witness the horror of what happened Wednesday, it makes them even more steadfast in their stance that more netting isn't just a good thing but a necessary one.

"Let's just put fences up around the whole field," Cubs third baseman Kris Bryant told ESPN. "I mean, it's so sad when you see stuff like that happen.

"There's a lot of kids coming to the games -- young kids who want to watch us play," Bryant continued. "And the balls come in hard. I mean, the speed of the game is quick, and I think any safety measure we can take to make sure that the fans are safe, we should do it."

Bryant wasn't the only one calling for it. Outfielders Jason Heyward and Kyle Schwarber supported the idea. Nothing terrifies players more than a hard-hit foul ball into the stands. They understand that it's not about people focusing on their phones, not about preventing kids from partaking in one of baseball's great joys and sitting close to the field -- not about any of the talking points the anti-net crowd bleats every time this happens.

Here's the truth: Even the most astute baseball fan would have difficulty getting out of the way of a line drive when it's traveling 90 mph or 100 mph or 110 mph. Almora's foul ball reached the stands in barely a second. Knowing that, it's not a surprise that Bloomberg News estimated around 1,750 fans each year get hurt by foul balls and broken bats at major league games. The girl here wasn't the only one struck Wednesday; a man at Dodger Stadium was hit in the head by an Alex Verdugo foul ball as well.

The last incident to stir the league and teams into action came in September 2017, when a 105-mph foul ball hit a young girl at Yankee Stadium and hospitalized her. This should galvanize the league similarly. As much as commissioner Rob Manfred tries to be hands-off and allow each team to determine its own ballpark configuration, this issue demands strong, proactive leadership. If Manfred came out Thursday, lamented the horrible injury and said he was mandating teams begin design efforts to ensure every team has pole-to-pole netting in place for the 2020 season, it would be an unmistakable message to fans that their concerns are a top priority of the league.

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Almora shaken up after foul ball hits girl

Albert Almora Jr. explains his emotions after hitting a foul ball that struck a young fan.

Remember, after the death of 14-year-old Brittanie Cecil at a hockey game, the NHL installed netting around every arena. Fans adjusted, because netting to the human eye is like white noise to the ear. Eventually, it became the norm, as standard as the netting in the back of a goal.

Surely MLB recognizes the fear about netting is a fallacy, that the threats to boycott games with extended netting are the idle blathering of the habitually self-absorbed. Albert Almora Jr., very clearly, is not such a person. When a security official at Minute Maid Park updated him on the girl's condition an inning after the incident, his head burrowed into her shoulder, his emotion spilling out. While he would not reveal what the security official said, he did say that her words allowed him to continue playing, which dovetailed with sources telling ESPN's Jesse Rogers that the prognosis was positive.

"God willing," Almora said, "I'll be able to have a relationship with this little girl for the rest of my life."

Hopefully sooner than later, Almora can connect with her, with her family, and give them a dose of good news. That the Chicago Cubs, the team whose uniform he wears, plan on extending netting to the foul poles of Wrigley Field, and that Major League Baseball, the league Almora represents with such class, plans on doing the same at 29 other stadiums. That her injury won't keep happening again and again and again and again and again. That a little girl with an orange bow in her hair can watch the best baseball players in the world without any fear, any pain, any suffering.

Following two days of intense qualification rounds, this is where the business begins in earnest with a star-studded line-up of seeded players stepping onto the main stage in Shenzhen.

Who will take the main prizes when Sunday eventually arrives at the Seamaster 2019 ITTF World Tour Platinum China Open?

An unavoidable question, but the journey towards those final battles will be a long and hard one for all involved, such is the unbelievable, elite quality of the players on show.

TOUGHER THAN THE OLYMPICS

Take a look at the entry list and you could make a very strong case that the China Open is harder to win than most World Table Tennis Championships or even the Olympic Games.

Of the top 50 Men’s Singles players on the planet, 46 turned up in Shenzhen in search of glory, with the total number of titles (171) won by all Men’s Singles participants outnumbering the entries (153)!

Competition for the Women’s Singles title will be red hot as well, especially when you consider that the top five seeds all have experience of winning the China Open: the Chinese quintet of DING Ning (2014, 2016, 2017), ZHU Yuling (2015), CHEN Meng (2012, 2013), WANG Manyu (2018) and LIU Shiwen (twice in 2009).

RECORDS & WORLD CHAMPIONS: THE STORY

Reigning World and Olympic Champion, MA Long (CHN) is also defending his China Open crown in Shenzhen, starting today with his R32 match against Mizuki OIKAWA (JPN) at 20:15 GMT+8 (live on itTV). For MA to go all the way again this year, he will most likely have to overcome world no. 1 FAN Zhendong (CHN) at the quarter-final stage in what would be another classic encounter between the pair.

‘The Dragon’ has extra incentive to claim the top prize this week, which would see him set a new benchmark of 28 career ITTF World Tour titles. He currently shares the Men’s Singles record with the legendary Vladimir SAMSONOV (BLR), the 43-year-old coming through his qualification rounds to book a match-up against LIANG Jingkun (CHN).

In the Women’s Singles, LIU Shiwen (CHN) will be looking to capitalise on her fine recent form, which saw her end a 10-year wait to clinch gold at the 2019 World Table Tennis Championships in Budapest. The question now is ‘can she go on to win her first China Open in a decade?’ Her journey begins today at 16:05 against compatriot GU Yuting (CHN), who defeated in-form Hina HAYATA (JPN) in qualification.

MEN’S SINGLES: MOVERS & SHAKERS?

Top seed FAN Zhendong will be keen to bounce back from the disappointment of his R16 exit at the World Championships with a strong showing on home soil. He kicks off his campaign against Sathiyan GNANASEKARAN (IND), who produced some of the most pulsating performances throughout qualification with three victories that went the full seven-game distance!

One of the main entertainers in Budapest with his swashbuckling style, Simon GAUZY (FRA) will take on 6th seed LEE Sangsu (KOR). Both players have plenty of tricks up their sleeves! The winner of that match could well set up a quarter-final clash against 4th seed and teenage talent Tomokazu HARIMOTO (JPN)

Can World Championships silver medallist Mattias FALCK (SWE) maintain recent momentum? Form dictates that the 16th seed could take on 2006 China Open champion, Timo BOLL (GER) in the R16, with 2nd seed XU Xin (CHN) lying in wait in the last eight.

As 7th seed, Hugo CALDERANO (BRA) would face no higher-ranked opponent before the quarter-final stage, where LIN Gaoyuan (CHN) and Dimitrij OVTCHAROV (GER) would be the favourites to come up against him. Before that, however, the reigning Pan American champion will likely face the challenge of LIANG Jingkun or SAMSONOV.

WOMEN’S SINGLES: THE WAY FORWARD?

World no. 1 DING Ning (CHN) has the very real prospect of three consecutive contests against Japanese opponents. After kicking off today against Miyuu KIHARA, the top seed is in line to face 9th seed Miu HIRANO and 7th seed Mima ITO, should they all progress.

Defending China Open champion and 4th seed WANG Manyu (CHN) is on course to meet 5th seed LIU Shiwen in the quarter-finals, while 3rd seed CHEN Meng (CHN) faces arguably the toughest possible R32 match-up against compatriot SUN Yingsha.

The winner of that clash would put themselves in the driving seat to reach the semi-finals where 2nd seed ZHU Yuling would be the favourite to reach that stage as comfortably the highest ranked player in her quarter of the draw.

SEEING DOUBLES

Silver medallists at the World Championships, the mixed nationality Men’s Doubles pairing of Alvaro ROBLES (ESP) & Ovidiu IONESCU (ROU) look determined to build on that success, having booked their place in the quarter-finals where they will take on World Champions MA Long & WANG Chuqin (CHN) who have progressed from the qualification rounds. That’s right, there will be a rematch of that Budapest final on Friday!

In the Women’s Doubles, WANG Manyu & ZHU Yuling (CHN) will fancy their chances of glory. The top-ranked pair are through to the quarter-finals with 2nd and 3rd seeds Barbora BALAZOVA (SVK) & Hana MATELOVA (CZE) and DOO Hoi Kem & NG Wing Nam (HKG) no longer in the running.

The Mixed Doubles story so far sees plenty of big names through to the quarter-finals: top seeds WONG Chun Ting & DOO Hoi Kem (HKG), the newly formed partnership of XU Xin & CHEN Meng (CHN) and also Tomokazu HARIMOTO & Kasumi ISHIKAWA (JPN), back together again. Could success in Shenzhen ensure they are Japan’s preferred choice for Tokyo 2020?

STAY TUNED!

TRD & Wilson Named Sonoma Grand Marshals

Published in Racing
Wednesday, 29 May 2019 14:25
David Wilson will represent TRD as the grand marshal for the upcoming Toyota/Save Mart 350.

SONOMA, Calif. – In celebration of Toyota Racing Development’s 40th anniversary, Sonoma Raceway has named TRD – represented by president David Wilson – as Grand Marshal of the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Toyota/Save Mart 350.

Toyota, which made its NASCAR debut in the Goody’s Dash Series in 2000, has been the official vehicle and NASCAR event co-title sponsor at Sonoma Raceway since 2007.

The raceway joins TRD in celebrating an anniversary in 2019, as Sonoma marks 50 years of racing in wine country.

Since TRD’s debut in NASCAR, the organization has achieved more than 450 wins across all three professional series, including two Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series championships.

In Sonoma, TRD has visited victory lane five times, including Kyle Busch’s first NASCAR Cup Series road-course victory and Toyota’s first Sonoma victory in 2008.

TRD has also seen success in the other two NASCAR national series, NHRA, USAC, CART, IndyCar, IMSA, various grassroots series and off-road racing series, with multiple titles and race wins.

Off-the-track, TRD has been successful in adding technology gleaned from racing into its production vehicles.

“On behalf of all of our team members at TRD in both Costa Mesa, California and Salisbury, North Carolina, we’re honored that our partners and friends at Sonoma Raceway have chosen to pay tribute to TRD’s 40th anniversary by making TRD the Grand Marshal of this year’s Toyota/Save Mart 350,” said Wilson“From humble beginnings as a simple speed shop in Southern California to an organization employing more than 250 team members that contribute to championships and victories spanning numerous motorsports entrants across America, we’re proud of the rich history of our company.

“We look forward to celebrating that history at Sonoma Raceway.”

Wilson, TRD and Sonoma Raceway’s 50th anniversary will be honored on Friday, June 21, at the Children’s Champions NASCAR Banquet at Viansa Winery in Sonoma.

The gala is a fundraiser for the Sonoma Chapter of Speedway Children’s Charities.

Wilson and TRD representatives will also take part in the Pre-Race Show powered by Friedman’s Home Improvement on Sunday, June 23, including giving the official command to start engines.

“Sonoma Raceway’s relationship with Toyota and TRD dates back to their first entry in the NASCAR Cup Series in 2007, and their success on the track has been mirrored by our growing and robust promotional partnership with Toyota Motor Sales and the regional dealers,” said Steve Page, Sonoma Raceway president and general manager. “To top it off, David Wilson is celebrating his 30th anniversary with TRD this year, so we are delighted to honor David and his team of innovators at Toyota Racing Development as our Grand Marshals this summer.”

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