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Down 2-0 in the NBA Western Conference finals, the Portland Trail Blazers find themselves in a must-win predicament on their home floor Saturday night (9 p.m. ET, ESPN).

One big reason the Golden State Warriors are in the driver's seat: their ability to shut down Damian Lillard, who must get going if Portland has a chance to turn this series around.

Here's how Golden State has contained Dame, and some things the Blazers can do to try to counter.

Lillard not getting his shots

Lillard is a terrific scorer who averaged nearly 26 points per game this season by blending 3-point scoring, midrange shooting and rim attacks.

But in the first two games of this series, the Warriors have reduced Lillard to a medium-usage, low-efficiency perimeter scorer. They've prevented him from doing any damage inside the 3-point line.

Lillard's shot distribution in the first two games should worry the Blazers. He has only one made shot in the paint and three total buckets in the 2-point area. He has taken nine shots from beyond 30 feet, and has taken a total of four inside 10 feet.

During the regular season, Lillard's average shot quality on 3-point attempts -- factoring in shot type, location and defender distance -- rated as a not-great 47.5 expected effective field goal percentage (eFG), according to Second Spectrum tracking. Because Lillard is money from long range, even when contested, he cashed in with an actual eFG of 55.6.

But the Warriors might be forcing Dame to a breaking point. His shot quality is down to a 42.5 expected eFG on 17 3s in this series, per Second Spectrum. The average shot distance on his 3s is 29.1 feet away from the rim. Somehow he's still shooting 41.2 percent overall on those looks, but that's not sustainable and it's affecting the rest of his game.

Lillard's inability to produce anything near the basket is particularly disappointing. Consider these two stats:

  • In the regular season, Lillard averaged over 11 points per game on 2-pointers. In the first two games of this series, he has scored just six total points on 2s.

  • Lillard averaged 6.5 shots per game within 8 feet of the basket in the regular season. In this series, he has tried just three total in that zone.

So how are the Warriors pulling this off?

The Warriors' plan to take out Dame

Give credit here to Golden State's defense, which remains the most unheralded part of this dynastic run. The Warriors have always combined smart tactics with fantastic individual defenders to generate great defensive results. This series is no exception. The Dubs have built a game plan designed to suppress Lillard's scoring activity and dare other Blazers to beat them.

Klay Thompson has done the lion's share of defensive work on Lillard, and Thompson has been superb. In the regular season, Lillard shot 27.9 times and scored 34.5 points per 100 possessions. But in the 66 matchups against Thompson this series, Lillard is shooting at a rate of 18.2 times per 100 and yielding just 12.1 points. In Game 1, Dame had the fewest shot attempts of his 49-game playoff career (12). His 16 attempts in Game 2 were still well below his career average of 19.9.

The Warriors are leaving Lillard with few good options, squashing the Blazers star at the point of attack. After blitzing pick-and-rolls just four times per game in the first two rounds of these playoffs, they're doing so 18 times per game in this series, per Second Spectrum. Rarely does Lillard call for a pick without two Golden State defenders absolutely swarming him.

In Game 2, Golden State blitzed Lillard 19 times. That isn't just the most blitzes Lillard has faced in a postseason game in his entire career -- it's the most any player has faced this postseason.

Sometimes Lillard has been able to split that blitz and get to the rim, but moves like this become challenging to execute on every possession when you've played 326 total minutes this month and nine playoff games in 18 days:

The Warriors' defense is famous for being able to switch anything, but Golden State can also adjust to the matchup.

What else can Lillard try?

Lillard is mostly making the right play on these blitzes. He's finding the big -- typically Enes Kanter -- on short rolls, but Kanter is no Magic Johnson. He's kind of a dead end on these plays.

With that in mind, Portland should try something else. Some potential alternatives:

  • Set screens with playmakers. In the second half of Game 2, Portland started using Evan Turner as a screener, making him the receiver of the passes out of the blitzes. Turner is much more adept at making plays than, say, Meyers Leonard, Zach Collins or Kanter. Portland used the Lillard-Turner pick-and-roll eight times in the second half of Game 2, while using it just five times total in all previous playoff games. Expect more of that in Game 3.

  • Get rid of the ball faster. The best way to punish teams for blitzing is to move the ball as soon as the defenders try to converge. Both Lillard and CJ McCollum need to initiate the punishment as fast as possible when Golden State blitzes.

Dethroning the champs is no easy task, and this Warriors team is tough to beat on both ends of the court.

Though the Warriors will rightly go down in history as an offensive juggernaut, more folks should celebrate this defense. Thompson still has yet to make an all-defense team, which is nothing short of a travesty. He is a world-class wing defender who has consistently shown up for big games. If the Blazers are going to win Game 3, they'll need to find someone to pick on other than Klay.

Kinsler on outburst: Only regret doing it on field

Published in Baseball
Friday, 17 May 2019 19:24

SAN DIEGO -- Ian Kinsler said he regrets using profanity during an emotional outburst after hitting a pivotal three-run home run for the San Diego Padres on Thursday night and maintained he was firing up his teammates and not taking a shot at fans.

Kinsler hollered and gestured as he touched the plate after hitting the go-ahead home run in the sixth inning of the 4-3 win against the Pittsburgh Pirates, and again in the dugout.

Kinsler has been criticized by fans as he has struggled since joining the Padres on an $8 million, two-year deal. Many fans, particularly on social media, felt the outburst was directed at them.

"The only thing that I do regret is doing it on the field in front of everybody, so everyone can interpret it their own way," Kinsler said before Friday night's game.

Asked if he wanted to say anything to fans who thought he was directing it at them, to clear things up, he said, "No."

The 36-year-old Kinsler, in his 14th big league season, said he has been criticized by fans "my whole life."

Asked about this year, he said: "Yeah, that's part of being an athlete. They pay a ticket to yell at their own team, I guess. They pay a ticket to yell at the other team, whatever. If they want to pay a ticket to yell at people, that's fine. I can't control what the fans do. I just want good energy at the ballpark. I just want people to be supportive of the Padres. ... I can't control the fans."

Kinsler went 1-for-4 on Friday night in a 5-3 loss to the Pirates. He is batting .177 with five homers and nine RBIs in 38 games.

San Diego manager Andy Green reiterated what he said about Kinsler on Thursday night, that it wasn't the right response.

"He's come out and said directly who he intended it for. I take him at his word on that," Green said. "For us, we understand how that appears to people in that moment, and we don't want to give off that impression. We take ownership over that. As an organization, we've apologized for that. We intend to move on from that."

"The appearance is not the appearance that we want in this Padres organization," Green added. "That look is not what we want on the field. He had the opportunity to apologize today and to recognize how that could be perceived and was perceived by a lot of people."

Green declined to say if Kinsler had been disciplined.

"We'll continue to talk to all our players in different moments in time, and that stuff we'll keep to ourselves," Green said.

Kinsler said he plays with passion and emotion. He did have a bat flip after driving his fifth homer off the Western Metal Supply Co. Building in the left-field corner.

Two years ago, Kinsler walked back comments he made that seemed to be criticizing players from Latin American countries for playing with too much emotion in the World Baseball Classic. He was on the U.S. team that beat Puerto Rico in the final.

Pressly sets mark with 39th straight blank outing

Published in Baseball
Friday, 17 May 2019 22:08

BOSTON -- Houston Astros reliever Ryan Pressly broke the major league record for consecutive appearances without giving up a run on Friday night against the Boston Red Sox in a 3-1 victory, tallying his 39th straight scoreless outing.

Pressly broke the previous mark set in 2011 by Craig Kimbrel.

Houston acquired Pressly from the Minnesota Twins at the trade deadline last year, coveting the reliever in part for the high spin rate on his fastball. Pressly has not allowed a run to score since August 10, 2018, totaling 38 scoreless innings. Since the last time he allowed a run, Pressly has struck out 47 batters, walked just three and allowed 17 hits.

"I just tried to put it in the back of my mind as far as I possibly could," Pressly said. "My job is to go out there and get people out and throw up zeros as many times as I possibly can and put this team in a situation to win. That's really all I was thinking about."

The Houston hurler rolled through a perfect eighth inning, requiring just 11 pitches while fanning Boston first baseman Mitch Moreland and generating outs against shortstop Xander Bogaerts and third baseman Rafael Devers. Pressly topped his history-making performance with a dramatic third out, collecting a Devers bloop while making a Matrix-like throw to first, falling away from first base.

"I just ran over there, threw it and hopefully didn't throw it into right field," Pressly said. "Everything kinda clicked right there, so I was happy Yuli [Gurriel] got the ball and stepped on the bag."

And while his name is now etched in the baseball record books, Pressly will have no memento to keep from the evening.

"I don't even know where the ball went," Pressly said. "I don't care for that kind of stuff."

Pressly's teammates celebrated the achievement after the game in the locker room by awarding him a wrestling-inspired robe, given to the Astros player of the game.

"We were all aware of what he was going for, and wow, what a special moment for him," starter Gerrit Cole said. "Kind of inconspicuous trade last year, and he's just absolutely blossomed here and made a lot of huge pitches for us along the way. Any time you are part of history or you're around it for a game that's been around so long, it's pretty special. We celebrated him after the win, gave him the robe for the game, and he put a cherry on top with the Mark Buehrle-esque play that he made. That was pretty special as well."

Things have changed dramatically since Pressly arrived in Houston. While with the Twins in 2018, the 30-year-old reliever posted a 3.40 ERA with a 1.36 WHIP. In 43 outings since arriving in Houston, Pressly sports a 0.43 ERA in 42 1/3 innings, allowing just two runs and striking out 52 batters. The Astros hope for more of the same.

"It was Ryan's night," Cole said.

Cubs' Bryant goes deep in 7th, 8th, 9th vs. Nats

Published in Baseball
Friday, 17 May 2019 21:53

WASHINGTON -- Kris Bryant and the Chicago Cubs saved their best for last -- bad news for a Nationals bullpen that's having a hard enough time as it is.

Bryant matched a career high with three home runs and drove in five while the Cubs piled on against Washington's bullpen in a 14-6 win Friday night.

Bryant went deep in the seventh, eighth and ninth innings, making him the 12th player to homer in three straight innings.

"It's tied for first, I guess. I don't know. The other [three-homer game] in Cincinnati was great. I had one more hit there," Bryant said. "It was just a great night all around. Myself, a lot of the rest of us had great at-bats."

Bryant finished with four hits and extended his on-base streak to 26 games, a career best and the longest active run in the majors.

"We have seen him hit the ball consistently harder over the last two or three weeks," Cubs manager Joe Maddon said. "He looks like he [did] a couple of years ago, and he is also reacting with the same kind of confidence. It's a good thing to watch right now."

Albert Almora Jr., Kyle Schwarber and Willson Contreras also homered to help the NL Central-leading Cubs (26-16) snap a two-game skid. Javier Baez extended the majors' longest hitting streak to 15 games.

Contreras also had four hits. His ninth-inning homer off Matt Grace capped an 11-run barrage for the Cubs against the Nationals' beleaguered bullpen.

Schwarber broke open a one-run game in the eighth with a two-run homer against Kyle Barraclough that concluded a 13-pitch at-bat. Bryant followed two pitches later with his 10th homer.

"The bullpen holds us, different ballgame," Nationals manager Dave Martinez said. "They just couldn't do it tonight."

Chicago starter Cole Hamels (4-0) won for the fourth time in five starts. The left-hander tossed five effective innings, squirming out of two bases-loaded jams, as the Cubs improved to 7-2 in his nine starts this season.

The only damage Hamels allowed was a two-run home run to Anthony Rendon in the third inning.

Washington (18-26) has yet to win three in a row this season and has dropped all six of Max Scherzer's home starts.

Scherzer (2-5) struggled with his command over six innings. He walked a season-high four and gave up a two-run homer to Almora, his fourth of the season, in the second. Scherzer also struck out eight before exiting.

Trea Turner went 2-for-5 in his return from a broken right index finger that kept the Nationals shortstop out of the lineup for 38 games.

Almora made a diving catch in center field to rob Juan Soto of a hit in the ninth inning.

SLOW STARTERS

The Nationals fell to 2-13 in series openers this season.

"We're just not getting the job done," second baseman Brian Dozier said. "We preached, 'Gotta win the first game.' But at the same time, we haven't done a good job at that. There's no better way to fix that than to just start winning them."

TRAINER'S ROOM

Cubs: 1B Anthony Rizzo (back) returned to the lineup after missing four games and went 1-for-5 with a strikeout and run scored.

Nationals: OF Victor Robles was hit on the left wrist by a pitch and left the game in the fourth inning. Martinez said Robles had a contusion on the wrist, but X-rays were negative ... RHP Justin Miller suffered a rotator-cuff strain in his brief relief appearance and will likely undergo an MRI Saturday ... RHP Anibal Sanchez was placed on the 10-day injured list (strained left hamstring)

UP NEXT

Cubs: LHP Jon Lester (3-1, 1.16) has not allowed an earned run in his last three starts. He's 2-2 with a 4.25 ERA in seven career starts against the Nationals.

Nationals: RHP Stephen Strasburg (3-3, 3.63) has lost his last two starts. He is 1-1 with a 2.23 ERA in six career starts against the Cubs.

Fiery Sabathia shouts at Rays in tense Yanks win

Published in Baseball
Friday, 17 May 2019 22:55

NEW YORK -- Barely a week after an at times contentious series against division rival Tampa Bay, Yankees starter CC Sabathia appeared to have a few choice words Friday for the Rays as he pitched against them in the opener of a pivotal mid-May matchup.

Twice after he walked off the mound during this latest outing, Sabathia was caught by cameras shouting.

The first time, he appeared to be yelling toward his own dugout. As he sauntered across the first-base line in the middle of the fifth, moments after throwing a pitch to Rays designated hitter Austin Meadows that missed far inside, Sabathia appeared to say, "I was definitely trying to hit his ass."

An inning later, after striking out Rays second baseman Brandon Lowe swinging, Sabathia appeared to turn in the direction of Tampa Bay's dugout and shout some more words.

After the Yankees won 4-3 on Gio Urshela's walk-off single in the ninth, Sabathia said he remembered saying something in the Rays' direction in the sixth but didn't recall the exact words.

"Just excited about the game," Sabathia said. "We're playing for first place."

With the win, the Yankees overtook the Rays for first place in the American League East. It's the first time since April 1 that anyone other than the Rays has led the division.

Sabathia's apparent chippy on-field demeanor came after a few tense moments in his previous start, which came against the Rays last Saturday at Tropicana Field.

In the top of the sixth of that game, Yankees first baseman Luke Voit was hit by a pitch that was up and in. Plunked for the fifth time this season and second time in barely a week, Voit was enraged. He was upset in part because he was hit one batter after DJ LeMahieu had homered off Rays reliever Yonny Chirinos.

"It's frustrating," Voit said after last Saturday's game. "He can hit me anywhere else. This one is up and in. It's a situation that can be career-ending. He's a sinkerballer, and that was pretty straight."

Sabathia was among those who did not hide his displeasure when Voit was asked to take his base.

Sabathia, who departed the game the half inning prior, came out of the Yankees' dugout and shouted across the field to the Rays. It was a scene reminiscent of his previous start at Tropicana Field in September.

During his final start last regular season, Sabathia hit then-Rays catcher Jesus Sucre after his own catcher, Austin Romine, had been thrown behind the previous half inning. Sabathia was ejected for throwing the errant pitch and suspended the first five games this season because of it. When he walked off the mound that time, he also shouted an obscenity in the direction of Tampa Bay's dugout.

"It's just the same thing, you hit a home run and then they throw up and in," Sabathia said just after his start last weekend. "It's stupid."

On Friday, he said whatever emotion he demonstrated during this latest start was not a carryover from the previous game.

Asked whether he thought Sabathia had more of an edge than normal in Friday's six-inning, six-hit, one-run, four-strikeout outing, Yankees manager Aaron Boone said no.

"CC's always got a little bit of an edge," Boone said. "He gets between the lines. He's an awesome competitor. You're going up against a good club, and he went out and set the tone really well to start off this series."

Rangers' Kelley has lumps removed from throat

Published in Baseball
Saturday, 18 May 2019 13:01

ARLINGTON, Texas -- Texas Rangers reliever Shawn Kelley had two lumps surgically removed from his throat this week.

Kelly says an initial biopsy on the lumps was inconclusive, so doctors removed the "decent-sized" lumps on Thursday. The 35-year-old was put on the injured list May 9, five days after he last pitched.

Kelly says he noticed the issue early this season. He had the lumps checked this month after they got bigger and bothersome while trying to sleep.

He's awaiting the results, but on Saturday said he feels great and is ready to return to pitching.

Kelley is 3-0 with two saves and a 1.29 ERA in 14 appearances in his first season with the Rangers.

American duo enjoy thrilling early-season 100m clash at Diamond League while Abderrahman Samba wins big 400m hurdles head-to-head

The men’s 100m at the Diamond League in Shanghai saw a classic contrast of styles between two sprinters who were, ultimately, separated by a photo finish. Christian Coleman, the world indoor record-holder for 60m, produced a bullet start to build a clear lead, but he was dramatically run down by fellow American Noah Lyles – a fast-finishing and rangier 200m specialist.

Both runners clocked 9.86 (+0.9). Yet the verdict was given to Lyles by six thousandths of a second as Akani Simbine of South Africa clocked 9.95 in third and Britain’s Reece Prescod 9.97 in his first 100m of the year.

The IAAF World Championships in Doha is more than four months away but this was an early-season chance to gain a psychological edge. When introduced to the crowd Coleman looked pensive and raised his left arm – which is tattooed with the Olympic rings – to acknowledge the crowd. More of a showman, Lyles drew an imaginary handgun from a mock holster, fired and blew the muzzle like a cowboy in a Wild West shoot-out.

The subsequent race did not disappoint. All of the nine starters possessed a sub-10-second PB, including Bingtian Su, the big home nation hope, although the Chinese athlete could do no better than fifth in 10.05 as he narrowly beat fellow countryman Zhenye Xie.

The men’s 100m was not the only mouth-watering clash on the programme either. Abderrahman Samba won a much-anticipated 400m hurdles head-to-head with Rai Benjamin as the Qatari ran a meeting record of 47.27 to beat the American’s 47.80.

During 2018 Samba clocked 46.98, whereas Benjamin ran 47.02 to win the NCAA title. The times placed them No.2 and No.4 on the world all-time rankings (Kevin Young and Ed Moses are No.1 and No.3) but the duo had never raced before.

Benjamin held a narrow lead in the home straight but Samba proved too strong as he surged away in the final metres. Behind, Ireland’s Thomas Barr ran 49.41 in third.

“It was a great race and Rai and I pushed each other to the line,” said Samba, who will be going for global gold on home soil in Doha later this year.

Andreas Hofmann threw a world lead in the javelin of 87.55m in a quality contest that saw Taiwanese athlete Chao-Tsun Cheng throw 87.12 for a close second place, while the women’s javelin saw a win for Lyu Huihui on home soil with 66.89m.

The men’s 5000m featured a strong field, too, with Yomif Kejelcha running a 53.3 last lap to see off Selemon Barega in a world lead of 13:04.16 as Hagos Gebrhiwet completed an Ethiopian one-two-three and world cross champion Joshua Cheptegei came in seventh.

Elsewhere, Salwa Eid Naser of Bahrain ran 50.65 to beat US talent Sydney McLaughlin in the 400m. Still only 19 and a 400m hurdles specialist, McLaughlin ran 50.78.

There was a Canadian one-two in the men’s 200m as Aaron Brown clocked 20.07 to beat Andre De Grasse’s 20.21 while Britain’s Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake ran 20.60 in fifth.

Rababe Arafe of Morocco ran 4:01.15 to win the women’s 1500m from Gudaf Tsegay of Ethiopia as Sifan Hassan of the Netherlands wound up fifth. Beatrice Chepkoech took the women’s steeplechase comfortably from fellow Kenyan Celliphine Chespol in 9:04.52.

There were some early-season turn-ups as well. Aleia Hobbs of the United States took the women’s 100m in 11.03 (+0.2) – beating a strong field that included Blessing Okagbare (11.07) and Olympic champion Elaine Thompson (11.14).

“I fractured my wrist two weeks ago playing laser tag,” revealed Hobbs. “Someone ran into me – it was a total accident. Fortunately, I have not missed too much training.”

Chase Ealey also caused an upset as she took the shot put with 19.58m to beat, among others, Lijiao Gong – the world champion throwing 19.44m on home soil to finish runner-up.

“I’ve changed coaches (to Ryan Whiting) and changed to the rotational technique 10 months ago and I feel that has made the difference,” said Ealey.

Omar McLeod was uncertain whether to compete following the death of his aunt, but the Jamaican toed the line in the 110m hurdles and was in tears after clocking 13.12 to beat Wenjun Xie, Sergey Shubenkov and Orlando Ortega as Britain’s Andy Pozzi placed sixth in 13.39.

“I asked myself what would she want?” said McLeod. “And she would want me to race. It was hard but I just wanted to finish, win and get the job done.”

In the women’s pole vault, meanwile, Katerina Stefanidi of Greece cleared 4.72m to win on countback from Nikoleta Kyriakopoulou, Ling Li and Sandi Morris. Britain’s Holly Bradshaw went over 4.42m but failed at 4.52m, though.

Great Britain's men's wheelchair tennis team stunned Japan to reach the final of the BNP Paribas World Team Cup.

Gordon Reid and Alfie Hewett each won 6-4 7-5, helping them and team-mate Dermot Bailey past the top seeds.

They face France on Saturday and will ensure Britain end the tournament with a record-equalling three medals.

Great Britain's junior team leave the event with silver after a final defeat to Australia, while the women's team won bronze against South Africa.

The women's team of Jordanne Whiley, Mariska Shuker, Louise Hunt and Cornelia Oosthuizen started quickly when Whiley overcame Mariska Venter 6-4 6-1 and progressed when Shuker's opponent retired injured in the deciding set of their match.

The junior quartet of Dahnon Ward, Gregory Slade, Ben Bartram and Ruby Bishop had their hopes of gold dashed when doubles pairing Bartram and Ward lost 14-12 in the deciding match tie break.

Not since 2012 have Great Britain ended the tournament with three medals and it could have been four but for a 2-1 defeat for the quad team of Andy Lapthorne, Antony Cotterill and James Shaw against South Africa on Friday.

The World Team Cup is the wheelchair tennis equivalent of the Fed Cup and Davis Cup competitions, with teams from 23 nations taking part in the finals in Ramat Hasharon, Israel.

The men's final between Great Britain and France will see Reid and Hewett face off against Stephane Houdet and Nicolas Peifer, the duo who beat them in the Rio 2016 Paralympic final.

Kinshasa welcomes continent’s future

Published in Table Tennis
Friday, 17 May 2019 13:55

The goal is to gain a place in the ITTF World Hopes Week and Challenge to be staged in Muscat, Oman from Thursday 25th to Wednesday 31st July for which there are places for two boys and two girls from the African continent.

Very much at the helm of proceedings in Kinshasa will be Ramzi B.H Mabrouk, the Development Manager for the African Table Tennis Federation, he will assist Eva Jeler, the head coach in a week when education will be very much at the forefront of activities.

In order for players to attend the event, financial support from the International Table Tennis Federation to assist with expenses has been organized.

Proceedings commence with accreditation and a team leaders meeting on Wednesday 4th December, a gala dinner will be held on Saturday 7th December.

Overall a total of five age categories will be organised with men’s team and women’s team, in addition to men’s singles and women’s singles events, being held. The age groups are 40-49 years, 50 to 59 years, 60 to 69 years and 70 to 79 years in addition to 80 years and over.

All matches will be best of five games, except in the 80 years and over category when it will be best of three games.

In the team events for men, the current system employed at the World Championships of three players per team will be adopted (A v X, B v Y, C v Z, A v Y, B v X); for the women it will be two players for the singles with a further two eligible for the doubles (A v X, B v Y, Doubles, A v Y, B v X). An exception is made in the 80 and over years category where a fixture comprises two singles matches followed by a doubles.

Notably in addition to the traditional trophies, the winning team in each category receives US$400.00, the runners up US$200.00 with each of the bronze medal outfits collecting US$100.00. Similarly, in the individual events, first place is awarded US$150.00, the runner up $80.00, the bronze medallists US$50.00.

Overall, a total of 800 players will be accepted; including the gala dinner, the entry fee per team event is US$180.000 for four players; for the individual competitions it is US$15.00 per person. However, for any player who wishes to compete only in the individual events and does not wish to attend the gala dinner, the cost is US$30.00; for accompanying guest gala dinner coupons may be purchased for the sum of US$30.00 each.

Contact:

Daniel Wu, Organising Committee
Tel: 86-13962751487 Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Peter Ma, Asia Pacific Table Tennis Veteran Union Mr. Peter Ma
Tel: 852-90390210 Fax: 852-23081200 Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

2019 Asian Cup Veteran Open Championships: Prospectus (issued Thursday 16th May)
2019 Asian Cup Veteran Open Championships: Entry Form

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