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How the Masters Tournament cut line is determined

Published in Golf
Friday, 12 April 2019 04:30

Like almost every event played in professional golf, there is a cut made to reduce the field after 36 holes of the Masters Tournament.

The Masters has a limited field, related to the number of invitations it offers, and this year’s number started at 87 players.

After two rounds, the top 50 players and ties will qualify for weekend play, as well as any player within 10 shots of the lead. Therefore, if 70 players were within 10 shots of the 36-hole leader(s), then 70 players would make the cut.

Prior to 2014, the Masters used to cut to the top 44 players and ties (along with the 10-shot rule).

Zach Johnson was taking practice swings on the 13th tee box Friday at the Masters when the unthinkable happened.

Johnson clipped his ball on one of the swings. His ball then ricocheted off the right tee marker and landed about 10 yards in front of Johnson, who casually walked up and grabbed his ball.

"Y'all can laugh, that's embarrassing," Johnson told his playing competitors, Ian Poulter and Matt Kuchar.

Luckily for Johnson, no penalty was given since he did not intend to hit his ball. So Johnson re-teed and found the fairway. He then went on to birdie the hole and move back to 1 over for the tournament.

"There's a first for everything boys," Johnson added.

Tiger Woods got off to a strong start on the par 3s Friday at Augusta National.

He hit his tee ball to 7 feet on the par-3 fourth and sank the putt for his first birdie of the round. Two holes later, after a bogey at the difficult par-4 fifth, Woods drained a 20-footer at the par-3 sixth.

He even gave patrons a nice putter raise.

After an unexpected bogey at the par-5 eighth, Woods made this 37-footer for birdie at the par-4 ninth.

With three birdies and two bogeys, Woods shot 1-under 35 on the first nine. He turned in 3 under par for the tournament, four off the lead.

Chelsea chief: Pulisic key for our U.S. fan base

Published in Soccer
Friday, 12 April 2019 14:30

Chelsea hopes Christian Pulisic will help the London club expand its U.S. fan base and assist the team's campaign to combat anti-Semitism.

Chelsea bought the 20-year-old midfielder from Borussia Dortmund in January for $73 million, by far a record price for an American player, then loaned him back to the German club for the rest of the season. Pulisic can't play for Chelsea for a May 15 charity exhibition at the New England Revolution dubbed the "Final Whistle on Hate," but will play a role in Chelsea's promotional efforts after he joins in July.

"He's a personable boy. He's well-liked in this country," Chelsea chairman Bruce Buck said during an interview Thursday with The Associated Press. "So of course I would expect him when we come here and play some friendly matches, which is what our objective is in the summer of 2020. Then yes, I think he will he will be helpful."

Manchester United has the highest average U.S. viewers among Premier League clubs this season at 630,000 on NBC, NBCSN and their digital streams, topping Arsenal (573,000), Liverpool (563,000) Chelsea (534,000), Manchester City (494,000) and Tottenham (477,000). Kickoff times and appearances on the late Saturday NBC match impact audience.

"The surveys tell us that we're very strong on the two coasts," Buck said. "We have some work to do in Middle America. I think we're doing in round terms as well as any other big club."

Next month's charity match is a project of Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich and New England Patriots and Revolution owner Robert Kraft to focus on the increase in hate crimes. Beneficiaries include the World Jewish Congress; the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh that was the site of a mass shooting last year; the Anti-Defamation League; and the Holocaust Educational Trust. Both teams will take part in the "March of the Living" event from the Auschwitz to Birkenau concentration camps in Poland on May 2, a remembrance of the Holocaust.

"What we're trying to do, mostly in the UK but also here, is educate people, make them aware of the issue and hopefully change some attitudes," Buck said.

Chelsea's season has been marred by a series of racist and anti-Semitic incidents. The club stopped three supporters from entering Thursday's Europa League match at Slavia Prague after they were identified singing a derogatory chant about Liverpool star Mohamed Salah.

UEFA opened an investigation into allegations of anti-Semitic chanting by Blues supporters during a Europa League group stage match against Vidi in Budapest in December, though no disciplinary action was ultimately taken.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Messi clash with Smalling like 'being hit by a truck'

Published in Soccer
Friday, 12 April 2019 12:31

BARCELONA, Spain -- Ernesto Valverde compared Lionel Messi's clash with Chris Smalling to being hit by a truck after leaving the Barcelona forward out of the squad for Saturday's game against Huesca.

Manchester United defender Smalling unintentionally caught Messi in the face, drawing blood, during Barca's 1-0 win at Old Trafford in the Champions League on Wednesday.

Messi, Barca's top scorer this season with 43 goals in all competitions, ended the game with bruising and swelling around his nose and cheek but tests ruled out any serious damage.

Valverde, though, has opted to err on the side of caution and has not included the Argentine in the 18-man squad for this weekend's match against bottom-of-the-table Huesca.

"It's possible that Messi rests," the coach said in a news conference before announcing the squad. "I spoke with him [on Thursday] and he's doing OK after the blow to the face.

"But he was knocked [by the incident]. [It was like] being hit by a truck. We will assess him in training [on Friday] but it's likely that he will rest."

Smalling told BBC Radio 5 Live's Football Daily podcast on Friday that Messi knew there was nothing intentional about the knock.

"We spoke afterwards. We had a brief chat and shook hands," Smallin said.

"He knew it was an accident."

Messi's not the only Barca player who will have the weekend off ahead of the second leg of their quarterfinal against United at Camp Nou on Tuesday.

Sergio Busquets has also been handed a breather, while Luis Suarez and Gerard Pique are both suspended. Ivan Rakitic and Sergi Roberto have both been ruled out with minor problems.

Defender Jean Clair Todibo comes into the squad for the first time since signing in January, while Barca B players Moussa Wague, Riqui Puig and Abel Ruiz have also been called up.

"Huesca is a dangerous game," warned Valverde, whose side have an 11-point lead over Atletico at the top of the table with just seven games to play.

"We have to be switched on. Not because [we are thinking of the second leg against United] but because you always have to think about the next opponent. So, the danger comes from Huesca, who have a lot to play for.

"Yes, there will be changes [to the team], but let's not forget we still need 10 points to be champions. We will make changes but with the aim of putting out a competitive team."

Perhaps it is nothing more than a coincidence that Manchester City face Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park this weekend on the same day that Liverpool host Chelsea at Anfield in what promises to be a compelling double-header in the Premier League title race. After all, every team has to play each other at some point during a league season, yet it seems as though somebody in the fixtures department is having fun at Liverpool's expense by throwing up another unwanted reminder of what happened the last time they met Chelsea with the title on the line.

Back in April 2014, Demba Ba's goal at Anfield -- following Steven Gerrard's slip and crucial loss of the ball -- proved to be the decisive moment in that season's title race with City. Liverpool lost 2-0 that day and, hours later, City won 2-0 at Palace to reclaim the initiative and ensure that their destiny was once again in their own hands. Manuel Pellegrini's team won their next three games to win the title and leave Liverpool -- and Gerrard -- haunted by that unforgettable slip against Chelsea.

"This wound has been open since my experience," Gerrard told ESPN FC last month. "I am not sure it will close because I can't change that experience."

But does what happened five years ago really matter in this year's title race? Not one player from Liverpool's starting outfielders that day remains at Anfield, while only Sergio Aguero, of the City side at Palace in 2014, is likely to be involved this weekend. These might be different times and different players, but when it comes to winning a title, the ghosts of the past and fear of what might happen always become an issue at this stage of the race.

Some managers and teams deal with it better than others. Rio Ferdinand, who won six Premier League titles with Manchester United, recalled in his book, "#2Sides," how Sir Alex Ferguson would always use deflection to protect his players from outside scrutiny if results went wrong.

"If anything did go wrong, he always took the stress off us by creating an argument in the media or picking a fight somewhere with someone," Ferdinand said. "It distracted attention from what had gone wrong on the pitch."

Ferguson used to call it "squeaky-bum time," an odd phrase to describe the tension and pressure that applies itself when the slightest mistake can have the biggest implications. Players are told to avoid reading newspapers by their managers, as it might spare them the damaging negativity that comes after points are dropped, while so-called mind games are played out in interviews before and after games.

When Newcastle threw away a 12-point lead and finished second to United in 1995-96, Ferguson's use of the post-match interview -- his version of "mind games" -- was cited as being the spark which lit the fuse when Newcastle manager Kevin Keegan exploded with his "I would love it if we beat them!" rant after a victory at Leeds. Keegan remembers it differently, of course, insisting in his autobiography that the drip-drip effect of conceding late goals was the real reason for his team's stumble.

"How come these last minute goals never went our way?" Keegan wrote. "Too many players were struggling with the tension and when we did play well, we were still coming away empty-handed from key fixtures. We did succumb to mental tension, but that was well before my outburst and it's a distortion of history to think the championship was settled by 'psychological warfare,' or whatever you wish to call it."

For many players, the pressure is at its height when the opposition are playing. Alan Shearer often tells the story of how, during Blackburn's tense race with Manchester United in 1994-95, he chose to paint his garden fence rather than watch United on television in an effort to escape the psychological torment. Ferguson would often head to the golf course to avoid being drawn into watching his closest rivals win again on television.

During Leicester's incredible title success in 2016, Claudio Ranieri would lighten the mood with jokes and an insistence that his team were only interested in avoiding relegation. He would also motivate his players by offering to buy each one a pizza whenever they kept a clean sheet, a ploy designed to trivialise the challenge in front of them and emphasise the fun of the game.

Jurgen Klopp has struck a similar note with Liverpool in recent weeks and months, with the German playing up the excitement of the race while, at the same time, attempting to turn the screw on City by claiming Liverpool must overcome the "best team in the world" to win the title. If you can't beat the "best team in the world" to win a title, that's no failure; at the same time, if the "best team in the world" can only finish second, what does it say about them? Klopp, all smiles, knows what he is saying and why.

Liverpool's challenge this season is different to City's, however. City are chasing their fourth title in seven years, but Liverpool are having to deal with the burden of expectancy and the sense of desperation that comes with not having won the league since 1990. When United ended their 26-year wait for the title in 1993, Ferguson applied the trusted techniques of urging his players to avoid all references to football in the media, but there was still no escaping the pressure, with midfielder Paul Ince admitting that "wherever you went, it was all anybody would talk about. You couldn't escape it."

"If you can, try to turn off being constantly on social media," Ince said. "Try to avoid a lot of the noise, get your head down and remember how you got to this stage."

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1:47

Can Liverpool oust Chelsea in top 3 battle?

Liverpool and Chelsea's heavyweight matchup headlines this weeks Premier League predictor, with league title hopes on the line.

Klopp's players face the same issues in 2019 as Man United did in 1993, but so far they are using the desperation as a positive and a source of motivation. Gerrard has insisted that the desire of the supporters to win the title should be embraced by the Liverpool players.

"I think it is only normal for the supporters," Gerrard said. "They want it more than anyone. They will help. When we were in that situation, I didn't feel suffocated by the fans. I actually felt they were right behind us and with us and wanted it so much.

"I saw it as a help rather than a hindrance."

There have been so many late winning goals for Liverpool this season, with the last two victories against Spurs and Southampton achieved in the closing stages, that a sense of fate comes into play. If players believe that fate is on their side, it can override the negative emotions, but Liverpool fell into that trap in 2014 and one slip, by one of their greatest-ever players, brought it all crashing down.

City have a different pressure to deal with due to the team's pursuit of a Quadruple. In the league they've looked almost serene at times, winning without having to over-exert themselves, but their fixture demands could trigger the fatigue which then becomes a psychological problem. Perhaps, then, the outcome of the title race will boil down to the simple equation of which falters first: City's legs or Liverpool's minds. The pressure of chasing a title will obviously drain both.

The sleepless nights, the endless analysis of the other team's remaining fixtures and where points will be dropped, and the unexpected twists and turns -- and slips -- on the pitch will all play their part. And the decisive moment might once again come on the day that Liverpool play Chelsea and City travel to Crystal Palace.

W2W4: Dominant Zlatan has Galaxy on the rise

Published in Soccer
Friday, 12 April 2019 06:50

Minnesota United christens its brand-new stadium against NYCFC (live on Saturday at 5 p.m. ET on ESPN2), Zlatan and the Galaxy look to stay hot against the Union, and Seattle and Toronto meet in a rematch of the 2016 and 2017 MLS Cup finals. It's MLS W2W4.

House Hunters Minnesota

If you haven't watched "House Hunters," then surely someone close to you has. It can be maddening to see the show's couples bicker over something as inane as a light fixture in a guest bathroom, but at the end of the day, everyone is happy with the house that has been selected. Heck, sometimes the real estate agent even gets an invite to the "Three Months Later" cocktail party.

Minnesota United have had no such qualms with their new home, the glittering Allianz Field, which will open on Saturday afternoon (live at 5 p.m. ET on ESPN2). With stadiums going up left and right in MLS, Minnesota United's new stomping ground looks pretty sleek and, more importantly, it should provide a home-field advantage for the local team.

Unlike the defensively challenged Minnesota United teams of the past two years, this is a side that has clamped down in the back, allowing just eight goals. Winning three of five road games to open the season is no small feat, and that has been helped in part by Darwin Quintero, arguably the league's most underrated star and scorer of three goals.

The Colombian excels in anonymity, but Saturday will provide him a national platform to show the rest of the country that Minnesota could have something special brewing in 2019.

The Zlatan you love to hate

The mind-numbing statistics for Zlatan Ibrahimovic continue to pile up. After last week's one-goal, one-assist performance in Vancouver, the former Manchester United man now has four goals in just three games this season. That makes 26 goals and 11 assists in 30 games since his arrival to MLS a little more than a year ago. Simply incredible.

But don't expect Vancouver's Felipe Martins to be lining up to congratulate Ibrahimovic. The Whitecaps midfielder was none too pleased that his counterpart was getting cheered in Vancouver's BC Place. But the reality is that wherever Ibrahimovic goes in this league, he will have his fans. And judging by some of the sparse crowds thus far in 2019, it certainly wouldn't hurt to liven up some of these stadiums.

Next up for everyone's favorite Swedish striker is a home date with the Philadelphia Union on Saturday night (10:30 p.m. ET, ESPN+). Unlike Whitecaps defender Doneil Henry, who dared state that Vancouver could keep Ibrahimovic under wraps, which it didn't, Union boss Jim Curtin has smartly decided to err on the side of caution and plans to keep his mouth shut in order to not anger Ibrahimovic. That's sound practice, but it's no guarantee to keep him from scoring.

Just like old times in Seattle

It will feel like the days of yore when the Seattle Sounders take on Toronto FC on Saturday (4:00 p.m. ET, ESPN+), as the teams that met in MLS Cup in 2016 and 2017 will tangle on the Sounders' home turf.

Carlos Vela and Los Angeles FC might be getting the headlines, but Seattle has been equally good this season, with Nicolas Lodeiro playing the midfield maestro role to a tee and Jordan Morris and Raul Ruidiaz teaming up to score three goals each. In the back the Sounders are just as good with only three goals conceded, tops among teams in the Western Conference.

Toronto FC's arrival to the Emerald City is timely, as the Canadian outfit has found its stride with the signing of Spanish attacker Alejandro Pozuelo. The team that capitulated in CONCACAF Champions League play in Panama back in February is a distant memory, and it would be hard to name a more dangerous team in the Eastern Conference than the Reds.

There is also nothing more fun than rumors of a big-name European player possibly coming to MLS during the summer, and TFC has given us just that in the form of a possible Arjen Robben arrival. Right now only "exploratory talks" have materialized between the two parties, which means we all get to ask and wonder about it for the next several weeks until the discussions are officially dead.

In the meantime, it should be plenty fun to watch TFC try to do its stuff against its old final foe.

How an Oasis song became Minnesota United's anthem

Published in Soccer
Friday, 12 April 2019 10:14

On Saturday, Minnesota United will open its brand-new home at Allianz Field in Saint Paul. If the 19,400 in attendance are lucky, they will celebrate a victory vs. New York City FC (watch LIVE on ESPN2, 5 p.m. ET) by belting out Oasis' 1995 hit "Wonderwall," with help from the club's players. How far the club has come...

At the turn of the decade, nobody in the Twin Cities was serenading this club with Britpop anthems. Indeed, not many were singing about the club in any genre. In those days, it was more common to wonder if there would continue to be a club at all.

The preeminent soccer team in Minnesota since the early 1990s underwent four rebrands between 2008 and 2012. Its name changed three times. There were four different ownership groups. There was a bankruptcy filing.

Amid that chaos -- with the team then known as the Minnesota Stars, owned by the NASL and looking for a new investor to take over -- the threadbare front office began filming its players everywhere (in the dressing room, in training, on the bench) in hopes of injecting the organization with character and in turn attracting a benefactor.

It succeeded: Dr. Bill McGuire bought the club in 2012 and began the process of creating the Minnesota United outfit that is in its third Major League Soccer season. But the front office also captured a moment that would become one of the league's most famous fan traditions: the singing of "Wonderwall."

"I suppose in the lyrics: winding roads, shining lights and all that kind of stuff -- basically the struggle," former manager Carl Craig told ESPN FC about the significance of the single that made Oasis famous around the world.

"The club back then, compared to where it is now, we were really struggling. Most of us were broke, financially. The club was run on a shoestring budget. We were making next to nothing; most of us were coaching youth football someplace or another to try to make ends meet. But the spirit was tremendous."

Craig is the man who started it all. He spent seven years with the club, six of them as an assistant and three of those in precarious financial circumstances prior to McGuire's ownership. He was known as a motivator, the coaching staff's emotional conduit to the players.

"He loved to sing," said center-back Brent Kallman, who played under Craig for four seasons before moving up with the club to MLS. "And not just after the wins, either. Sometimes he would come into the [dressing] room singing all kinds of stuff."

Sometimes Craig could be heard humming or singing for no reason but other times, the former punk rocker from Newcastle, England, did so as positive reinforcement, reminding players of how sweet victory tasted. It was his way of instilling a winning mentality, and "Wonderwall" became his song of choice.

"The message I wanted to convey to the players and to the fans is, 'You mean something to me,'" Craig said. "And I guess it's sort of a masculine way -- for want of a better term -- when you have a group of men and women who you really appreciate what they do and they mean a lot, maybe in that context not feeling comfortable saying that, so you utilize someone else's words in the song to convey that message."

The players bought in. The videographers, tasked with showcasing the club for potential new owners, witnessed the players singing "Wonderwall" with every ounce of passion they had following a win in the club's NASL title-winning season of 2011 and the fans took notice.

"The next game was a home win, and some of the fans in the stands just jumped on it," said Bruce McGuire (no relation to the team's owner), a founding member of The Dark Clouds, the largest independent soccer supporters group in Minnesota.

"You could see the players turn their heads, and they raced over toward the supporters. Pretty soon, everyone was signing it together. And from that point on, it just built and built and built, week after week."

That was more than seven years ago. It started with a handful of Dark Clouds and, by the end of the Loons' days in the NASL, 9,000 people were driving the half-hour north of Minneapolis to the National Sports Center in Blaine, in hopes of doing their best Liam Gallagher impression. Some 25,000 regularly sung the song at the club's temporary home, Minneapolis' TCF Bank Stadium, over the past two seasons too.

"It's a really good reminder that there were people who came before, who kind of carried the torch before this club became an MLS club," Kallman said. "For some people who are newer to the club, it might not be as important, and that's OK. But for the people who have been around and have seen [the club] grow to what it is, I think it's a really nice reminder of where we've been and where we're going."

It's a sentiment shared by Craig and Bruce McGuire. That growth has ensured the club's financial stability, but it has come at the expense of the close-knit community that saw those fans and players both embrace a tradition together nearly a decade ago.

"With people grasping onto a tradition like singing 'Wonderwall' -- and maybe I should say, I really don't like that song, I never have ... I can't stand Oasis -- it's incredible," said Bruce McGuire. "So, to have [those traditions] come along, when you change the name, when you change the whole organization, when you change leagues, when you move to a new stadium, to have those things come along with you, is what makes it feel incredible. It's what makes you know it's real."

Craig was dismissed as Loons manager ahead of their inaugural season in MLS, making way for Adrian Heath, but has stuck around the Twin Cities as high-performance director for Salvo SC, a youth-development organization based in suburban Eagan. And while he laments his split from the club, he takes pride in having helped create the prevailing tradition in the sport's community.

"It doesn't matter where I am or who's with me, [when 'Wonderwall' comes on] I get a little nudge and they'll say, 'There's your song!'" Craig said. "It's pretty special; it really is, actually."

Durham 224 and 31 for 1 lead Sussex 202 (Wells 98*, Rushworth 4-41) by 53 runs

Sussex have unhappy memories of Chester-le-Street. It is where their promotion challenge came to grief last September as they were thumped by 186 runs and Chris Rushworth, Heritage Cricketer, took 12 wickets in the match.

Once again they travelled north in trepidation. They slumped to 67 for 7 in response to Durham's 224 and once again the sun glinted menacingly on Rushworth's shaven forehead, the pattern vaguely resembling the edge of the newly-discovered black hole into which their innings looked certain to disappear.

Run through Sussex's batting line-up and there are not too many batsmen who relish the most exacting conditions. Phil Salt set an inappropriate tone with a slap-happy 2 which was over by the end of the first over. Within 16 overs, half the side had fallen. Durham's slips were full of expectation.

But Luke Wells is made of different stuff. Few batsmen will be more deserving of a century this Championship summer than Wells but he had to settle for 98 not out as he organised Sussex's resistance for all but one over of their innings. He already has four Champonship hundreds against Durham so can probably manage without this one.

Unlike some of his more entertaining colleagues, the tougher the challenge, the more Wells likes it. Never mind a bit of swing and seam, he would take guard with determination on the shingle and pebbles of Pevensey Beach where William the Conqueror landed back in 1066. Wells does not have the air of a conqueror. He would be the one organising near-hopeless resistance while others did not show as much heart for the fray.

His first boundary was inadvertent, a squirt square of the wicket against Matt Salisbury which probably left him a little guilty as it crossed the ropes. Five batsmen had departed by the time Salisbury tempted him into another attacking shot with a wide half-volley. Durham knew it would be hard to break this heart of stone. How Ben Raine must have rued a lost run-out opportunity when he missed from 10 yards.

Three competent slip catches set Durham on their way, two of them to the skipper, Cameron Bancroft at second slip, his 33 from 159 balls on the first day looking more valuable by the minute. James Weighell had one of those three wickets and then added Laurie Evans, who dragged on an extravagant pull, and Ben Brown, lbw.

Matters did not improve after lunch as Rushworth bowled Mark Burgess through a large gate and struck David Wiese's stumps in the following over. At seven down for 67, Sussex were still notionally in danger of following on. But finally Wells found support - Chris Jordan, Ollie Robinson and Mir Hamza helping to add 135 for the last three wickets.

Wells' determination not to be dislodged was not entirely helpful to Jordan, who was run out by Raine from mid-off, a throw to the striker's end after Jordan had drilled Gareth Harte down the ground and Wells had remained embedded in his crease.

With nine wickets down, tea was delayed to no avail and he finished with a series of lofted drives against the seamers, Mirza holding out for almost an hour until Rushworth struck the stumps for a third time to bring the innings to a close. This is a closely-fought contest but Wells will need more support second time around if Sussex, already caught napping by Leicestershire in their opening match, are not to begin the season with two defeats.

Northamptonshire 234 for 0 (Vasconcelos 126*, Newton 85*) trail Glamorgan 570 for 8 dec (Root 126, Labuschagne 121, Carlson 111)

After Glamorgan's run-fest on the opening day, it was their own bowlers' turn to toil on the second, as the Sophia Gardens pitch continued to offer little, if any, assistance.

By the close, Northamptonshire's openers, Ricardo Vasconcelos (126*) and Rob Newton (85*) had shared an unbroken partnership of 234. They still required a further 187 runs to avoid the follow on, but on the evidence so far, there is little prospect of a positive outcome on such an unresponsive strip.

When play resumed, Glamorgan added 137 runs in the morning session, before declaring during the lunch break. They lost Billy Root to the fourth ball of the morning, when the debutant left-hander struck a low catch to backward point. Root and Kiran Carlson had added 172 for the fifth wicket, before Carlson, who added a further 10 runs to his overnight 101, was taken at first slip.

Graham Wagg and Marchant De Lange quickly followed, but Chris Cooke then accelerated to strike a rapid undefeated 70 from 87 balls with a six and ten fours before calling a halt to the innings.

Needing 421 to avoid the follow-on, Northants' openers set off confidently. Vasconcelos - a 21-year-old from Johannesburg who has a Portuguese passport - struck two boundaries in Michael Hogan's second over, and was the dominant partner against the five-man Glamorgan pace attack.

After scoring 56 and 79 here last summer, Vasconcelos was dropped at second slip after scoring 21, and was uneasy at times against the legspin of Marnus Labuschagne, but he deserved his fourth first-class century which included 15 boundaries from 189 balls.

Newton was no less effective, as the pair went past the 150-run stand, with Glamorgan, like Northants, resorting to seven bowlers. The most effective was Labuschagne, who was treated with respect and ended his opening spell with the commendable figures of 11-1-29-0.

With the pitch as true as it was when the first ball was bowled on Thursday morning, Northants could look to bat on to an imposing total, or declare if and when they reach maximum batting points.

The latter would be a popular decision with the spectators, especially if they witness a run-chase on the final day, otherwise there will be little to interest them if the game meanders to a draw.

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