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Follow live: MLB's best square off in All-Star Game

Published in Baseball
Tuesday, 09 July 2019 13:39

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Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal will try to tee up their first Wimbledon meeting since the epic 2008 final when they headline the men's quarter-finals.

Eight-time champion Federer plays Japan's eighth seed Kei Nishikori second on Centre Court on Wednesday.

Top seed Novak Djokovic opens on the main show court against Belgium's 21st seed David Goffin at 13:00 BST.

Nadal faces American Sam Querrey on Court One after fellow Spaniard Roberto Bautista Agut takes on Guido Pella.

In the mixed doubles, Andy Murray and Serena Williams will be third on Court Two for their last-16 match against top seeds Bruno Soares and Nicole Melichar.

Federer, who turns 38 next month, is the oldest player in a last-eight line-up featuring five players aged over 30, while Nishikori and Goffin are the youngest men left in the draw at the age of 28.

The Swiss great is the oldest men's quarter-finalist at the All England Club since American Jimmy Connors in 1991.

The old guard continue to lead the way

How the men's game will look when the power of Federer, Nadal and Djokovic eventually diminishes is something which has been discussed at length for a number of years now - and we are still no closer to knowing when that day will arrive.

The 'big three' have won the past 10 Grand Slams between them - Stan Wawrinka at the 2016 US Open was the last winner not from the trio - and few are looking past one of them lifting the Wimbledon trophy again on Sunday.

All three have sailed through the SW19 draw so far, dropping just one set apiece in reaching the quarter-finals.

Second seed Federer dropped just five games against young Italian Matteo Berretini, who was playing his first last-16 match at a Grand Slam.

Top seed Djokovic showed the gulf in class as he beat inexperienced Frenchman Ugo Humbert 6-3 6-2 6-3, while third seed Nadal breezed past Portugal's Joao Sousa in a 6-2 6-2 6-2 victory.

"I think the best guys now are fully engaged, they know exactly what to expect from the court and the conditions. That helps us to play better," said Federer, who is bidding to reach his 13th Wimbledon semi-final.

"We haven't dropped much energy in any way. It's not like we're coming in with an empty tank into the second week.

"All these little things help us to then really thrive in these conditions."

Federer is aiming to earn his 100th win at the All England Club against Nishikori, and in doing so, will become the first player in singles history to do so at a single Grand Slam.

'Playing Djokovic is like playing a spider'

Goffin has matched his best performance at a Grand Slam by reaching his first Wimbledon quarter-final, but trails 5-1 in his head-to-head record with four-time champion Djokovic.

The Belgian's coach Thomas Johansson, who famously earned a shock Australian Open title in 2002, said it is "almost impossible" to find any weaknesses in Djokovic's game.

"He doesn't have a big serve but it is very, very accurate. From the baseline he's a wall," the Swede said.

"I remember hitting with him many years ago - it's like hitting against a spider. It feels like everything is coming back.

"You really have to try to put him in uncomfortable positions on the court - otherwise he will kill you."

In reaching the semi-finals, Djokovic would join Boris Becker, Arthur Gore and Herbert Lawford in third place on the all-time list for last-four appearances at the All England Club.

Victory would also mark his 70th match win at Wimbledon, and would make him only the fourth man in the open era to achieve the feat after Federer, Becker and Connors.

Querrey's dangerous serve, Bautista Agut not dropped a set... don't rule out the rest

Querrey will be playing his third Wimbledon quarter-final in four years and looking to cause another upset after beating Britain's Andy Murray - who was injured and has not played in the singles at Wimbledon since - to reach his second semi-final in 2017.

The 32-year-old American is the only unseeded player in the men's singles quarter-finals and has thumped down 100 aces so far at this year's tournament, dropping just one service game and landing 86% of his first serves.

"My serve feels really good. I'm kind of locked in on it. I have got a good rhythm," he said.

"This is a tournament that rewards good servers. Everything feels right on my serve."

While Djokovic, Federer and Nadal take all the plaudits, 32-year-old Bautista Agut is actually the only man left who has not dropped a set yet.

His meeting with Pella marks their first on grass, and he would become only the sixth Spanish man in history to reach the Wimbledon semi-finals.

Pella, meanwhile, would become the third Argentine man to do so, with both yet to experience a last-four tie at a Grand Slam.

Stats fans, listen up

Grins all around as Australian Open commences

Published in Table Tennis
Tuesday, 09 July 2019 16:13

Yes, things could have gone better for Vladimir Samsonov, the 2017 Austrlian Open champion, whose bid for a second men’s singles title ended with a 4-1 loss to 21-year-old Cho Seungmin from Korea (9-11, 11-4, 11-8, 11-7, 11-5). After the match, Cho paid homage to the 43-year-old icon of the game, saying he felt “honoured and nervous to play such a legendary European player.” 

“I have always admired my opponent so I was very nervous to play against someone I look up to. I was really nervous in the first set but I lost by 9:11 so I felt the match was doable. I was playing really well and there were some unforced errors from Samsonov, which was lucky for me.” Cho Seungmin

Then there was China’s Zhou Kai, who came away with a hard-fought 4-3 victory in his endurance race against Simon Gauzy (14-12, 4-11, 6-11, 11-9, 12-14, 11-9, 11-9). Zhou came to the table having done his homework against the 2016 French Olympian. 

“I tried my best to challenge my opponent because recently he’s been performing quite well I fought point by point and played some of my best table tennis. Tomorrow will be similar — the main focus is to perform my best and fight for every point and hopefully win some more matches.” Zhou Kai

For Japan’s Miyu Kato, being faced with Australian Jee Minhyung meant confronting an opponent who had racked up an impressive resume — not to mention adapting her game to meet a new challenge.

“I didn’t know much about her, but I found that she defeated several famous players when I was preparing for this match, so I’m glad that I won,” said Kato, who contained Jee 4-0 (11-9, 11-7, 11-9, 11-4). How did she do it? The twenty-year-old. who shares a first and last name with a professional tennis player from Kyoto, employed the use of a stand-in for Jee when preparing for the match. 

“Minhyung mixes her shots with pips rubber and inverted rubber, but I practised with the same type of player beforehand and it helped me maximise my performance,” she commented.  

New Zealand’s Dean Shu, who defeated Australia’s Rohan Dhooria 4-1, underscored the camaraderie between players, who often exchange friendly greetings with familiar faces despite language barriers.

“I played Rohan a number of times in the past year so we know each other quite well,” he commented. Of course, competition remains competition, and kind words come after the fact. Looking across the table at Dhooria, “I tried to focus on myself,” Shu said. It worked, too: “I had a strong [match] that went well.”

VIDEO: Haudenschild Breaks Through At Cedar Lake

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 09 July 2019 16:00

Riding a season-long winless drought, Sheldon Haudenschild finally kicked down the door to victory lane on Saturday at Cedar Lake Speedway in New Richmond, Wis.

GM: Expectations 'growing' for talent-laden Nets

Published in Basketball
Tuesday, 09 July 2019 17:23

LAS VEGAS -- When Kevin Durant announced on Instagram that he was going to join the Brooklyn Nets at the stroke of free agency, the team's braintrust -- ensconced in the team's gleaming practice facility overlooking New York Harbor -- celebrated one of the league's elite players choosing to join their franchise.

Now comes the hard part: making it all work.

"I think from our standpoint is we stand true to who we have been for three years," Nets general manager Sean Marks said Tuesday at a news conference addressing the team's summer business at UNLV's Thomas & Mack Center. "Competing and playing hard and playing unselfish basketball. The product on the court speaks for itself.

"Guys, [coach Kenny Atkinson has] mentioned, they want to play here. They want to play in that system. The expectations, obviously they're growing. It comes with a deeper team. The more talent you acquire, we all know that we're all in on that, not only from the two of us but the organization as a whole."

Marks, sitting alongside Atkinson, spent a half-hour discussing what has been one of the most eventful offseasons in the NBA -- one that saw Durant, Kyrie Irving and DeAndre Jordan all choose to team up in Brooklyn. The fact they all agreed to do so at the stroke of free agency was just one of many signs that this year's summer was a lot different than in past years.

"These players are talking all the time," Marks said, referring to Durant making his decision without officially taking a meeting with the Nets -- or anyone else. "Our guys are talking, who knows what's going on behind closed doors. And we let them have their space; I mean, that's the players' sanctuary.

"The world is so small now, with social media and everybody can put out every post they want and so forth at whatever time they want. There's a lot of speculation coming from and everybody's jumping on that: did he mean this, and did he not mean this? So I think the market is different, too. This year was a year where there was so much money in the market.

"And guys were going, 'How do I capitalize? How am I going to make that money and not be left out?' I don't know if it's a perfect storm. I don't know what you want to call it. But I think ... this is definitely a bit of an anomaly year. And maybe that's where it's trending."

However it happened, Atkinson admitted he was caught off guard by how it all played out.

"Quite honestly, it did surprise me," Atkinson said with a smile. "Obviously we improved a lot last year but it wasn't a so-called star system. It was a group of guys that play really well together. I think it gives more credit to the guys that are coming here that say I like that style of play, I like the way they play. I think they want to participate in something like that.

"Yeah, it surprises me just because we've come a long way in a short time. That's the biggest surprise. And it happened quicker. I know Sean was strategizing and thinking big picture. I was kind of focused more on the day-to-day. It was a surprise they chose to participate in this type of system that we're running."

It certainly is a long way from where the Nets were at this time three years ago, when they held a summer news conference to introduce a series of signings -- including Jeremy Lin, Jordan Hamilton, Trevor Booker and Joe Harris.

Now, three years later, Brooklyn has become one of the most exciting franchises in the league, and Harris has both developed into one of the NBA's elite 3-point shooters and one of the faces of the Nets' revitalization project.

"It's an unbelievable transition," Harris told ESPN. "Actually, Sean and I were joking the other day because three years ago we had a press conference for free agency and it was Anthony Bennett, Jeremy Lin, Trevor Booker, Justin Hamilton, myself and Caris LeVert. And now they're having a presser for KD, Kyrie and DeAndre Jordan.

"But it's one of those things where you could sort of see the trajectory of the organization. They had laid a good, really solid foundation. The culture was solid. Everything about it was growing and trending in the right direction, but obviously this got to this point quicker than anyone could have realized."

It's a transition now, though, that comes with a lot of other questions.

One is obvious: When will Durant play? Coming off the torn Achilles he suffered during the NBA Finals, it is assumed he will miss the vast majority of next season -- if not all of it completely -- and then return for the final three seasons of the four-year, $164 million contract he agreed to with Brooklyn.

Marks, though, refused to speculate about when Durant could potentially return to the court.

"He will be evaluated with the performance team and so forth," Marks said. "I think a timeline will be given in due time, but as of now, we're certainly not going to comment on when or if and make any sort of hypotheticals. It's too early."

Both men were also asked about the process of integrating Irving -- who is coming off a tumultuous season in Boston -- into the mix in Brooklyn.

The Nets last season had tremendous chemistry throughout their underdog season, going from a team not expected to make the playoffs to one that finished with the sixth seed in the East, and pushed the Philadelphia 76ers in the first round.

"I'm definitely starting to do my homework on him," Atkinson said. "It's still recent. I think the challenge is to get the best Kyrie. I want him to have his best season ever and continue that improvement, and that's tough because he played well last year.

"I know there's a lot of talk out there, but you look at his numbers and I think the way he played really well. Definitely going to challenge him to keep improving. We play a system I don't imagine changing a ton. You'll have to ask him that. I think that's part of the reason he was interested in coming here our style of play. I think we'll come to a meeting of minds between me and him and how that works within the group."

Finally, Atkinson said that the competition between Jordan and Jarrett Allen for the starting center spot will go into training camp, but that Jordan -- who has been a starter for years -- has been amenable to coming off the bench.

"I'm excited about the pairing," Atkinson said. "Jarrett and DeAndre and DeAndre being able to push Jarrett and Jarrett being able to push DeAndre. DeAndre, two years ago, he was an elite, elite center in this league. That's where I want him to get back to. We really want to push him to his previous level. I think Jarrett will help him do that. As far as starting, not starting, Jarrett Allen said, 'Hey I want to be the starter,' which I love. It's great. I think we embrace the competition. I think that'll play out. I do think it helps us matchup-wise. If Joel Embiid maybe [Jarrett] gets two quick fouls or something we do have a heck of a player to support him and potentially starting different guys, too. I think that's possible. I think it's a great tandem to have.

"My initial conversation with [Jordan] was, 'Whatever I need to do to help us win.' So I think we'll see how that plays out but I love my initial conversations with him."

Johanna Konta reacted angrily when questioned on her big-point mentality after another golden Grand Slam opportunity went begging.

The British number one lost 7-6 (7-5) 6-1) to unseeded Barbora Strycova in the Wimbledon quarter-finals.

She hit a huge 33 unforced errors in a match in which she was the overwhelming favourite, mirroring a similar showing in the French Open semis.

"I don't think you need to pick on me in a harsh way," she told one reporter.

Presented with examples of shots that had gone wrong, such as a smash at the net and a double fault, and asked if she perhaps could have coped better on big points, she replied: "Is that in your professional tennis opinion?" before saying the questioning was "disrespectful and patronising".

"I'm a professional competitor who did her best today, and that's all there is to that," she added.

Konta had put in battling performances against top-10 players in her two previous matches, coming through in three sets against Sloane Stephens and Petra Kvitova, and has much to celebrate from these championships.

On the back of a successful clay-court season as well, she is set to return to the top 15 in the rankings for the first time since March 2018.

She has won admiration for a calmer on-court demeanour since hiring new coach Dimitri Zavialoff late last year, but the manner of her defeat from a winning position on Tuesday and the spiky nature of the news conference afterwards are reminiscent of the old days.

After last year's first-round exit from the French Open, she accused journalists of making her job more difficult with their criticism.

The mantra versus the mistakes

Konta is well known for speaking about the positives in her losses, even if it sometimes looks a bit of an effort to say it and look upbeat at the same time.

After this defeat, when she had led 4-1 before crumbling and missing out on a fourth Grand Slam semi-final, she repeated the same "no regrets" mantra that came after the defeat by unseeded Marketa Vondrousova at the French Open last month.

That straight-set loss to the teenager - which came after the Briton had held three set points in the first set - stopped her reaching her first Grand Slam final, with many pundits saying that had been her best chance of a major title.

Against Strycova, former world number one John McEnroe said it was disappointing to see Konta "fall to pieces" when she had been a break up early on.

But Konta, whose forehand broke down when targeted by Strycova, gave much of the credit to the Czech for "playing very well" rather than explaining why her serve that was so dominant in previous rounds dropped to a level where she won just 51% of first-serve points.

Nor did she explain why she sent two forehands long and a backhand wide to allow Strycova to break back in the first set, when as former world number one Tracy Austin put it on BBC television, "the irritating streaks of her game started kicking in".

"I think I've played a great tournament," Konta said. "Obviously I would have liked to have played three more matches, won three more matches. But I really feel that even including today, I can take a lot away from these 10 days.

"The players that I've played and beaten, also lost to today, I think overall there's a lot I can be proud of and take from it."

Was the news conference questioning unfair?

Former Wimbledon champion Marion Bartoli said Konta had been "bullied" by the questioning at the news conference, while journalists would say they are just doing their jobs by asking what went wrong in a match.

"[News conferences] can be extremely difficult," Bartoli told the BBC's Today at Wimbledon. "It is part of your job, you just have to sort of say exactly what she said - I am a professional tennis player, I tried my best today.

"Obviously us as analysers, we're trying just to figure it out what happened exactly, why she lost that match and why the other one won it.

"But as a tennis player you just can't allow yourself to be bullied like this in a press conference from someone who probably never picked up a racquet himself and never been on Centre Court, to be frank."

Konta 'will have to work on her game'

Konta reached her first Grand Slam semi-final at the Australian Open in 2016, losing to Angelique Kerber, while her bid to reach the Wimbledon final in 2017 was halted in the last four by seven-time Grand Slam champion Venus Williams.

A slump followed and she split with coach Wim Fissette after that Wimbledon semi-final before hiring Maria Sharapova's former coach Michael Joyce at the start of the 2018 season.

But she reached just one final last year, losing to Ashleigh Barty in Nottingham, and her ranking dropped to as low as 50th.

Under Zavialoff she has turned things round, reaching two clay finals this year before the stunning run at the French Open - a tournament where she had previously never gone beyond the first round.

She continued her form on grass with some excellent displays at the All England Club but once again finds herself facing questions about how she can take the next step up and end the 42-year wait for a British women's singles Grand Slam champion.

"I think now if she wants to improve and actually go further in a Grand Slam and maybe to first of all be in a final, she will have to sit down with her coach and see what happened today in that match," Bartoli said.

"She will have to work on her game because I think those kind of players with the slices and the lack of speed are really disturbing her, so that is something she will have to work on."

What was said - full transcript of exchange

Journalist: Do you not have to look at yourself a little bit about how you cope with these big points? Because it's all very well saying it is a lot to do with your opponent but there were key points when you perhaps could have done better.

Konta: Is that in your professional tennis opinion?

Journalist: No, that is just as a watching spectator with everyone else on Centre Court willing you on.

Konta: OK. I don't think you need to pick on me in a harsh way. I think I'm very open with you guys and I say how I feel out there and if you don't want to accept that answer or you don't agree with it then that's fine. But I still believe in the tennis I play and still believe in the way I competed and I don't much have else to say to your question.

Journalist: I'm just asking you as someone who presumably wants to go on from here, learn from this and win a Grand Slam one day. Is it not something that you need…

Konta: Please don't patronise me…

Journalist: …I'm not patronising you…

Konta: …No, no you are. In the way you are asking your question you are being quite disrespectful and you are patronising me. I am a professional competitor who did her best today and that's all there is to that.

The Last Checkered Flag At The Fairgrounds

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 09 July 2019 13:00

On Thursday night, May 23, Tyler “Sunshine” Courtney drove around Kevin Thomas Jr. with eight laps remaining to win the Hoosier Hundred.

Besides honoring Courtney’s winning drive, the fluttering double checkered flags marked the last time the echo of booming racing engines would reverberate around the storied Indiana State Fairgrounds mile.

Like the many other fairgrounds dirt tracks that dotted the nation and became American auto racing’s foundation, the one-mile Indianapolis dirt track was originally intended for horse racing.

Built in 1892, its sulky racing drew standing-room-only crowds and captured the nation’s attention as Dan Patch, an extraordinary Hoosier-born, standard-bred horse, shattered world records and raced undefeated on the mile.

Barney Oldfield was the first person to drive a mile a minute on a closed course. He did it at the Indiana State Fairgrounds.

However, it wasn’t long before horsepower of a different sort laid claim to the track. In 1903, former bicycle racing champion Barney Oldfield took the tiller of Henry Ford’s thundering No. 999 and became the first man to cover a mile a minute on a closed course.

That remarkable event solidified Oldfield as the first superstar of the still new sport of auto racing. In the process, he also collected a $250 prize posted by Carl Fisher, who later founded Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Ever the showboating marketer, Fisher frequently used the fairgrounds mile for publicity stunts and “speed records.” In 1905, Fisher was determined to go after a world record there.

He’d made his fortune with his Prest-O-Light Co. that produced acetylene-powered headlights for the majority of automobiles manufactured in the United States. To further publicize the company, Fisher and his Prest-O-Light business partner, James Allison, organized an assault on the 24-hour mileage mark for automobiles.

Prest-O-Light devices were strung every 25 feet around the track to light the way. The first known attempt at track lighting that, in the overblown parlance of the day, “Brightened the track like a midday sun.”

On Nov. 16-17, 1905, driving National automobiles, another Fisher friend, Arthur C. Newby, who was the company president, along with drivers Charles Merz and “Jap” Clemens, braved unseasonably cold temperatures and racked up 1,094.56 miles in 24 hours, setting the record.

With no pari-mutuel betting in Indiana, horse racing couldn’t sustain the crowds necessary for the track to turn a profit. Since Fisher’s events had generated so much excitement and interest, the fair board surmised that auto racing could be a perfect income generator.

Starting in the early 1900s on dozens of “outlaw” races and a diverse conglomerate of other motorized promotions kept the track busy.

The Hoosier mile became the home of a prominent event for African-American drivers. To organize drivers unable to compete with major racing organizations because of the “unspoken segregation” that was rampant in that day, a group of businessmen created the Colored Speedway Ass’n.

Click to the next page for the rest of the story.

NASCAR’s Most Surprising Upsets – Part 2

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 09 July 2019 14:00
Eventual race winner Justin Haley races ahead of Matt Tifft (36) during Sunday’s Coke Zero Sugar 400. (Daylon Barr photo)

We’re back with part two of our special look back at some of the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series’ biggest upsets!

On the heels of Justin Haley and Spire Motorsports’ shocking upset victory in Sunday’s Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona Int’l Speedway we wondered what are some of the other shocking and surprising winners in Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series history.

We decided to dig through the archives and took a look back at some surprise NASCAR Cup Series winners. Today our look back features drivers with last names such as Ragan, Hamilton, Brickhouse, Menard and Sacks.

Click below to find out the stories behind more of NASCAR’s biggest upsets.

SC&M: Remembering The Late Richard Hoffman

Published in Racing
Tuesday, 09 July 2019 15:00

In the July issue of Sprint Car & Midget Magazine, Dave Argabright remembers late sprint car team owner Richard Hoffman, who died on April 30 after a brief illness. The full story can be viewed at www.sprintcarandmidget.com and requires either a print subscription to Sprint Car & Midget Magazine or online subscription to www.sprintcarandmidget.com to read.

He was the centerpiece of one of the most dynamic and successful teams in racing history, and his passing leaves a void that will not soon be filled.

Richard Hoffman passed away on April 30 at age 76 following a brief illness, surrounded by family. It was a quiet end to a life that was loud, action-packed, and filled with success.

Hoffman was the middle generation of Hoffman Auto Racing, a racing team that traces its roots back 90 years. His father, August “Gus” Hoffman, purchased his first race car in the Cincinnati area in 1929, and young Richard counted the days until he was deemed old enough to travel and race with his father. Richard’s son Rob continued the tradition as Richard and Rob worked side-by-side on the family’s race cars for more than 30 years.

Richard Hoffman was not a race driver, as he preferred his role of car owner and mechanic. But among the dozens of men who wheeled the family car through the years, none carried a more fierce determination to win than Richard.

His insatiable appetite for winning was at the center of his personality, and Richard had other notable traits as well. He was well-spoken and educated; he was savvy in the ways of business and his fellow man; he conducted himself with a respectful air. Even in the midst of heated and intense competition he was typically composed and calculating, somehow always able to navigate through adversity.

Click here to read the full story on sprintcarandmidget.com.

Avs extend Bednar through 2021-22 season

Published in Hockey
Tuesday, 09 July 2019 14:46

Colorado coach Jared Bednar has signed a two-year contract extension that will keep him with the Avalanche through the 2021-22 season.

Bednar is coming off a 38-30-14 season and his second appearance in the Stanley Cup playoffs in his three seasons as coach.

Colorado didn't announce the financial terms of the deal.

"I'd like to thank Stan and Josh Kroenke, (general manger) Joe Sakic and the entire Avalanche organization for continuing to show their faith in me to lead this team," Bednar said in a statement. "I am grateful and honored to be the head coach of the Avalanche. We're moving in the right direction with the group that we have here. This team has an exciting future and I am ecstatic to be part of it."

Bednar is 103-116-27 in his three seasons with Colorado, getting the job after Patrick Roy's stunning decision to walk away a month before the 2016-17 season began. He spent the previous 14 seasons as a minor league coach, notably winning the American Hockey League's Calder Cup with the Lake Erie Monsters, and the previous nine as a minor league player,.

"Jared has done a tremendous job behind the bench and has earned the opportunity to continue leading this team," Sakic said. "He is an outstanding coach who has the full trust of his players, coaches and staff. He has guided this franchise to two straight playoff appearances and we are excited with what this group can do moving forward."

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