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Klay: Dip in Pacific Ocean spurred 32-point game
LOS ANGELES -- Golden State Warriors All-Star swingman Klay Thompson said that a few moments in the Pacific Ocean on Saturday helped him clear his head after a slow start to the playoffs. After scoring 42 points combined in the first three games, Thompson scored 32 points in 40 minutes on Sunday in the Warriors' 113-105 Game 4 win over the LA Clippers.
"I didn't think I had bad games, but I didn't have any big games," Thompson said of his early series performance. "I told Jonas [Jerebko on Saturday] -- we went to the beach and played some volleyball -- I'm like, 'Yo, I'm just going to jump in the ocean, and I just know that will reset my mind.' And it worked. I don't know if I'm going to jump [in the water] up north [in the Bay Area] because it's freezing, but it's something I'll definitely contemplate if I don't shoot the ball that well the rest of the year. But hopefully that doesn't happen."
Thompson started the game 7-for-7 from the field and was shooting with confidence all game, as his teammates tried to find him up and down the floor. After seeing his friend walk back into the team hotel after his trip to the beach on Saturday, Warriors star Stephen Curry had no doubt that Thompson, who spent part of his childhood in the Los Angeles area when his father, Mychal, played for the Lakers, would get things rolling in Game 4.
"It's the home cookin'," Curry said. "I know the Pacific Ocean is undefeated. He got his feet wet [Saturday], walked in the hotel with a wet T-shirt, with his shades on. A typical Klay type of vibe. I just had a smile on my face when I saw him because I knew what that meant. It was nice for him to show out like he did. We needed every bit of it, for sure."
Steph on Klay in LA: 'The Pacific Ocean is undefeated'
Steph Curry talks about what fueled Klay Thompson's 32-point hometown performance against the Clippers in Game 4.
As has been the case throughout the season, the Warriors never doubted that Thompson would get rolling. His teammates and coaches have repeatedly said how confident they are in his game, even when he goes through colder stretches.
"When Klay gets going like that, it fuels the whole bench," Warriors head coach Steve Kerr said. "You can see everybody jumping around. Everybody gets happy. We all love when Klay gets hot. It fuels our momentum. It didn't surprise me at all. He kind of had a quiet first few games of the series, so it was only a matter of time until he broke out."
Thompson's offensive output came on a day when Curry was 3-for-14 from the field. Thompson walked the hallways of Staples Center with a renewed confidence, as he wore sunglasses and the hint of a smile as he headed to meet with reporters. He knows that the Warriors, now up 3-1 in the series, appear to be on a collision course with the Houston Rockets, and he hopes his team can close out this series on Wednesday in Game 5 so the Rockets don't get much extra rest if they sweep the Utah Jazz on Monday.
"We see our opponent. They're up 3-0," Thompson told ESPN's Lisa Salters after the game, in reference to the Rockets. "So we don't want to give them any more rest days. Same with us. We don't want to extend the series any longer than we need to. 'Cause every game is so pivotal in the playoffs, and we'll give our fans a show, redeem ourselves from the last time we were in Oracle, 'cause we owe 'em one."
The NBA said Sunday that Nets center Jarrett Allen was fouled in the final seconds of Saturday's Game 4 against the Philadelphia 76ers in Brooklyn.
According to the league's Last Two Minute Report, Sixers forward Tobias Harris grabbed Allen, preventing him from rolling from his screen and releasing to the basket sooner.
If Harris hadn't grabbed Allen, he might've had enough time to dunk the ball and tie the game. Instead, the extra second allowed him to be corralled by three defenders, and he eventually turned the ball over, preventing the Nets from attempting a potential game-tying -- or winning -- shot in the final seconds.
Harris was eventually fouled and sank two free throws with 4.9 seconds remaining to seal the 112-108 win for Philadelphia, which gave the Sixers a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven series.
"So the big point of emphasis this year was the wrapping, wrapping the player when he rolls to the rim," Nets coach Kenny Atkinson said after Saturday's game. "Judge for yourself if you watch the clip, but there was a clear wrap by Tobias Harris on the roll.
"I am just disappointed. That was a point of emphasis on day one at the coaches' meetings -- that they were going to emphasize that at the beginning of the game, the end of the game and all season. So how that all of a sudden doesn't become a foul on the wrap, I don't understand that."
There was one other missed call, as the league said Nets guard Spencer Dinwiddie should've been called for a carry with 1:45 remaining.
The league also announced Saturday afternoon that Jared Dudley had been fined $25,000 and Jimmy Butler $15,000 for their roles in escalating the fracas that briefly spilled into the stands midway through the third quarter following a hard foul on Allen by Joel Embiid.
Embiid was called for a flagrant foul on the play, which league sources told ESPN would stand as called and not be downgraded retroactively to a common foul. That means Embiid remains with two flagrant foul points, putting him halfway to an automatic one-game suspension, which kicks in when a player reaches four flagrant foul points in the playoffs.
Brooklyn and Philadelphia resume their series Tuesday at Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, where the Sixers will try to close out the series.
OKLAHOMA CITY -- With their starters heading to the bench with 40 seconds left, Game 4 in hand and a 3-1 series lead in their pocket on the way back home, the Portland Trail Blazers had an opportunity to bask in their 111-98 win over the Oklahoma City Thunder a little. But there was no celebrating, no trash talking, no taunting, no dunks at the buzzer. It was, as Damian Lillard said, all business from start to finish.
"After Game 3, we were in the locker room saying they lived at the free throw line and all this stuff, but Game 4, we're not talking to nobody but ourselves," Lillard said. "Referees can call it how they want to call, we're just going to worry about ourselves.
"After last game, it was a big deal being made out of the back-and-forth and we weren't emotional about it -- we were just competing," Lillard continued. "We were just passionate about the game as well. But like I said earlier, we didn't really engage in it because our focus was our team. Like I told you guys, we're not gonna come out here and go crazy on the referees, we're not gonna go out here and get in any shouting matches and back-and-forths and all that stuff. We're gonna focus on the stuff we need to focus on that's gonna give us a chance to win the game. I was proud of how our team stuck to that."
Lillard, who started 0-of-6 and didn't make his first shot until 1:15 left in the first half, cooked once again in the third quarter, finishing with 24 points on 7-of-19 shooting plus 8 assists. Guard CJ McCollum was essential in putting the Thunder away, scoring 27 on 10-of-20 shooting. A number of times, Lillard and McCollum were vocal with teammates, once pulling forward Zach Collins aside for an animated conversation after the second-year player was called for defensive three seconds.
"We're a lot more mature than we were in past years," McCollum said. "We can handle adversity. We understood what we wanted to accomplish tonight and we didn't want anything to get in the way. Multiple times we had discussions about not saying anything to anyone. If they don't have a black-and-gray jersey on, don't talk to him. Talk to our team. Don't talk to the refs, don't talk to the other team. Execute our game plan and let's get out of here with the win."
Once again, Lillard and McCollum outplayed the Thunder's two stars, with Paul George finishing with 32 points on 8-of-21 shooting, while Russell Westbrook had only 14 points on 5-of-21 shooting. Westbrook started hot, hitting a couple of 3-pointers early, and a pull-up jumper over Lillard in the first quarter. After he hit it, Westbrook stuck out his tongue and shot a look at the Portland bench. He was more restrained as well, but that might have had more to do with the fact he didn't have many more opportunities to talk.
Westbrook finished the game missing 10 straight shots and had only one point on 0-of-7 shooting in the second half. According to ESPN Stats & Information research, it was the worst shooting half of Westbrook's career (his previous worst was 0-of-4 against the Clippers in 2014). Westbrook missed at least 15 shots for the 29th time in his playoff career, the most in the league since 2009-10 (his first playoff appearance) by eight games.
Westbrook relied heavily on his jump shot, taking only three shots in the paint in Game 4 and missing all three. It was only the second time in Westbrook's playoff career he went scoreless in the paint.
"It wasn't taken away," Westbrook said of getting to the rim. "I get deep paint any time I want, but I always make the right play. So when I'm in deep paint I find guys on the perimeter. Hit [Steven Adams]. My job is to make sure guys get the basketball. I don't need to shoot a layup every single time. But I'm in the paint all game, and that's how it goes sometimes. Shot attempts is not the only thing that I can do to make sure I'm in it for the defense, and kick it out to make open shots."
The Blazers, though, were clearly content with letting Westbrook shoot. As Al-Farouq Aminu checked back in midway through the fourth quarter, Blazers assistant David Vanterpool told him, "Don't help on Russ; let him shoot." Later in the quarter, with Westbrook isolated by the 3-point line with Enes Kanter guarding him, the entire Blazers bench was screaming, "Back up! Back up! Back up!" Westbrook pulled up for a 3-pointer, which rattled in and out.
"Midrange jumpers, that's his shot," Lillard said. "Sometimes he takes pull-up 3 pointers and just having a presence -- and those are the shots we're making available, I guess. And that's what we're living with."
And despite Westbrook making his first couple -- and letting the Blazers know about it -- the Thunder died with them on Sunday.
Game 5 is Tuesday in Portland, and the Blazers can eliminate the Thunder. As he left the floor, Kanter kept repeating to himself, "One more, one more, one more." They expect an even more desperate Thunder team, especially after Westbrook's flat performance.
The Blazers have resoundingly bounced back after an embarrassing sweep last postseason, which highlighted 10 straight playoff losses. After Jusuf Nurkic was injured, the Thunder were the popular pick in the series, but the Blazers were undeterred.
"We don't focus on doubters, we focus on ourselves," Lillard said. "We accept the responsibility of our past two playoff performances and we moved on. I think that's one of the biggest and one of the best things that we did for ourselves, was not hold on to it. We moved on and we're having a better run now. We just got to finish it."
OAKLAND, Calif. -- Oakland Athletics pitcher Brett Anderson was pulled from his start against Toronto with a left ankle sprain suffered while running off the mound in the third inning.
Randal Grichuk hit a slow infield grounder between third base and the mound. Anderson quickly moved to field the ball, slipped, then got up limping as a team trainer came out with manager Bob Melvin.
After a brief discussion, Anderson threw two warm-up pitches before Melvin called for reliever Yusmeiro Petit.
Anderson allowed two runs on four hits and retired eight batters.
If Anderson has to pitch against Toronto again, he might want to call in sick. His ankle injury came less than a year after he sprained his shoulder the previous time he faced the Blue Jays on May 18, 2018.
"I'll be fine,'' Anderson said after Oakland's 5-4 loss. "I'll come in tomorrow and see how it feels.''
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Cincinnati Reds outfielder Matt Kemp exited Sunday's 4-3 loss to the San Diego Padres in the fourth inning after running into the left-field wall at Petco Park while tracking a fly ball one inning earlier.
He was diagnosed with a chest wall contusion, according to the team.
Kemp slammed into the wall while reaching up to catch a ball hit by Wil Myers in the third inning. He threw the ball back to the infield and initially stayed in the game after trainers checked on him.
He then struck out in the top of the fourth inning and was replaced in the outfield by Scott Schebler to open the bottom of the inning.
Reds manager David Bell said Kemp "was a little dazed, but he was adamant about staying in the game'' after trying to catch Myers' drive to left.
"I knew he was in a little bit of pain," Bell continued. "We were just hoping it was a temporary thing, but after he came back in from hitting it was pretty obvious that we needed to get him out of there.
"He's a tough guy and he went into the wall hard and almost came up with a great catch."
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
NEW YORK -- Aaron Judge won't be back with the New York Yankees anytime soon. It's a further blow to an injury-decimated team with a mediocre record three-plus weeks into the season.
New York's biggest offensive threat and the heart of its clubhouse went on the injured list for the third time in four seasons on Sunday, one day after he strained the oblique muscle on the left side of his abdomen while hitting a sixth-inning single against Kansas City.
"Pretty significant strain in there," manager Aaron Boone said. "These next couple of weeks will kind of be a lot of just the healing process, so I think once we get through these first couple of weeks, then we'll have a better timeline."
Judge broke his right wrist when he was hit by a pitch by the Royals' Jakob Junis on July 26, and he did not return until Sept. 14. The Yankees were 65-36 when Judge went on the IL, they went 25-20 while he was out, and they won 10 of their final 16 games en route to a second-place finish in the AL East.
Judge became the Yankees' major-league-high 13th player on the injured list and the 14th overall this season, joining left fielder Giancarlo Stanton (strained left biceps), center fielder Aaron Hicks (strained left lower back), catcher Gary Sanchez (strained left calf), shortstop Didi Gregorius (Tommy John surgery), third baseman Miguel Andujar (torn labrum in right shoulder) and first baseman Greg Bird (torn plantar fascia in left foot).
Those six and Judge accounted for 175 of the team's record 267 homers last year, 515 of their 851 runs and 515 of their 821 RBIs. In addition, new shortstop Troy Tulowitzki has a strained left calf.
"Especially tough times like this, when a lot of guys are beat up. I wanted to be out there in the trenches with the guys every single day,'' Judge said after the Yankees' 7-6, 10-inning win over Kansas City on Sunday.
New York's starting lineup for the series finale against the Royals would have pushed the spring training rule requiring four regulars to make the trip for road games, as the Yankees resembled a Broadway show stocked with understudies near the end of a lengthy run. DJ LeMahieu was at second, followed by designated hitter Luke Voit, center fielder Brett Gardner, right fielder Clint Frazier, left fielder Mike Tauchman, third baseman Gio Urshela, first baseman Mike Ford, catcher Austin Romine and shortstop Tyler Wade. New York gave second baseman Gleyber Torres the day off.
"You feel like this is a great opportunity for us," Boone said. "I feel like it can make the end all that much more sweet."
New York entered the day 10-10 and was trying to get above .500 for the first time since it was 5-4.
"The guys that have been pressed into more regular roles than certainly any of us expected at this point have been productive and have been shown to be good players," Boone said. "And some of our young players that have very bright futures have stepped up and performed at a really high level."
Judge suffered a season-ending right oblique strain while fouling off a pitch against the Los Angeles Dodgers on Sept. 13, 2016.
The Yankees called that a Grade 2 strain, but Boone said Sunday that there is no grade on this injury: "With obliques, they don't grade. It's not like that."
Said Judge: "I don't think it's as bad as the one I did in '16, but it's a different side.''
He will be treated with ice until the inflammation and pain subside. Then he will work to regain mobility and strength.
Infielder Thairo Estrada, the only remaining healthy position player on the 40-man roster, was recalled from Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Estrada, recovered from an early 2018 gunshot wound sustained in Venezuela, has never played in the major leagues, though he was on the bench for an April 4 game at Baltimore.
Sanchez, out since April 10 with a strained left calf, is scheduled to play a rehabilitation game Monday with Class A Charleston and could be activated before Wednesday's game at the Los Angeles Angels. Hicks, Andujar and Tulowitzki were headed to the team's Tampa, Florida, complex on Sunday to continue their rebab. Hicks felt pain while taking batting practice on March 1, Andujar got hurt March 31, and Tulowitzki got injured on April 3.
Stanton, injured on March 31, will be evaluated in the next few days, "and then it could potentially move fast," according to Boone.
New York's sidelined pitchers include ace Luis Severino (strained latissimus dorsi muscle), reliever Dellin Betances (right shoulder impingement) and Jordan Montgomery and Ben Heller (both recovering from Tommy John surgery).
Outfielder Jacoby Ellsbury has not played since 2017 because of a variety of ailments.
"I don't view him as being close," Boone said. "He's had different things that have popped up that haven't allowed him to kind of break through and really get to that point to where we start thinking about heavy baseball activities."
OAKLAND, Calif. -- Matt Shoemaker had to choke back tears after tests revealed a torn ACL in his left knee Sunday, cutting short yet another promising season for the Toronto Blue Jays' oft-injured right-hander.
Standing in the clubhouse following a 5-4 win over the Oakland Athletics on Sunday, Shoemaker's voice quivered and he paused a few times while discussing the injury. At one point he was asked if he needed time to compose himself but declined.
"You can't put words to it,'' Shoemaker said. "Extremely frustrated but at the same time I just have to stay positive. I know I'm really upset right now, I just got the news. But stay positive, keep fighting, get this thing right and be back when it's ready to go.''
Shoemaker was hurt at the end of a rundown Saturday, and Toronto announced the diagnosis and placed him on the 10-day injured list a day later. He will undergo surgery but no date has been set.
The 32-year-old is 3-0 with a 1.57 ERA in five starts after signing a $3.5 million, one-year deal with Toronto in December. He was limited to seven starts last year with the Los Angeles Angels because of a strained right forearm. In 2016, he sustained a skull fracture when he was hit in the head by a line drive, and he has had lingering forearm trouble for a while.
"He was one of the best pitchers in baseball for the first month,'' manager Charlie Montoyo said. "I feel bad for him. I feel bad for all of us, worse for him because he was doing so great.''
Shoemaker's latest injury occurred while he was chasing Oakland's Matt Chapman in the third inning. Shoemaker applied the tag and spun around to avoid contact. The injury happened as he twirled.
Shoemaker hopped around before falling to the ground as a team trainer rushed out. He was down for several moments and sat with his head in his hands before being helped to his feet and off the field.
"I was really hoping for a knee sprain,'' Shoemaker said. "I knew what I felt. It didn't feel right, but I was just hoping for a knee sprain.''
Blue Jays first baseman Justin Smoak called it a big loss for a team that just completed a 6-1 road trip.
"He's been awesome and he's pitched well so far,'' Smoak said. "It's a freaky thing. It's tough for him, tough for us.''
Before Sunday's game, Shoemaker walked slowly through the clubhouse with the aid of a single crutch. He didn't need it when talking to reporters but had a noticeable limp.
Although it's admittedly difficult, Shoemaker said the key to his recovery will be keeping an optimistic outlook.
"The biggest thing is that it's frustrating,'' Shoemaker said. "I can deal with this stuff. I know I seem pretty upset right now, which I am. But I've had bumps in the road before and I'm just going to fight through it. That's just who I am. It's just really upsetting right now."
Infielder Richard Urena was recalled from Triple-A Buffalo.
Every week deeper into the season adds extra meaning to where teams are. Get a month in and you can start to wonder if a hot start is an opportunity and if a slow start is a season-derailing stumble. But so far, the Astros can take some satisfaction in having lived up to expectations, nailing down another No. 1 ranking by appearing first on three of five ballots from our voters.
The other two first-place votes went to the Rays, whose hot start places them atop the new wave of contenders looking to unseat the Red Sox as the reigning champs, along with the Phillies and the Brewers.
The biggest move up this week was achieved by the Pirates, who make an eight-spot leap to crack the top 10. Joining them as newcomers to the top 10 are the Indians, who made an almost-as-impressive seven-rung climb. But where some teams made big gains, others took big hits. The Braves fell furthest, declining by seven slots to tumble from the top 10. The injury-wracked Mets dropped six spots and also fell from the top 10.
For Week 3, our panel of voters was composed of Bradford Doolittle, Christina Kahrl, Eric Karabell, Tim Kurkjian and David Schoenfield.
Previous: Preseason | Week 1 | Week 2
1. Houston Astros
2019 record: 13-8
Week 2 ranking: 1
Bullpens are struggling across baseball, but that's not a problem for the scorching Astros. Houston's relief staff ranks second overall in ERA (2.47) and first in strikeout-to-walk ratio (3.7), has blown just one save opportunity and has allowed just four inherited runners to score. Roberto Osuna, Ryan Pressly, Hector Rondon & Co. have been airtight so far. -- Bradford Doolittle
2. Tampa Bay Rays
2019 record: 14-8
Week 2 ranking: 2
For a team that doesn't rely on a traditional rotation, the Rays' starters have been pretty damn good this season. The group has an MLB-best 1.92 ERA and ranks in the middle of the AL in quality starts, even though that stat has less relevance for them (thanks to the opener) than any other club. Only Baltimore's starters have seen fewer batters beyond their first two trips to the dish in a game. -- Doolittle
3. Los Angeles Dodgers
2019 record: 15-9
Week 2 ranking: 6
In a big series win in Milwaukee over the weekend, the Dodgers took three of four and handed Josh Hader two losses in the process on late-game home runs from Enrique Hernandez and Cody Bellinger. Joc Pederson and Bellinger continued their early power streaks, as Pederson hammered his ninth and 10th home runs on Sunday and Bellinger's blast off Hader in the ninth was his 11th (he's batting a neat .424/.500/.882). -- David Schoenfield
4. Milwaukee Brewers
2019 record: 13-10
Week 2 ranking: 3
In a bizarre bit of early scheduling, the Brewers have already faced the Dodgers twice and the Cardinals twice, and on Monday, they begin their third series against St. Louis this season. That's good news for Redbird killer Christian Yelich, who already has eight homers and 19 RBIs against them this season. -- Doolittle
5. Philadelphia Phillies
2019 record: 12-8
Week 2 ranking: 9
The Phillies head back east after a tough weekend series in Denver, with right-hander Jake Arrieta scheduled for a pair of starts this week. Where would the rotation be sans Arrieta, who's 4-for-4 in quality starts? Aaron Nola gets the Marlins this week. That should help. -- Eric Karabell
6. New York Yankees
2019 record: 11-10
Week 2 ranking: 10
Aaron Judge became the 13th player on the Yankees' 40-man roster to head to the IL, with an oblique strain that manager Aaron Boone said on Sunday was "pretty significant." That's now six of the nine position players from the Opening Day lineup out with injuries. The Yankees still managed to go 5-1 in the week against the Red Sox and Royals, rallying Sunday after the bullpen blew a 5-0 lead in the eighth inning. -- Schoenfield
7. Cleveland Indians
2019 record: 12-9
Week 2 ranking: 14
Just when you start thinking the Tribe's fortunes were improving now that Jason Kipnis and Francisco Lindor are both back from the IL, problems are starting to multiply in the rotation. Mike Clevinger is out until at least June, and Corey Kluber and Carlos Carrasco have allowed six runs in four of their nine combined starts. -- Christina Kahrl
8. St. Louis Cardinals
2019 record: 12-9
Week 2 ranking: 7
The Cardinals have already lost five of seven games against the Brewers this season but now face their division rivals at home for the first time. Marcell Ozuna has been carrying this red-hot offense with eight home runs in his past 13 games, but the team will need more pitching performances like Miles Mikolas' on Saturday to produce a stronger outcome in the rematch. -- Tristan Cockcroft
9. Seattle Mariners
2019 record: 16-9
Week 2 ranking: 5
After a dreadful 0-6 homestand against the Astros and Indians, the Mariners went to L.A. and their bats suddenly came alive again, as they hit 11 home runs in the first three games against the Angels to take the four-game series. The Mariners hit 53 home runs in their first 24 games. The 1979 Astros hit 49 home runs all season (and still won 89 games). -- Schoenfield
10. Pittsburgh Pirates
2019 record: 12-7
Week 2 ranking: 18
Strong pitching has propelled the Pirates into first place. From April 10 to April 21, the team limited its opponents to three runs or fewer in every game. Even fifth starter Jordan Lyles has gotten into the act, with consecutive quality starts and a 0.53 ERA through his first three turns of the season. -- Cockcroft
11. New York Mets
2019 record: 11-10
Week 2 ranking: 4
This week starts with lefty Steven Matz on the mound, seeking revenge after one of the worst starts in history against the Phillies last week. Matz allowed eight runs while retiring nary a Phillie. The concern with Matz in the past has rarely been ability but his durability. At least he appears to be healthy. -- Karabell
12. Chicago Cubs
2019 record: 10-10
Week 2 ranking: 16
The Cubs' bullpen had an ERA over 9.00 in its first eight games, then under 1.00 for its next nine. What's the real number? As we wait to find out, the Cubs can take solace in having weathered their early struggles even though neither Kris Bryant nor Anthony Rizzo has really gotten things going at the plate early in the season. -- Doolittle
13. Washington Nationals
2019 record: 10-10
Week 2 ranking: 11
The Nationals avoided a sweep in Miami when Stephen Strasburg pitched one of the best games of his career on Sunday with a line of 8 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 11 SO. The Game Score of 87 matched the third-highest of Strasburg's career. Now the Nats need to get Max Scherzer back on track after he allowed 14 runs his past three starts. (He's fine -- mostly some bad luck on BABIP in those games.) -- Schoenfield
14. Atlanta Braves
2019 record: 11-10
Week 2 ranking: 8
One of the best surprises for the Braves has been the early production of shortstop Dansby Swanson, who ranks third in the NL in RBIs while already more than one-third of the way to his 2018 total of 14 home runs. The biggest development for him so far: He has cut his chase rate from 30.8 percent to under 20 percent. -- Schoenfield
15. Boston Red Sox
2019 record: 9-13
Week 2 ranking: 12
So the defending champs aren't dead yet. After a three-game sweep of the Rays, the Red Sox are at Fenway for a 10-game homestand that includes three more against Tampa Bay. The surprising hero this weekend? Catcher Christian Vazquez, who hit a two-run homer Friday, picked Tommy Pham off first to end Saturday's win and knocked in the winning run Sunday with an 11th-inning sac fly. -- Steve Richards
16. Minnesota Twins
2019 record: 12-7
Week 2 ranking: 17
Twins third basemen, led by free-agent acquisition Marwin Gonzalez, have been a bit disappointing, but at least Miguel Sano is on the mend and should help by early May. The word "disappointing" describes Sano's recent seasons, as well, but he has slugged .477 in his career. Meanwhile, Gonzalez returns to Houston this week. -- Karabell
17. Oakland Athletics
2019 record: 11-13
Week 2 ranking: 15
Pitching was the big question for the A's, and despite strong encores from Brett Anderson and Blake Treinen, it hasn't been great. They lost all five of Marco Estrada's starts before he landed on the IL, and Estrada and Mike Fiers have combined to allow 42 runs in 48⅔ IP across 11 starts. Beyond Treinen, the pen has allowed an MLB-worst 50 percent of inherited baserunners to score. -- Kahrl
18. San Diego Padres
2019 record: 12-11
Week 2 ranking: 13
A six-game losing streak cooled some of the buzz that surrounded this team early, but top prospect Fernando Tatis Jr. continues to reward the team for putting him on the Opening Day roster and ignoring the service-time debate. On Friday, Tatis became the youngest player in history to homer and steal three bases in a single game. -- Cockcroft
19. Texas Rangers
2019 record: 12-8
Week 2 ranking: 24
It was a big week in Texas, as the Rangers went 5-1 to wrap up their homestand. They did it by swinging the big sticks, averaging 7.3 runs per game (including 20 the last two games against the vaunted Astros staff), or nearly 2.5 runs more than their average entering the week. -- Richards
20. Colorado Rockies
2019 record: 8-13
Week 2 ranking: 26
A five-game winning streak during the past week spared the Rockies from the depths of last place, and Charlie Blackmon's weekend resurgence gave hope of an impending move up the standings. The Rockies' leadoff hitter was 9-for-14 with his first two home runs of the season, snapping what had been a .219/.266/.301 opening three weeks. -- Cockcroft
21. Arizona Diamondbacks
2019 record: 11-11
Week 2 ranking: 23
Arizona's biggest short-term concern is the health of first baseman Christian Walker, who sat out Sunday with a hip pointer. Walker has come out of nowhere to rank in the top 10 in OPS (1.127), slugging (.706) and wOBA (.461). He also has a hard-hit rate of 73.3 percent, with just 4.4 percent soft contact, which is best in baseball. Walker said he's OK; the D-backs sure hope so. -- Richards
22. Los Angeles Angels
2019 record: 9-13
Week 2 ranking: 19
Right-hander Matt Harvey should start twice this week, against the Yankees and Royals, as he attempts to alter his rough start of 20 earned runs through 18⅔ innings. Harvey's work in March/April in his first five seasons added up to a 3.66 ERA over 24 starts. The Angels already lack rotation depth, but Harvey is on watch. -- Karabell
23. Toronto Blue Jays
2019 record: 11-12
Week 2 ranking: 25
Business ought to be picking up in Toronto sometime this week with the much-anticipated arrival of Vladimir Guerrero Jr. This on the heels of a strong 6-1 week for the Jays. Enough to divert attention from the Maple Leafs' Game 7 against the Bruins on Tuesday night? Let's not get crazy -- but some April baseball excitement nonetheless. -- Richards
24. Detroit Tigers
2019 record: 10-10
Week 2 ranking: 21
The Tigers' respectable start owes much to a solid staff-wide performance from their pitching. Detroit is one of just five teams to get quality starts in 50 percent or more of their games, and the bullpen -- keyed by closer Shane Greene's recording a save in all 10 Tigers victories this season -- ranks fourth in the majors in ERA (3.29). -- Kahrl
25. Cincinnati Reds
2019 record: 8-13
Week 2 ranking: 20
Jesse Winker's bat has started to catch fire with six home runs in his past 43 trips to the plate, but the rest of the offense needs to follow suit soon. The Reds can't keep expecting Luis Castillo and his 1.47 ERA to single-handedly carry them to victory every fifth day -- ask Jacob deGrom how that worked out in 2018. -- Cockcroft
26. Chicago White Sox
2019 record: 8-12
Week 2 ranking: 27
Lost in the back-and-forth of the Brad Keller-Tim Anderson incident was that the White Sox missed a golden opportunity to build some momentum. First, they lost that game against the Royals in extra innings. Then they blew a late lead in Detroit. In a division that might not require 90 wins to win it, these are the kinds of games that could haunt an improving ChiSox squad later. -- Doolittle
27. San Francisco Giants
2019 record: 9-14
Week 2 ranking: 22
The middle infield might have been one area in which the Giants entered the season thinking they were in solid shape, but slow starts from veterans Joe Panik and Brandon Crawford have the Giants dead last with a .479 OPS from their second base/shortstop combo. Will they reach a point where they feel the need to shake things up? -- Kahrl
28. Kansas City Royals
2019 record: 7-15
Week 2 ranking: 29
Royals Opening Day starter Brad Keller, scheduled to pitch twice this week, made news last week for a retribution plunking of Tim Anderson and earned a suspension, but he deserves notice for his numbers. Keller is among the qualified leaders in batting average against, with 19 hits permitted in 30⅔ innings. The Royals need myriad things, but they might have a surprising ace. -- Karabell
29. Baltimore Orioles
2019 record: 8-15
Week 2 ranking: 28
We knew those heady days floating near .500 couldn't last, and a 1-5 week sunk the O's to their expected spot in the AL East cellar. On the bright side, Chris Davis is on fire -- relatively speaking. Since April 12, when Davis' record hitless streak reached 0-for-54, his slash line is .333/.364/.619 and he has almost as many RBIs (six) as strikeouts (seven). Progress, such as it is. -- Richards
30. Miami Marlins
2019 record: 6-16
Week 2 ranking: 30
With Marlins outfielders dead last in offensive production with a .502 OPS, the Fish turned back to last year's most frequently used right fielder last weekend after starting five other players there (in just 20 games), moving Brian Anderson back from third base. It helped Miami win its series with the Nationals -- including handing Max Scherzer a drubbing. -- Kahrl
A look ahead to this weekend’s multi-day endurance events taking place on the Isle of Man and Guernsey
The always popular Isle of Man Easter Festival has a reputation as a students’ jolly, but the three-race series from April 19-21 always attracts good athletes and performances.
Manx Harriers’ Ollie Lockley and Rachael Franklin are back to defend their festival titles, which are decided on aggregate positions over the weekend. Last year’s festival represented the first time in the event’s 57-year-history that both champions were locals.
Both have been warm-weather training in Portugal in preparation, with Lockley recently showing good shape by becoming the first Isle of Man athlete to run below 30 minutes for 10km on the road.
Cambridge University’s James Hoad, who ran 14:27 at the Armagh 5km recently, is another who could figure.
Edinburgh University’s Neil Renault is still showing good form as an M35, having run 15:18 and 32:04 last year for 5km and 10km. Keele University’s Felix McGrath is looking to continue in the shape that saw him run a 10km PB of 30:51 last month.
Alan Corlett, who has run 31:23.4 for 10,000m on the track this year, is another Manx Harrier looking to do well on home soil.
Among those looking to challenge Franklin on the women’s side will be Cambridge University’s Ruby Woolfe, recently under 37 minutes for 10km.
Edinburgh University’s Laura Stark, who was 16th in the under-20 race at the Inter-Counties Cross Country Championships last month, is joined by Cambridge University’s Polly Keen, who ran 2:49 at the ASICS Greater Manchester Marathon this month, plus Edinburgh’s Naomi Lang and Amy Frankland.
Races
Good Friday April 19: Bushy’s 10km road race, Port Erin
Saturday April 20: Peel hill race Easter
Sunday April 21: 5km road race, Douglas
Over in Guernsey, the Intertrust Guernsey Easter Running Festival from April 19-22 sees Ryan Burling (pictured below), who was last year’s overall winner, return. Last year’s runner-up, Dan Galpin, is also set to race.
Other challengers include Luke Williams of San Domenico, who has a recent 10km PB of 32:12, and City of Portsmouth’s Jacob O’Hara, who has run 15:32.90 for 5000m.
Guernsey’s twice Commonwealth representative Sarah Mercier heads the women’s line-up.
Other top women include locals Mel Nicolle and Jenny James, while Louise Perrio may defend her title depending on constraints connected with the organisation of the event.
Races
Good Friday April 19: 5km road race
Saturday April 20: Keith Falla Memorial Cross Country
Easter Sunday April 21: 4×1-mile cross country relay
Easter Monday April 22: 10km road race
Three-time world 1500m champion maintains his innocence but is suspended following a positive test for EPO
Kenya’s 2008 Olympic 1500m champion Asbel Kiprop has been handed a four-year ban after testing positive for the banned substance erythropoietin (EPO) in an out-of-competition test in November 2017, the Athletics Integrity Unit has announced.
Kiprop has maintained his innocence but on Saturday the Athletics Integrity Unit published its decision on the case stating that the 29-year-old would be banned for four years from the date of his provisional suspension on February 3, 2018, with any results from November 27, 2017, to February 3, 2018, to be disqualified.
The @iaaforg Disciplinary Tribunal has banned former Olympic and world 1500m champion Asbel Kiprop of Kenya for four-years starting 03 Feb 2018. #CleanSport #antidoping #AIUNews @ADAK_KE @athletics_kenya @SportRes_UK
Find all the details here: https://t.co/cBkQOqSHT4 pic.twitter.com/LYNutaHUvi— Athletics Integrity Unit (@aiu_athletics) April 20, 2019
In its decision document the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU), acting on behalf of the sport’s world governing body the IAAF, wrote that “at various times and in various formats he (Kiprop) has proposed a number of possible explanations for the adverse analytical finding” but after considering each of those points the panel said “the case against the athlete is convincingly made out”.
Among Kiprop’s claims were that the sample may have been tampered with and that he was notified about the doping test in advance, which is in breach of anti-doping rules.
The AIU response to each of Kiprop’s claims can be found in its decision document (available in full here), which confirms that the athlete had been given advance notice of the planned test. “The panel was … unable to conceive of any link between such advance notice and the adverse analytical finding in this (or any other advance notice) case,” added the AIU.
As well as his Olympic gold from 2008, which he claimed after his silver medal was upgraded to gold following the disqualification of winner Rashid Ramzi due to a doping offence, Kiprop won his three world titles in 2011, 2013 and 2015, while his PB of 3:26.69 recorded in 2015 puts him third on the world 1500m all-time list.
He also placed sixth at the Rio Olympics and ninth at the London 2017 World Championships.
“The panel … is aware that its order will interrupt and may even terminate the athlete’s sporting career and cast a shadow over his impressive competitive record,” added the AIU decision document in part.
“But in its opinion the laboratory results viewed in the context of the evidential record and the regulatory framework admit of no other conclusion than that the case against the athlete is convincingly made out.”
Kiprop has the right to appeal the decision.