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Pro14 semi-final: Glasgow v Ulster (Fri)

Published in Rugby
Thursday, 16 May 2019 04:31

DTH van der Merwe's surprise return for Glasgow Warriors' Pro14 semi-final against Ulster is "massive", says head coach Dave Rennie.

The Canadian, who scored the winning try in this fixture four years ago, was expected to be out for the season after a shoulder operation in February.

But Warriors' record try-scorer has recovered four weeks ahead of schedule and starts at Scotstoun.

"DTH is very experienced, really powerful and secure," Rennie said.

"He is massive for us."

The injured Niko Matawalu drops out of the Glasgow squad in the only change to the backline that started the thumping of Edinburgh last month.

Co-captain and flanker Callum Gibbins has recovered from concussion and Jonny Gray has overcome illness to feature, with Rob Harley shifting from lock to the blind-side flank, and Ryan Wilson and Tom Gordon dropping to the bench.

The match will be Warriors great Stuart Hogg's last at Scotstoun as the full-back prepares to join English Premiership side Exeter Chiefs next term, but not necessarily his last in Glasgow, with the final staged in the city's Celtic Park on 25 May.

"I think he's been outstanding, particularly over the last three games against tough opposition," Rennie, whose side have won eight games in a row, added.

"We know he has a lot of x-factor. He's given a lot of years' service to this club and the boys are desperate to send him out on a high.

"When there was a real drive to try to host the final here, there was obviously a lot of hope that we'd be part of that, so it's a motivating factor, no doubt. But what we know is that if we just put in a quality performance tomorrow, we've got a good chance ."

Ulster, coached by former Glasgow and Scotland assistant Dan McFarland, are boosted by the return of fit-again Ireland full-back Jacob Stockdale and wing Louis Ludik.

The duo's introduction to the backline are the only changes to the side that beat Connacht in the quarter-final, and join Robert Baloucoune in the back-three.

Ulster captain Rory Best and centre Darren Cave could play their final games for the province, with both retiring at the end of the season, although hooker Best will lead Ireland at the Rugby World Cup.

Centre Cave has been named on the bench by former Glasgow and Scotland assistant Dan McFarland and, if he comes on, he will equal Andrew Trimble's all-time Ulster appearance record of 229.

Glasgow Warriors: Hogg; Seymour, Steyn, Johnson, Van der Merwe; Hastings, Price; Bhatti, Brown, Z Fagerson, Cummings, Gray, Harley, Gibbins, M Fagerson.

Replacements: Stewart, Kebble, Rae, Wilson, Gordon, G Horne, P Horne, H Jones.

Ulster: Stockdale; Baloucoune, Marshall, McCloskey, Ludik; Burns, Cooney; O'Sullivan, Best, Kane, Henderson, Treadwell, Timoney, Murphy, Coetzee.

Replacements: Herring, Warwick, O'Toole, O'Connor, Reidy, Shanahan, Lowry, Cave.

Glasgow's Johnson stays grounded as Ulster semi looms

Published in Rugby
Friday, 17 May 2019 03:25

When Glasgow Warriors host Ulster in the Pro14 semi-final at Scotstoun on Friday night, poignancy as well as passion is guaranteed. Somebody is going to finish their night by saying goodbye.

Depending on who loses, it's either going to be Stuart Hogg bidding farewell to Glasgow after nine years - next stop Exeter - or Rory Best and Darren Cave with a so long to Ulster after a combined 27 years - next stop retirement from club rugby.

It's going to be loud and attritional and emotional no matter how you cut it. Three titans of their surroundings leaving the stage and the likes of Sam Johnson only really getting started.

"This is where you want to be," says the Glasgow and Scotland centre. "Ulster are a great team. The last time we played them [in early April] we won 30-7 but Tommy Seymour pulled off two brilliant bits of defence to deny them two certain tries, so if they go in that's 30-21 and people are remembering it differently."

Ulster did not have Rory Best that night. They did not have Iain Henderson either. That's two leaders and two Lions right there. "It's going to be a great game," says Johnson. "They have massive athletes and Rory is one of the best leaders of men in the world.

"They'll be trying desperately to make sure that Friday isn't his last game for Ulster in the same way we'll be trying desperately to make sure it isn't Hoggy's last game for Glasgow. We haven't spoken about it as a group, but it's there in the subconscious. Everybody knows it.

"I've learned a lot of stuff from Hoggy - the way he conducts himself on and off the pitch, his standards, his dedication to making himself better and the impact that has had on me. You watch him working harder and that makes you work harder as well. I always knew I could play the game but it was only when I came to Glasgow that I realised that I wasn't taking it as seriously as I should have been.

"Playing alongside him gives you so much confidence. You know that if you can give him some quick, clean pill then magic is going to happen. We want to give him the best send-off, not at Scotstoun but at Celtic Park in the final."

'A sheltered boy, quiet and laidback'

Four years ago these same teams met at the same venue at the same stage of the competition and Glasgow won with a late sweep of Finn Russell's boot. Johnson was just packing his bags in Ipswich, Queensland to come to Scotland at the time. "A sheltered boy," he says of his younger self. "Quiet and laidback and just turned 22. A little bit nervous but kind of excited at the same time.

"My parents, my two sisters and my brother are all in Queensland and, yeah, you wish you could see them more. Everyone has their own journey in life, though, don't they? Sorry, I don't want to be too philosophical about it, but I'm okay about being away from Australia. My life is very much here now.

"When I came over first it was the World Cup in England and I was cheering for Australia. I still had that in me. It's long gone now. In 2015, it was the first time out of my comfort zone. I packed everything up and moved to the other side of the world and it was a shock.

"The second night I was here I looked out of my window and there was this guy standing outside the door of the building with blood streaming down his face. He was in a bad way. The police arrived. Loads of cars. It turned out that the fellow had been attacked by a guy with a machete. I'm this kid who's been living with his mum and dad all his life and suddenly I feel like a million miles from home.

"That was the last time I saw anything like that. Glasgow is home now. My girlfriend is Scottish and we're looking to start a life together here. I'm so grateful for everything that's happened to me. It took me a while to get used to things at the start. I found it difficult to talk to people. I just sat in the corner. I didn't come over as a star signing so nobody paid any attention to me. I've had to work hard and I'm proud of what I've done so far. Nobody in Australia knew who I was back then. Nobody in Australia knows who I am now, to be honest."

That might have been true up until this spring, but it's not true anymore. His first Scotland cap against Italy will have given him some kind of profile in Australia. His try against Ireland will have enhanced his reputation further, but it was his score against England that will have had rugby fans in Australia wondering how they missed out on this guy.

Johnson calls the Six Nations a "whirlwind, an experience like I've never known before." And he adds: "So many more eyes on you. So many more followers on Instagram after the try at Twickenham."

'We know what's coming, but we're in a good head space'

Clever, quick and skilful, when he scored under the sticks that evening he thought he had won the game. The dart through a gap in the English defence - "you could have driven a bus through the hole" - the step off his right foot to get around Jack Nowell, the right-hand fend of Elliot Daly, the bowling over of one Englishman, then another and then the touch down. It looked like history in the making.

"I'd watched some of the Italy versus France game earlier in the day and I saw the Italy centre [Marco Zanon] going over in the corner only for Damian Penaud to knock the ball out of his hands as he was about to score. When I crossed the England line that image sprung into my head and I thought to myself, do not drop this ball'. I thought we'd done it. It was an awesome feeling."

In the end, he had cause (again) to remind himself of something that Jonny Gray had told him about a year earlier. "Jonny said something really good in the car one day," Johnson explains. "It was a simple thought, but very, very true. He said, 'you've never made it in this game'. And he's right. Just when you think you've made it, England score or you lose your form or you get injured and lose your place.

"I'm playing 12 against Ulster but I know that loads of others are chomping at the bit to get that jersey. You can't rest, you can't rely on reputation. That stuck with me. We're in a privileged position as rugby players but it can be taken away very quickly. That thought helps me. I have a bit of fear at the moment of joining the real world. I don't want to. I want to ride this wave for as long as possible."

White horses of a different kind are heading his way at Scotstoun. Ulster have not won a trophy in 13 years and their survivors from Glasgow, 2015 - Best, Henderson, Cave, Louis Ludik, Stuart McCloskey, Rob Herring - have not forgotten what it felt like that night. 'We know what's coming, but we're in a good head space," adds Johnson. "This will be a proper battle, though."

Pro14 semi-final: Glasgow Warriors v Ulster

Published in Rugby
Thursday, 16 May 2019 23:58

Luke Marshall says Ulster are in a much better place mentally for their return to Scotstoun for Friday's Pro14 semi-final against Glasgow Warriors.

Ulster lost 30-7 away to Glasgow in a Pro14 game last month but have since beaten Edinburgh, Leinster and Connacht to reach a first semi-final since 2016.

"This is a good chance to hopefully get revenge," said Marshall.

"We were probably feeling sorry for ourselves last time, coming off a loss to Leinster in the Champions Cup."

Ulster emptied the tank in the Champions Cup quarter-final defeat at the Aviva Stadium and struggled to compete with Glasgow the following week.

They have previous with Glasgow too, having narrowly lost a memorable Pro12 semi-final at Scotstoun in 2015.

"Hopefully it will make a difference going in with a bit confidence of a play-off win (over Connacht) behind us," Marshall said.

"We went there last month a week after losing to Leinster thinking we should have been looking forward to a European semi-final.

"They were coming off a big loss too against Saracens but were obviously well motivated.

"We know if we play to the full ability we have, we can get a result, but we have nothing to lose really. They're the ones who finished top of their Conference and they're expected to go through."

Marshall's timely return

A brave try-saving tackle in the corner against the Ospreys last May helped secure Champions Cup rugby for Ulster this season, but it came at a personal loss to Marshall.

The 28-year-old ruptured his ACL which wiped out the next 10 months, but he has made an instant impact on his return with an impressive cameo against Leinster as well as big performances in recent Pro14 games.

"It's been good to get back on the pitch again and my timing was pretty good, I got lucky," Marshall said.

"I think I got playing in that [Champions Cup] quarter-final just by default - there were so many injuries, I was probably the only man left standing.

"From watching the boys since the start of the season it's been amazing how much we've kicked on from last season.

"Everyone wanted to move on and it's been great for squad development to see so many young boys coming through and really playing well and putting their hands up for selection.

"I'm just lucky to be a part of it now at the end of the season."

One moment he'd prefer to forget since his comeback was the fumble against Glasgow six weeks ago.

With a try at his mercy, Marshall was caught out by the quick-thinking Tommy Seymour who knocked the ball out of his hand.

Marshall and Ulster have every incentive to upset the odds, given it is 13 seasons since they lifted a trophy, the old Celtic League in 2006.

Darren Cave and captain Rory Best, the last surviving link to that team, are retiring at the end of the season and silverware would be the perfect send-off.

Marshall said: "You always find yourself, just whenever you have a bit of free time, thinking about what it would be like to lift a trophy over in Celtic Park in the final.

"You've got to, that's the motivation at the end of the day.

"We're not thinking past the semi-final but you have to imagine how good it would be, because it's so long since we've won a trophy."

Hudson O’Neal Tops In Iowa LM Tussle

Published in Racing
Friday, 17 May 2019 04:16

WEST BURLINGTON, Iowa — Hudson O’Neal passed Jonathan Davenport on lap 48 and went on to score his second win of the season on Thursday night at 34 Raceway.

O’Neal battled with his father Don for several laps after the 18-year-old charged from the 10th starting position. Then, a single file restart with three laps to go saw O’Neal pass Davenport to score a one-two finish for Longhorn Chassis.

Hudson O’Neal’s fourth career Lucas Oil Late Model Dirt Series victory came over Davenport, Josh Richards, Kyle Bronson and Earl Pearson Jr.

Don O’Neal took the lead heading the down the backstretch on lap 38, but that lap was never completed as contact between Don O’Neal and Davenport caused the caution flag when O’Neal came to a halt with a left rear flat.

Davenport then went back in front with Hudson O’Neal in second. It was the fateful lap 47 that allowed Hudson O’Neal to saddle up behind Davenport. The three-lap shootout was set, and Hudson O’Neal came out on top. Davenport then held off Richards by half a car length for second.

“Oh my gosh I am out of breath,” said O’Neal. “The surface was bumpy, but it made for some good racing. I was all over this thing. It really widened out there at the end and it gave me a chance to make a move there on JD. We weren’t very good at the beginning, but we continually got better and better. I just put myself in a good position there at the end.

Hudson O’Neal in victory lane. (Brendan Bauman photo)

“I hate what happened to my dad,” Hudson added. “We were battling hard. I thought for a moment I had a right rear flat under that one caution because it was lying low really bad. It scared me for a little bit. This car was on a rail tonight. We made the right adjustments to get it to the front. It’s good to be back in Victory Lane after not being very good for a couple of months.”

“It was a heck of battle with the O’Neal’s and inside my own race car,” Davenport said. “I am sure it was a heck of a show for the fans. I didn’t know where I was going there sometimes. I want to tell Don [O’Neal] I am sorry. You can’t see out of these things. As soon as he slid me, I ran over his left rear and I tried to get off of him.”

The finish:

Hudson O’Neal, Jonathan Davenport, Josh Richards, Kyle Bronson, Earl Pearson Jr., Don O’Neal, Chase Junghans, Shanon Buckingham, Tyler Bruening, Devin Moran, Billy Moyer Jr., Jimmy Owens, Stormy Scott, Tyler Erb, Jason Jameson, Billy Moyer, Bobby Pierce, Frank Heckenast Jr., Spencer Diercks, Tim McCreadie, Chad Simpson, Shannon Babb, Chris Simpson, Allen Murray.

Consistency Has Braden Atop ARCA Points

Published in Racing
Friday, 17 May 2019 06:00

CONCORD, N.C. — Travis Braden isn’t the man many would have picked to be leading the ARCA Menards Series standings after five races.

However, that’s exactly the situation Braden finds himself in as the tour prepares for Sunday’s Sioux Chief PowerPEX 200 at Ohio’s Toledo Speedway.

Braden’s position at the top of the ARCA Menards Series standings has come thanks largely to his consistency on the race track. Though winless this year, he’s the only driver to finish inside the top-10 four times.

“It’s really important in ARCA, obviously,” Braden said.

His biggest rival at this point — Venturini Motorsports’ Michael Self — is second in the standings with two wins and three top-five finishes and top-10 results. However, Self has crashed in two races and finished near the tail of the field each time, leaving him 30 points shy of Braden early in the season.

Another of Braden’s rivals, Christian Eckes, won the most recent race at Fairgrounds Speedway Nashville. However, an illness forced Eckes to miss the ARCA event at Salem (Ind.) Speedway and he crashed out early in the race at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway.

“I think a lot of guys get a little overexcited and they cost themselves in these races,” Braden said. “That’s going to keep happening as the season goes on and we can capitalize.”

Bret Holmes and Joe Graf Jr. are also within reasonable striking distance of Braden, but none have been as consistent as the native of Wheeling, W.Va. He said that same consistency will be even more important when the series visits Charlotte Motor Speedway on May 23.

“When you go to a short track and you have a really bad day and you wreck, you’re going to finish not as bad as you do here (at Charlotte),” said the driver of the No. 27 Ford for RFMS Racing following the recent ARCA open test at Charlotte. “That points gap is huge. Last year it really killed us. We had a bad race at Daytona, like a 30th place, and honestly that killed us the whole year.

“We weren’t going to win the championship either way, but we might have been able to compete for a top five and that took us away from it.”

This year Braden avoided the same mayhem that bit him at Daytona Int’l Speedway, finishing eighth. He backed that up with a seventh-place run at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway. He said runs like that are what will help him stay near the top of the ARCA Menards Series standings.

“This year we had a good run at both superspeedways and we’ve had top 10s pretty much everywhere,” said Braden, who scored his lone ARCA win in his first series start in 2015. “We’ve been able to consistently keep those points building up and that’s going to matter throughout the season.

“Honestly, we’ve been struggling every race so far, but we’ve got a lot of promise showing. When that promise finally shines through I think it’s going to be great for us because we’re in such a good position in the points.”

The Boston Bruins are back to the Stanley Cup Final -- their first since 2013, though professional sports teams in Boston have hardly suffered since then -- knocking out the Carolina Hurricanes in a sweep.

Here's a recap of last night's action (check out replays of every playoff game on ESPN+) and what to watch for tonight, in today's edition of ESPN Stanley Cup Playoffs Daily:

Jump ahead: Last night's game | Three stars
Play of the night | Today's game | Social post of the day


About last night ...

Game 4: Boston Bruins 4, Carolina Hurricanes 0 (Bruins win the series 4-0)

Let's be honest: the Canes were telegraphing mental exhaustion over the past few days, and a Boston series win felt inevitable after the Bruins took Game 3 in Raleigh. In Game 4, Carolina just couldn't sustain any pressure. The Canes had only four shots in the second frame, including a 14-minute stretch without any, and then didn't register one for more than half of the third period.

Even without captain Zdeno Chara, the Bruins put up a solid defensive effort in one of their more complete performances of the postseason. It didn't help the Canes that Boston's top line is sizzling hot; the trio accounted for all four of the Bruins' goals. You can boil down Boston's domination in this series to two factors:

  • Tuukka Rask (a 24-save shutout in Game 4) leveled up to an elite tier of performance, and that's now two straight series-clinching shutouts.

  • The Canes' special teams were a liability; Boston's were awesome.

Three stars

1. Patrice Bergeron, C, Boston Bruins. Two goals and an assist from Bergeron paced the Bruins on Thursday. Over the past seven games, the top line is 11-0 in goals for versus goals against, with 77 percent of the high-danger shot attempts, according to Natural Stat Trick.

2. David Pastrnak, LW, Boston Bruins. Pastrnak added a goal and two assists. His one-timer, off a feed from Brad Marchand, was clinic.

3. Tuukka Rask, G, Boston Bruins. Once the Bruins scored their second goal, it felt all but certain they would win. There was no way the Canes were scoring three goals on Rask after how sharp he has been this series.

Play of the night

The Bruins' top line was guilty of trying to be a little too cute -- and making one too many passes -- on a few chances in the first period. It finally worked out for them with this gorgeous second-period goal.

Dud of the night

After Game 3, Carolina defenseman Dougie Hamilton admitted that the Canes' power play hadn't been good "for some time." They didn't have enough time to fix it for Game 4.

Carolina went just 1-for-14 on the man advantage in this series (7.1 percent) and finished the postseason 5-for-52 (9.6 percent).

(The Bruins, meanwhile, were 7-for-15 in the series, converting at nearly a 43 percent rate.)

On the schedule

San Jose Sharks at St. Louis Blues, Game 4, 8 p.m. ET (Sharks lead the series 2-1)

Was the botched no-call on the game-winning overtime goal in Game 3 a cruel way for the St. Louis Blues to lose? Yes. Is it going to change? No. The Blues need a mental reset; they can't lament what's already done. Players told reporters in the off day that they wouldn't wallow, but that's easier said than done.

St. Louis may be without defenseman Vince Dunn, who is day-to-day with an upper-body injury (he's been having a breakout season, and plays point on the power play). A positive for San Jose? Erik Karlsson finally broke his goalless streak, scoring his first goal in more than five months -- a span of 31 games without one.

Social post of the day

There are few things in sports more pure than the playoff handshake line.

Quotable

"I'm proud of, obviously, what we've done; I'm proud that we've gotten ourselves relevant again." -- Carolina captain Justin Williams

Man City can't afford Griezmann, jokes Guardiola

Published in Soccer
Friday, 17 May 2019 07:19

MANCHESTER, England -- Pep Guardiola joked that Manchester City cannot afford Antoine Griezmann after ruling out a move for the France international.

Griezmann informed Atletico Madrid on Tuesday that he wants to leave the club after five seasons with sources confirming to ESPN FC that Barcelona are hopeful of signing him.

Sources have told ESPN FC that City are set to bring in three or four new faces during the summer but Guardiola has ruled out any move for the 2018 World Cup winner.

"For the people of Barcelona, I say don't worry guys. Manchester City is not going to buy Antoine Griezmann, we cannot afford him," the Catalan told a news conference ahead of the FA Cup final against Watford (11:55 a.m. ET, ESPN+).

"For the people of Barcelona don't worry. We are not interested in Griezmann."

Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has ordered his Manchester United players to report for preseason training as early as July 1 after being dismayed by fitness levels following his arrival as Jose Mourinho's successor, sources have told ESPN FC.

With the bulk of United's squad facing an extended summer break due to only a small number being likely to be involved in the Copa America, Solskjaer has set the early return date in order to ensure they are fit enough to compete for the top four next season.

Eric Bailly, meanwhile, will miss Ivory Coast's African Nations Cup campaign with a knee injury.

Sources told ESPN FC that Solskjaer and assistant Mike Phelan were struck by the unsatisfactory fitness of the majority of the players when they were given interim control of the team in December.

The squad were then subjected to a tougher fitness regime that coincided with the upturn in results that saw United win 10 of Solskjaer's first 11 games in charge.

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However, concerns that they would suffer a reaction to the increased demands proved well-founded, with United's results nose-diving during the final weeks as the club failed to qualify for the Champions League.

"The players weren't fit enough when Ole arrived," a source told ESPN FC. "They worked really hard to change that in December and January but they hit the wall in the end, and that was probably inevitable."

United failed to win any of their final five league games as they finished five points adrift of fourth-placed Tottenham.

While Solskjaer is determined to overhaul his squad, with at least three new signings and emerging youngsters expected to replace those heading for the exit, he also believes his players must vastly improve their fitness.

United are due to play their first preseason game against Perth Glory in Australia on July 13, but the players will be exposed to a tougher regime when they return at the beginning of that month.

Meanwhile, the club will discover on Saturday whether they must begin their Europa League campaign on July 25 -- and face the prospect of six qualifying games before reaching the group stage -- after finishing sixth in the Premier League.

If Watford defeat Manchester City in the FA Cup final on Saturday, they will have to enter the competition at the second qualifying round stage.

That would play havoc with their preseason plans, with arrangements already in place to play Tottenham in Shanghai in the International Champions Cup on July 25.

Juventus announce Allegri to leave this summer

Published in Soccer
Friday, 17 May 2019 05:09

Juventus have announced Massimiliano Allegri will leave his post as manager at the end of the season.

There have been a succession of meetings between Allegri and the Juve board in the past few days over the ex-AC Milan boss' future with the decision having been taken that he will step down following their last match of the season away to Sampdoria on May 26.

"Massimiliano Allegri will not be on the Juventus bench for the 2019-2020 season," the statement on Juventus' website read.

Allegri took charge of the Bianconeri in July 2014, after Antonio Conte resigned only days into preseason training. He was an unpopular choice among Juve fans at the time, given his past at AC Milan, whom he had led to the Serie A title in 2011 before being sacked midway through the 2013-14 campaign.

He managed to win most Juve supporters over, however, by guiding the Old Lady to five straight Serie A titles, and leading them to the 2015 and 2017 Champions League finals, which they lost to Barcelona and Real Madrid respectively. Allegri also won the Coppa Italia in his first four seasons in Turin -- after Juventus had gone 20 years without winning Italy's main domestic cup competition -- but saw his side eliminated by Atalanta in this season's quarterfinals.

Last summer's signing of Cristiano Ronaldo was seen as a key to Juve finally lifting the Champions League for the first time since 1996 but, despite making a remarkable recovery from a 2-0 first leg defeat to eliminate Atletico Madrid in the round of 16, they were eliminated by Ajax in the quarterfinals, losing at that stage for the second season running following last year's defeat to Real Madrid.

Allegri, 51, turned down a move to Real last summer in a bid to win the Champions League with Juve but, with the Spanish club now back in the hands of Zinedine Zidane, Allegri's future could lie in the Premier League, where he has previously been linked with Chelsea.

Allegri and club president Agnelli will explain the reasons behind the parting of ways at a news conference on Saturday.

Juve will pick up their eighth straight Scudetto following their final home game of the season at the Allianz Stadium against Atalanta on Sunday.

World Cup 2019 winners to get US $4 million

Published in Cricket
Friday, 17 May 2019 04:18

The winner of the 2019 men's World Cup will walk away with a monetary reward of US $4 million, with the runner up getting half the amount ($2 million), as the ICC, on Friday, announced details of the total prize money on offer for the 10-team tournament.

The total prize money of $10 million will be the same as it was in the 2015 World Cup, which was contested among 14 teams with Australia defeating New Zealand to take the trophy and the winner's cheque.

The prize purse for both the winners and the runners-up is an increase from 2015, when the winning team was awarded $3.75 million, while the runners-up were given $1.75 million. The prize-money pot for the 2015 World had seen an increase by 25%, from $8 million previously to $10 million.

In the 2019 edition, the two losing semi-finalists will get $800,000 each, also an increase compared to the 2015 edition, where losing semi-finalists were awarded $600,000. The winners of each league-stage match will receive $40,000 each, and teams whose campaigns end at the league stage will get $100,000 each.

The 2019 World Cup format is similar to the nine-team edition played in 1992, where each team plays the others in the round-robin phase, with the top four advancing to the semi-finals. The 46-day tournament will be played across 11 venues from 30 May to July 16.

The ICC also announced its panel of commentators for the World Cup, which starts from May 30. The 24-member panel features World Cup captains Graeme Smith, Nasser Hussain, Kumar Sangakkara, Wasim Akram, Brendon McCullum, Shaun Pollock, Mike Atherton, Sourav Ganguly and Michael Clarke. Clarke, who had led Australia to victory in 2015, will be making his ICC TV commentary debut. The panel also features other experienced commentators like Ian Bishop, Simon Doull, Michael Holding, Melanie Jones, Isa Guha and Alison Mitchell, as well as Sanjay Manjrekar and Harsha Bhogle.

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