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Source: Dadashev undergoing surgery after loss

Published in Breaking News
Friday, 19 July 2019 22:27

OXON HILL, Md. -- Previously undefeated Maxim Dadashev was taken to a hospital following his 11th-round loss to Subriel Matias on Friday night and was undergoing surgery because of brain swelling, a source told ESPN's Bernardo Osuna.

After trainer Buddy McGirt threw in the towel after Round 11 of the IBF 140-pound eliminator, Dadashev needed assistance leaving the ring and vomited.

He left the arena on a stretcher and was taken to UM Prince George's Hospital Center.

"I think right now he's dehydrated -- I think he really needs some IVs in him,'' McGirt said after the fight. "He didn't want to drink much water in the corner -- he kept spitting it out. He had one hell of a fight, tough fight. He took a lot of shots. I think it was time to stop it."

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Kellerman emphasizes Dadashev's condition as a 'serious situation'

Max Kellerman recognizes the severity of Maxim Dadashev's condition after he was taken off on a stretcher.

Throughout the bout, Matias, 27, of Fajardo, Puerto Rico, steadily came forward, throwing hard shots with both hands.

Dadashev, 28, of Saint Petersburg, Russia, spent much of this fight on his back foot, circling the ring. And while Matias was the constant aggressor and able to control the tempo and pace of the bout, Dadashev was never willing to stand and trade with him.

According to Compubox, Matias outlanded Dadashev 319-157; 112 of Matias' punches were body shots.

As the rounds mounted, Matias steadily piled them up in his favor, outworking Dadashev and pounding the body consistently. In the later rounds, either because of exhaustion or desperation, Dadashev began to sit inside the pocket and fight with Matias. But while he had some success, he was overwhelmed by Matias, whose punches had more effect.

The scores at the time of the stoppage in favor of Matias were 109-100, 108-101 and 107-102.

"First of all, I'm very grateful for this opportunity. I showed that I am not just a power puncher. I also can box. I was dominating the fight. I focused my offense on going to the body, and that's how I stopped him from running,'' Matias said.

But his fallen foe also was on his mind.

"I hope that Maxim is all right. He is a great fighter and a warrior."

NEW YORK -- Maybe it's something in the low-altitude Bronx air. On the night the Colorado Rockies visited Yankee Stadium for the first time in four seasons, a trio of former Rockies showed up, showed out and proved why the New York Yankees felt it was smart to acquire all three of them earlier this year.

"It felt really good," current Yankees reliever and former Rockie Adam Ottavino said following New York's 8-2 win Friday night. "Everybody wants to perform well against familiar people."

These weren't just "familiar people" to Ottavino and fellow Yankees DJ LeMahieu and Mike Tauchman, though. These were the folks who believed they could continue fielding a competitive team this season without each of their services.

So that's why Tauchman had to flash a smile when asked about going 3-for-4 with a double, two runs scored, a stolen base and a pivotal outfield assist in the victory. It's also why Ottavino wasn't shy about saying his three side-retiring (in order) strikeouts are helping him move in a more positive direction on the mound.

"While it was a cool thing to play against those guys, I had expectations of getting the job done, and going out and performing as if it was any other game," Tauchman said.

Collective performances such as these are making members of the Yankees' front office look so much more like geniuses than many of their league counterparts.

In LeMahieu's case, the story of the game was setting a career high in RBIs, and doing it against the team with which he notched his previous career-best mark. It's a mark he toppled with more than two months of this season left to play. He has 67 RBIs in 88 games this season

"DJ's done well against just about every team this year, and 'Otto' has, too," Tauchman said. "But it was great for them. I'm sure they were looking forward to playing the Rockies ... they were there a lot longer than I was."

When it came to letting Ottavino and LeMahieu leave, the Rockies' desire to go cheaper and younger outweighed retaining them. So in January, the former batting champion and multiple Gold Glove Award winner LeMahieu signed with the Yankees. Three days later, Ottavino, the right-hander whose pitches practically dance every bit of the 60 feet and 6 inches they travel, signed with them, too.

Two months later, as the Bronx Bombers broke camp and wrapped up spring training, Tauchman joined them. Traded for 25-year-old lefty Phillip Diehl, a former 27th-round Yankees draft pick who had been rocketing to relevance within the organization throughout the spring, Tauchman arrived in a move that confused more than a few fans. That's because trading Diehl wasn't the only surprise; the Yankees had been grooming super-utilityman Tyler Wade into a rather dependable outfielder, but suddenly another outfielder was being added to the fold.

Nights like Friday's are proof Brian Cashman and the men and women in the departments under him knew exactly what they were doing.

"Kudos goes to the office for going out and finding us another diamond in the rough," said Yankees bench coach Josh Bard, who managed Friday's game while Aaron Boone served a one-game suspension.

About Tauchman, Bard added: "He just creates a lot of run value."

Specifically, Bard was referencing Tauchman's ability to not only create runs -- scoring twice in the series opener -- but also his knack for saving runs in the field. Often platooned, Tauchman nevertheless entered the game with six defensive runs saved this season, according to FanGraphs. So despite just part-time play, that figure puts him among the 20 best outfielders in the big leagues within that metric, on par with the likes of Michael Brantley, Christian Yelich and Kevin Pillar.

In the second inning Friday, Tauchman had one of the most special defensive plays of the night, delivering a one-hop strike home from left field to nab speedy Garrett Hampson, who had tagged up at third, trying to score on a sacrifice fly.

According to Statcast, Tauchman's throw clocked 91.3 mph. Hampson, who is credited with having the seventh-fastest sprint speed in all of baseball, was tagged out just as he slid into the plate. Statcast also notes that Hampson averages a sprint speed of 30.0 feet per second, a measured speed that is considered "elite."

"That's a big, big play early that shifts the game," Bard said.

The outfield assist got Yankees starter J.A. Happ out of early trouble, as he escaped the inning down 2-0, when at least one more run could have scored. Happ, who finished after five innings, allowed only those two runs.

The 36-year-old pitcher, who himself has played for five teams, understands exactly what it's like for a player to want to play well when they face a former team.

"You try not to overthink it," Happ said. "You can get into a situation where sort of as a pitcher, you're maybe like, 'Oh, these guys know me so well from playing with them for so long.' But you sort of hope that once the game starts, you just kind of fall into the rhythm of the game.

"But yeah, there's a little something there, where, if you were somewhere for a while, sort of wanting to be like a 'Maybe you should've held on to me' kind of thing. Or whatever motivation works."

Tauchman wouldn't venture to say if he was motivated in this game by the trade, but Ottavino certainly went down that path for him.

"[Mike] played an unbelievable all-around game, against a team that didn't really give him a lot of chances, honestly," Ottavino said. "To come here and to put his best foot forward, I know meant a lot to him."

Along with Tauchman's success both at the plate and in the field, Ottavino's three-strikeout sixth inning, and LeMahieu's 2-for-5 line that included two RBIs -- one of which came when Tauchman scored from third, beating out a chopper in the infield -- a fourth former Rockie was in Yankees pinstripes Friday.

Reliever Tommy Kahnle warmed up late in the game, but he never entered. Unlike the other three, Kahnle didn't arrive to New York directly from Colorado. Prior to being traded to the Yankees in 2017 from the White Sox, Kahnle had been traded to Chicago from the Rockies in 2015. The player he was traded for, Yency Almonte, gave up four hits and three runs in two innings against the Yankees in Friday's opener. Tauchman's scamper home was the first of the three runs Almonte gave up. A batter later, LeMahieu scored when Aaron Judge hit a two-run home run to right.

As good as it might have felt for them to play against the Rockies, the Yankees' former mountain men contend they harbor no ill will toward their former employer.

"Obviously the Rockies drafted me, and I was able to make my debut there," Tauchman said. "So I have a lot of good memories there, but I'm really excited to be where I am right now, and with the group that we have and the goals that we have as a team.

"That's the stuff I'm really excited about."

Dortmund down Liverpool at Notre Dame Stadium

Published in Soccer
Friday, 19 July 2019 20:18

Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain provided the sharpness and dynamism Jurgen Klopp will have been delighted to see despite Liverpool suffering a 3-2 preseason defeat to Borussia Dortmund.

The England international, who was involved in just four matchday squads last season as he recovered from multiple ligament damage, was the standout star for the European champions at Notre Dame Stadium.

His explosive runs from midfield were on show and he provided the impetus in attack for the Reds during the first outing of their US tour.

Oxlade-Chamberlain's cross from the right, which Ryan Kent connected with nearly had Liverpool level after Paco Alcacer converted from close range following poor defending three minutes in, but Marwin Hitz pulled off a superb save.

Klopp's side did equalise after Fabinho supplied a lovely pass, which was met by a clever Kent dummy before Harry Wilson applied the finish to a well-worked goal.

Dortmund responded with a quick double in the second half after making nine changes with Thomas Delaney scoring after Liverpool switched off at a corner.

Bruun Larsen then profited after Yasser Larouci, who had impressively kept Jadon Sancho quiet in the first 45, tried to dribble out of the box and lost the ball to Marius Wolf who pulled it back for the winger.

Klopp refreshed the entire outfield on 59 minutes, with Jordan Henderson, Virgil van Dijk, Trent Alexander-Arnold, Georginio Wijnaldum and Andy Robertson getting their first runout of preseason.

Rhian Brewster reduced the deficit from the penalty spot with a supremely confident take for his fourth goal in three games after Ben Woodburn was impeded by Mateu Morey.

Bruun Larsen was then flagged offside after beating Simon Mignolet. Liverpool's goalkeeper produced a brilliant late save to deny Immanuel Pherai.

The Reds will face Sevilla at Fenway Park on Sunday, before closing off their U.S. commitments with a test against Sporting at Yankee Stadium next Wednesday.

Harbaugh wary of mental health use in waivers

Published in Breaking News
Friday, 19 July 2019 17:47

CHICAGO -- Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh supports players being able to transfer once without sitting out a year but wants those seeking immediate eligibility to be truthful about their reasons in seeking waivers from the NCAA, especially regarding mental health.

Speaking Friday at Big Ten media days, Harbaugh said he would keep immediate eligibility for graduate transfers, allow undergraduates to transfer once without penalty but require a year of no competition for undergraduates transferring for a second time. Football is among five NCAA Division I sports without a one-time transfer exemption.

"It would be good to just have a clear, concise [policy], where everybody understands what the ramifications are," Harbaugh said. "I think that would be a fair way to proceed."

Harbaugh also told ESPNU Big Ten radio on Friday that he was concerned some players seeking immediate eligibility cite mental health issues that don't exist but improve their chances of receiving waivers from the NCAA. Harbaugh noted that he cares about mental health, but he said he thinks it has become an effective way for players to get waivers approved.

"Down the road, I don't see that helping them if that's not a legitimate thing," he said. "But nobody would know. But what are you going to say? Ten years down the road, 'I just had to say what I had to say?' You're putting them in a position that's unfair, not right. You're saying it just to say it. ... That's not something we should be promoting at the college level. Telling the truth matters, especially at a college."

Harbaugh did not reference any specific players and said he had no involvement in ongoing cases such as those of former Michigan players James Hudson and Oliver Martin, who are requesting immediate-eligibility waivers at Cincinnati and Iowa, respectively. Hudson cited mental health issues he experienced at Michigan in his waiver request, which was denied.

Hudson, who is appealing the NCAA's decision, responded to a tweet about Harbaugh's mental health comments Friday, tweeting, "You cannot be serious."

Harbaugh said his main point in raising the mental health issue, however, was that student-athletes shouldn't have to specify the reason they want to transfer.

"I care very deeply about mental health, I'm not saying everybody's lying about that," Harbaugh said. "... Just saying, 'OK, this is America. You started at this school, you didn't like it and for whatever the reason is, you're freely allowed to transfer to any other school like any other human being would have a right to do.' That's really the bottom line."

Rizzo hits slam after 9-year-old requests homer

Published in Baseball
Friday, 19 July 2019 20:23

CHICAGO -- Before Friday's game against San Diego, 9-year-old Matteo Lambert of Vienna, Virginia, met Anthony Rizzo in the Chicago Cubs' dugout and gave him a note asking for a "moonshot" on behalf of group running a 5K in Grant Park this weekend to raise money for kids with cancer.

Rizzo followed with a go-ahead grand slam, his first home run since June 15.

"That was for him," Rizzo, a Hodgkin's lymphoma survivor, said after the Cubs overcame a three-run deficit to beat the Padres 6-5. "That's really special for him to come and hang out there."

Javier Baez also homered for the NL Central-leading Cubs, who have won six of seven since the All-Star break. Chicago overcame an early home run by Manny Machado that built a 3-0 lead.

Josh Naylor tied the score 5-5 in the eighth inning against Pedro Strop (2-3) with his first career pinch homer, but the Cubs went back ahead in the bottom half.

Rizzo singled off Craig Stammen (6-5), rookie shortstop Fernandez Tatis Jr. threw Addison Russell's grounder into center field for an error, Jason Heyward was intentionally walked and David Bote hit a grounder to third. Machado threw home for a forceout and catcher Francisco Mejia threw to first, even though he didn't have a play on Bote. The ball hit off the glove of first baseman Eric Hosmer and bounced into short right field as Rizzo scored on Hosmer's error.

"A couple young guys playing really fast, trying to do special things, and sometimes those plays just aren't there," Padres manager Andy Green said. "If you're going to make mistakes in the field, mistakes of aggression are the better kind of mistakes."

Craig Kimbrel struck out three around a four-pitch walk in the ninth for his fifth save in six chances. San Diego has lost five of six and 11 of 15.

Jon Lester made his 400th big league appearance and matched his career high by allowing 12 hits, giving up four runs in six innings. He needed 26 pitches to get through the first on an afternoon with a 93-degree temperature at game time.

"Yeah, it was miserable," Lester said.

Padres left-hander Eric Lauer gave up four runs, five hits and three walks in 4 2/3 innings in his first appearance since July 5. Lauer had gone on bereavement leave following the death of his father. He remained in the game after he was hit on the back by Albert Almora Jr.'s single in the third.

"We've got to hit lefties, man," Maddon said. "We got to figure that part of it out. That's a big part of moving down the road."

Hunter Renfroe hit a sacrifice fly in the first and Machado made it 3-0 in the third with his 24th homer, a two-run drive.

Rizzo's fourth career slam put Chicago ahead in the bottom half.

Mejia tied the score with an RBI double in the fifth, and Baez hit an opposite-field homer to right-center in the bottom half.

HELP WANTED

Chcago figures to be in the market for a left-handed reliever before the trade deadline. The return of Carl Edwards Jr. (strained left thoracic) from the IL left seven righties among eight relievers. LHP Randy Rosario was optioned to Triple-A Iowa. "It's always nice to have more than one," manager Joe Maddon said.

TRAINER'S ROOM

Padres: Manager Andy Green was optimistic RHP Garrett Richards (Tommy John surgery last July) will be available in late August. "He's on a relatively quick path, all things considered," Green said. "I think we're all excited about that possibility."

Cubs: LHP Cole Hamels (strained left oblique) took part in light throwing and was scheduled for another bullpen session this weekend. ... C Willson Contreras (sprained right arch) remained on pace to return from the IL when eligible Wednesday.

UP NEXT

LHP Joey Lucchesi (7-4) is scheduled to start Saturday for San Diego. LHP Jose Quintana (7-7) has won three straight starts for the Cubs.

T2 Diamond: Patrick Franziska, the man in form

Published in Table Tennis
Friday, 19 July 2019 15:27

Similarly, Sweden’s Mattias Falck reached the levels displayed at the Liebherr 2019 World Championships, Chinese Taipei’s Lin Yu-Ju excelled; China’s Fan Zhendong extracted revenge.

Meanwhile, China’s Zhu Yuling, who in recent times has not been blessed with success, returned to winning ways; colleague Ding Ning asserted her authority, Singapore’s Feng Tianwei revelled in the short game format.

Men’s Singles: Round One

…………Patrick Franziska provided the performance of the day; level after four games, he excelled in the five point scenario to beat China’s Liang Jingkun (11-10, 4-11, 11-8, 7-11, 5-1, 5-3).

…………Mattias Falck thwarted a possible recovery by Japan’s Koki Niwa (11-8, 11-8, 11-10, 10-11, 2-5, 5-3).

…………Fan Zhendong turned the tables; he beat Brazil’s Hugo Calderano (11-8, 11-10, 11-6, 5-2); the player against whom he had experienced defeat at the Seamaster 2018 ITTF World Tour Grand Finals.

…………Lin Yun-Ju showed his class; he accounted for Japan’s Jun Mizutani in straight games (11-9, 11-10, 11-7, 11-8).

Men’s Singles: Quarter-Finals

…………Top half: Ma Long v Lin Yun-Ju, Patrick Franziska v Wong Chun Ting

…………Lower half: Xu Xin v Mattias Falck, Fan Zhendong v Lin Gaoyuan

Women’s Singles: Round One

…………Han Ying proved too secure for Chinese Taipei’s Cheng I-Ching (11-8, 11-9, 9-11, 5-2, 5-2).

…………Feng Tianwei recovered from a two games to nil deficit to beat Japan’s Miu Hirano (8-11, 9-11, 11-10, 5-4, 5-3, 5-4).

…………Ding Ning ended the hopes of Romania’s Bernadette Szocs (5-11, 11-4, 11-7, 11-2, 5-2).

…………Zhu Yuling proved the model of consistency; she accounted for Japan’s Kasumi Ishikawa (11-6, 11-7, 11-0, 7-11, 11-8).

Women’s Singles: Quarter-Finals

…………Top half: Wang Manyu v Han Ying, Feng Tianwei v Ding Ning

…………Lower half: Zhu Yuling v Sun Yingsha, Miyu Kato v Chen Meng

Eldora & WoO Confirm Kings Royal Format

Published in Racing
Friday, 19 July 2019 15:55

ROSSBURG, Ohio – World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Car Series and Eldora Speedway officials revealed the format for the $175,000-to-win Kings Royal feature on Friday afternoon.

All time trial procedures will follow those set forth in the World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink (WoO) Sprint Car Series Rulebook, with the exception that the qualifying order will not be split into “A” and “B” flights.

Cars will time trial in order of the random pill draw conducted prior to the driver meeting. The fastest lap will determine heat group position.

The two fastest qualifiers who do not advance to first, second or third place in their heat race will start 19th and 20th in the 36th Kings Royal.

Meanwhile, the winners of “Jokers Wild” and “The Knight Before” each earn the right to make their qualifying attempt at any point during Time Trials for the Kings Royal regardless of their established pill draw. The drivers are still required to participate in the pill draw and must present their cars ready to qualify in front of the Media Center to be eligible.

If the same driver wins both Thursday and Friday’s feature races, only that driver has the privilege – there is no transfer of the privilege.

Using the traditional Kings Royal format, the results of qualifying will be staggered by time into six Heat Groups using an invert of six.

The heat group pole cars will be: A) 31st fastest; B) 32nd fastest; C) 33rd fastest; D) 34th fastest; E) 35th fastest; and F) the 36th fastest qualifier.

Saturday’s fastest qualifier will start sixth in heat group A; and the second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth fastest qualifiers will start sixth in Groups B through F, accordingly.

The order of the Heat Races will be determined by “The Joust,” a race eight-laps in distance among the fastest six qualifiers. It will be held after qualifying and prior to the heat races.

The starting lineup will be determined by a “Revenge Draw.”

The results will give those six drivers, by order of finish, the opportunity to move their entire heat race in the order of events – and steal away the according advancement.

For example, the third fastest qualifier is traditionally seeded into the third heat race, and the top-three finishers in the third heat race start fourth, ninth and 15th in the Kings Royal.

In 2019, the third fastest qualifier has been seeded into heat group C. If the third fastest qualifier wins The Joust, the driver has the first choice to move Heat Group C up or down in the order of events.

If they move their heat group to be the first heat race, they will be racing to start 6th, 7th and 13th. If they see a top competitor is up front in group F and could possibly start pole, they may choose to move their entire heat group to be the sixth heat race in the order putting themselves – and the rest of their heat race – in position to race for the pole, 12th or 18th in the Kings Royal.

Notably, a new right-rear tire is permitted for The Joust. If an incident during The Joust necessitates the need for a backup car in the heat race, the driver would retain their original start position without penalty.

If a driver or car is not able to continue further in the program following the conclusion of The Joust, they will be awarded last place monies ($3,000) from the Kings Royal.

There are six heat races of 10 laps in distance. The top-three finishers advance to the 36th Kings Royal.

First Heat Race: the winner starts sixth; second starts seventh and third starts 13th.

Second Heat Race: the winner starts fifth; second starts eighth and third starts 14th.

Third Heat Race: the winner starts fourth; second starts ninth and third starts 15th.

Fourth Heat Race: the winner starts third; second starts 10th and third starts 16th.

Fifth Heat Race: the winner starts second; second starts 11th and third starts 17th.

Sixth Heat Race: the winner starts on the pole; second starts 12th and third starts 18th.

Cars finishing fourth, fifth and sixth – that are not the two fastest qualifiers who do not finish in the top-three in their heat race – advance to the Last Chance Showdown.

Cars finishing seventh, eighth, ninth and 10th advance to the C-Feature.

The two fastest qualifiers not advancing from the heat races will start 19th and 20th in the Kings Royal.

There is one C-Feature. Cars finishing first through sixth advance to the Last Chance Showdown.

There is one Last Chance Showdown. Cars finishing first through fourth advance to the Kings Royal.

The top-three finishers from the six heat races will makeup the first 18 starters in the Kings Royal as explained above.

The #JokersWild on Thursday and #TheKnightBefore on Friday will follow the procedures of, and be pointed per, the World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Car Series.

The 36th Kings Royal on Saturday night is a WoO show-up points event.

An additional $5,000 in cash awards has been posted for drivers who have never qualified for the A-Feature at the Kings Royal.

One-thousand dollars each is up for the highest-finishing driver making their first Kings Royal A-Feature; the fastest qualifier who has never made a Kings Royal A-Feature; the top-finishing non-qualifier who has never made the Kings Royal; the top-finishing driver in the Jokers Wild who has never made the Kings Royal and the top-finishing driver in The Knight Before who has never made the Kings Royal.

Oilers ship Lucic to Flames in exchange for Neal

Published in Hockey
Friday, 19 July 2019 18:17

The Edmonton Oilers and Calgary Flames swapped contract problems on Friday, as winger Milan Lucic waived his no-movement clause to allow a trade for winger James Neal.

The Oilers included a conditional third-round pick in 2020. They also retained salary on the deal.

Lucic, 31, signed a seven-year, $42 million free-agent deal with the Oilers in July 2016 as a physical forward to play with young star Connor McDavid. But his offensive numbers dramatically fell off, with just 104 points in 243 games with a 9.8 shooting percentage. His $6 million annual cap hit through 2023, with a full no-move clause through 2021, made his contract an albatross for new general manager Ken Holland.

Neal, 31, signed a five-year, $28.75 million free-agent deal with Calgary in July 2018, with an annual cap hit of $5.75 million. His lone season with the Flames was a disaster; after scoring more than 20 goals in his first 10 NHL seasons, Neal scored just seven in 63 games with the Flames and failed to find consistency in their lineup. His contract had no trade protection.

The Oilers' salary retention means the Flames have a $5.25 million average annual value on Lucic while the Oilers keep $750,000 on their cap.

The key for Edmonton in the trade, besides Neal's potential offensive upside, is flexibility. Not only can he be exposed in the eventual Seattle expansion draft, but the Oilers could buy out his contract without the signing-bonus burdens that Lucic's contract contains. Lucic is owed $8.5 million in guaranteed money beginning next summer.

The Edmonton Oilers and Calgary Flames swapped contract problems, as winger Milan Lucic waived his no-movement clause for a trade for winger James Neal.

The deal:

Oilers get: RW James Neal

Flames get: RW Milan Lucic, conditional third-round pick in 2020


Edmonton Oilers: A-

“Get in!”

Bo Jin yelled at his ball as his 30-foot birdie putt rolled toward the hole Friday at Inverness Club’s par-4 18th hole. The ball listened, dropping and giving Jin a 1-up victory over Kelly Chinn in the semifinals of the U.S. Junior Amateur.

Jin, a 17-year-old from Beijing, will face Preston Summerhays, a 4-and-3 winner over Joe Pagdin in the other semifinal, in Saturday’s 36-hole final.

The younger brother of 2015 Asia-Pacific Amateur champion Cheng Jin, Jin entered the week ranked No. 777 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking and winless in national amateur and junior events. His best finish is a T-2 showing at last year’s AJGA Junior Players.

He’ll have a chance to break through Saturday after winning a thrilling match over Chinn. Jin built a 3-up lead through five, capping that run with a long birdie make at the par-3 fifth. However, Chinn got two back with pars at Nos. 6 and 7.

Later in the match, Chinn birdied the par-4 11th and parred the par-3 12th to tie things up. And when Jin built another 2-up lead with a 12-foot eagle make at the par-5 13th and par at the par-4 15th, Chinn won Nos. 16 and 17 to send the match to No. 18.

In the end, though, it was Jin willing his ball in the hole at the last and punching his ticket to the final.

Summerhays will be waiting after a convincing win over Pagdin, a likely GB&I Walker Cupper this year at No. 41 in the WAGR.

Pagdin held a 2-up advantage after seven holes before Summerhays won four straight holes and took a 2-up lead of his own. Pagdin was noticeably gassed after a two-month stretch that’s included the U.S. Junior, European Boys Team Championship, Wyndham Cup, The Amateur, St. Andrews Links Trophy and Thunderbird International Junior. He managed to halve the par-4 12th with bogey, but three holes later Summerhays was sinking an 8-footer for par to seal the victory.

Summerhays, the 16-year-old son of instructor and former Tour player Boyd Summerhays (and nephew of current Tour pro Daniel Summerhays), is coming off his second straight Utah State Amateur victory and at No. 208 in the WAGR is, like Jin, looking for his signature national win.

Soccer

Almada golazo gives win to Messi-less Argentina

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Basketball

Nets' Watford, Pacers' Turner fined for altercation

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O's reinforce rotation, sign Gibson to 1-year deal

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