Pakistan’s Abid Ali cleared of concussion after warm-up blow

Pakistan's Abid Ali acknowledges the crowed as he walks back to pavilion after his dismissal for 174 runs during the third day of the second Test cricket match between Pakistan and Sri Lanka at the National Cricket Stadium in Karachi on December 21, 2019. (AFP)
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Updated 20 July 2020
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Pakistan’s Abid Ali cleared of concussion after warm-up blow

  • He will miss Sunday’s fourth and final day as a precaution
  • Pakistan are set to face England in a three-Test series that begins at Old Trafford on August 5

Manchester, United Kingdom: Pakistan opener Abid Ali has been cleared of concussion after being hit on the helmet Sunday while playing in an intra-squad match on the tour of England, a team statement said.
Abid was fielding at forward short leg on the third day of four at Derby when he was struck by a Haider Ali flick off Mohammad Abbas.
He will now miss Sunday’s fourth and final day as a precaution although the team doctor said he had shown no sign of concussion even after a scan.
“Abid is absolutely fine and will be available to resume training on Wednesday following Tuesday’s rest day,” Dr. Sohail Saleem said in a Pakistan Cricket Board statement.
“He underwent a precautionary CT scan which has also returned normal (findings).”
But left-handed batsman Khushdil Shah, a Twenty20 specialist, has been ruled out for up to three weeks after suffering a fracture in his left thumb while batting during a training session on Saturday.
Khushdil, not playing in the ongoing intra-squad game, won’t be available for the second four-day practice match, which also takes place in the Midlands town of Derby from July 24-27.
Pakistan are set to face England in a three-Test series that begins at Old Trafford on August 5 before concluding with two matches at south coast county Hampshire’s Ageas Bowl headquarters.
They return to Old Trafford for three Twenty20 internationals with England at the Manchester ground from August 28 to September 1.
England are currently playing the West Indies in the ongoing second Test at Old Trafford as part of a three-match series that marks the return of international cricket from the coronavirus lockdown.


Timberwolves maul Nuggets, Brunson fires Knicks over Pacers

Updated 15 sec ago
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Timberwolves maul Nuggets, Brunson fires Knicks over Pacers

  • Remarkably, Minnesota’s dominance was achieved without Rudy Gobert, the Frenchman who is one of the defensive pillars of the Timberwolves lineup
  • Knicks talisman Brunson finished with 43 points, six rebounds and six assists to give New York the early advantage in their best-of-seven conference semifinal

NEW YORK: The Minnesota Timberwolves produced a dominant defensive display to seize a commanding 2-0 lead in their best-of-seven playoff series against the Denver Nuggets with a 106-80 road victory on Monday.

The third-seeded Timberwolves harassed Denver relentlessly to claim a second straight win over the NBA champions as the series heads back to Minneapolis for Game 3 on Friday.

Karl-Anthony Towns and Anthony Edwards scored 27 points apiece but the star of the show was Minnesota’s suffocating defensive effort, which knocked Denver out of their stride almost from the tip-off.

The Timberwolves finished with 11 steals and 12 blocks, in sharp contrast to Denver who posted just six steals and five blocks.

Remarkably, Minnesota’s dominance was achieved without Rudy Gobert, the Frenchman who is one of the defensive pillars of the Timberwolves lineup.

Gobert skipped the game in order to be with his partner after the birth of the couple’s son earlier Monday.

“When you don’t got the defensive player of the year, you got to step your game up,” Towns said afterwards.

“We all understood the challenge coming in against the defending champions, a really good team, with some of the best players the game’s ever seen.

“We just wanted to come here and find a way to win the game.”

The normally unflappable Nuggets may also be without star point guard Jamal Murray for Game 3.

Murray was caught on camera hurling a heat pack onto the court in the second quarter, raising the possibility of a suspension when the incident is reviewed by NBA disciplinary chiefs.

That incident was emblematic of the Nuggets’ woes in a game that saw Minnesota in control after they surged into a 28-20 lead at the end of the first quarter.

A disastrous second quarter for Denver saw them outscored 33-15 by Minneapolis, leaving the Timberwolves leading 61-35 at halftime.

Minnesota’s iron-clad defense never looked like surrendering that advantage in the second half and the visitors raced into a 32-point lead early in the third quarter to leave Denver’s Ball Arena in stunned silence.

Denver coach Michael Malone admitted: “We just got beat up in our building and we got embarrassed in front of our fans.

“The good thing is we’re not playing until Friday, so we have a chance to get away and think about what we want to do moving forward,” added Malone.

“I’m not worried about anything other than trying to win Game 3.”

In Monday’s other playoff game, Jalen Brunson had a scintillating fourth quarter as the New York Knicks edged the Indiana Pacers 121-117 in their Eastern Conference opener.

Knicks talisman Brunson finished with 43 points, six rebounds and six assists to give New York the early advantage in their best-of-seven conference semifinal.

But it was his ice-cool performance down the stretch that swept New York to victory in front of 19,812 fans at an electric Madison Square Garden.

The Knicks guard rattled in 21 points in the fourth quarter to complete his fourth straight playoff game with 40 points or more.

Donte DiVincenzo backed Brunson with 25 points while Josh Hart weighed in with a monster performance that included 24 points, 13 rebounds, eight assists, three steals and a block.

Myles Turner led the Pacers with 23 points while Pascal Siakam added 19.

“That’s what you love about Jalen,” Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau said after the win.

“I could go on and on about him, but the thing I love about him is he’s all about the team.

“All he cares about is winning. And he cares about his teammates, and in the end, whatever it is we need, he’ll provide.

“But I think the same could be said for all the guys.”

Brunson was the difference in a pulsating contest that saw neither side gain more than a single-digit advantage across four quarters.

The Pacers opened up a nine-point lead early in the fourth quarter before the Knicks came roaring back to lead 113-109 after Brunson’s step-back jumper with 2min 42sec remaining.

DiVincenzo also came up with a huge clutch play with 40 seconds remaining, nailing a 28-foot three-pointer to put New York 118-115 ahead.

Indiana got back to within one at 118-117 but a harsh offensive foul called against Turner on DiVincenzo with 13 seconds remaining proved decisive.

Game 2 takes place in New York on Wednesday.


Chasing third Olympic gold: For Kipchoge, the road starts in Kenya’s Rift Valley

Updated 30 min 22 sec ago
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Chasing third Olympic gold: For Kipchoge, the road starts in Kenya’s Rift Valley

  • Currently Kipchoge is one of only three marathon runners to have two Olympic titles (2016, 2021), alongside Ethiopia’s Abebe Bikila (1960, 1964) and Waldemar Cierpinski of Germany (1976, 1980)
  • Kipchoge has already checked out the hilly route in Paris, a course said to be unfavorable for him

KAPTAGAT, Kenya: Dawn has not yet broken over the highlands of Kenya’s Rift Valley when marathon great Eliud Kipchoge crosses through the gate of his training camp.

It’s barely 6:00 am.

Three months before the Olympic marathon on Aug. 10 in Paris — where he hopes to make history with a third gold medal — he is preparing to start the weekly “long run.”

Wearing a cap and gloves to protect himself from the drizzle and the cool morning air, the 39-year-old sets off at the front of the pack.

Joining him are other residents of the renowned Kaptagat training camp including Kenyan middle-distance star Faith Kipyegon but also local runners who come in the hope of being talent-spotted.

On the program that day: 30 kilometers (18 miles) pounding the local roads.

The athletes have abandoned the red dirt tracks that crisscross the surrounding forest, made muddy by the torrential rains which have been pelting Kenya for more than a month.

“Nature says no. And now it’s speaking very loud,” smiles Kipchoge’s longtime coach Patrick Sang.

Over the kilometers, the pack stretches out and splits apart.

Only the car carrying their coaches, Sang and 2008 Olympic 3,000m steeplechase champion Brimin Kipruto, protects the runners from the trucks and matatus (minibus taxis) which zoom past on the hilly course.

In the lead group, Kipchoge eats up kilometers at a steady pace. He will go on to complete the distance, with six other runners, in one hour 40 minutes.

“Everything is going well. I’m feeling good. But I think the next months will be more interesting,” Kipchoge tells AFP in an interview after the road session.

The former double world record holder is in the last stages of preparation which will lead him toward the goal of a lifetime — becoming the first person to win Olympic marathon gold three times in a row.

Currently he is one of only three marathon runners to have two Olympic titles (2016, 2021), alongside Ethiopia’s Abebe Bikila (1960, 1964) and Waldemar Cierpinski of Germany (1976, 1980).

“The Olympic Games is crucial for me,” Kipchoge says.

For him, Olympic titles are “bigger than the major marathons,” the six races on the circuit where he has won 11 times since 2014 (five in Berlin, four in London, one each in Tokyo and Chicago).

His ambition remains intact despite two recent poor performances, in Boston in 2023 when he came in sixth and in Tokyo in March where he only finished 10th — arousing criticism and doubt about his future.

“I’m old enough to handle any setback. I know sport is not about performing every day,” he counters, saying he believed his low place in Tokyo was down to “fatigue.”

Kipchoge has already checked out the hilly route in Paris, a course said to be unfavorable for him.

“I prepare specifically on the hills and downhills but generally, I want to be fit enough.”

To reach his peak performance, Kipchoge sticks to an abstemious life and trains hard.

“Eliud is very consistent... but the way he is really focusing on Paris, it’s something else,” says Victor Chumo, a member of the team that helped him beat the mythical two-hour barrier in 2019, running 1:59:40 during an unsanctioned race in Vienna.

“He is more aggressive than in previous years. The way he trains, the way he rests, he is reporting to the camp earlier than before... That shows he is going for something special.”

“His mind is already in Paris,” adds Daniel Mateiko, a young Kenyan hopeful in long-distance running who trains alongside him in Kaptagat.

Kipchoge’s preparation is also punctuated by anti-doping controls, which the Kenyan athletics federation has reinforced under pressure from international authorities.

“This year, it has been more frequent,” he says, with a test for performance-enhancing drugs now every week compared to once or twice a month previously.

“There’s a lot of improvement, they have been doing a great job,” he says of the drug testing. “But consistency should be there.”

The countdown is on toward what could well be his last Olympics, but Kipchoge doesn’t want to talk about it: “I’m taking one step at a time.”

But his return to the French capital is rich with symbolism. It was there that in 2003, at the age of 18, he won his first international crown: becoming 5,000m world champion ahead of two legends, Morocco’s Hicham El Guerrouj and Kenenisa Bekele of Ethiopia.

“Paris is where my life started in athletics 20 years ago.”


Wilson survives Jones fightback to win World Snooker final

Updated 07 May 2024
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Wilson survives Jones fightback to win World Snooker final

  • A clearly emotional Wilson eventually triumphed 18-14 in the final at Sheffield’s Crucible Theatre in northern England
  • Jones was only the ninth qualifier in 47 years at the Crucible to reach the final

SHEFFIELD, United Kingdom: Kyren Wilson held his nerve on Monday as he overcame an impressive fightback from qualifier Zak Jones to win snooker’s World Championship title for the first time.

A clearly emotional Wilson eventually triumphed 18-14 in the final at Sheffield’s Crucible Theatre in northern England but only after Jones, who lost the first seven frames of the best of 35 contest, had won three frames in a row from 17-11 down to give himself hope of a remarkable rally.

But in the end the 12th-ranked Englishman regained his composure sufficiently to see off his Welsh opponent.

“Can you imagine how embarrassing it would have been if I’d lost and Bailey is dressed like that?” Wilson, pointing to his son, dressed in classic waistcoat and bow tie snooker attire, told the BBC.

The 32-year-old added: “I’d like to say sorry to Jak for that outburst (shouting ‘come on’ on match ball) but it does just mean so much to all of us.

“My mum and dad have remortgaged and sacrificed their whole lives to get me here. My brother and wife too. The list goes on and on, it’s a massive team effort.”

Wilson paid tribute to the resilient Jones by saying: “He was so tough and I don’t know if there’s many people left in Wales the amount that were cheering for him!

“Me and Jak have come through the junior ranks together. This is Jak’s first final, let alone a World final, and he’s conducted himself in an amazing fashion and I’m sure he’ll be back.”

A gracious Jones said: “I congratulate Kyren and family. They deserve it so much. If anyone deserves it, he does.”

Jones was only the ninth qualifier in 47 years at the Crucible to reach the final and he came within sight of emulating Terry Griffiths, his fellow Welshman, in 1979 and Shaun Murphy in 2005 in winning the title.

“It’s been an unbelievable tournament for me. About a month ago I was twitching in my first qualifying match. It’s been a long month but I’m happy with it.”

During his stirring recovery in Monday’s concluding evening session, Jones even threatened a maximum 147 break after potting the first 12 reds and blacks.

Jones had started Monday’s morning session five frames down at 11-6 behind but twice reduced Wilson’s lead to three frames.

Wilson, however, restored his advantage to lead 15-10 heading into the evening’s play.

Jones, who had defeated seeds Zhang Anda and Judd Trump en route to the final, hit back with his first century of the final to cut Wilson’s lead to 16-11.

The 28th frame saw Jones clear to the colors to force a re-spotted black only for Wilson to move within a frame of victory thanks to a stunning pot off three cushions.

Jones ensured there would be a mid-session interval with a break of 67 as he started to claw his way back after looking like he might become only the third player, after John Parrott in 1989 and Jimmy White in 1993, to lose the world final with a session to spare.

But in the end he had left himself with just too much to do as Wilson regained his composure.


Major League Soccer must attract best players to grow: Infantino

Updated 07 May 2024
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Major League Soccer must attract best players to grow: Infantino

  • Infantino said Inter Miami’s signing of Lionel Messi, and the club’s acquisition of other big-name players such as Luis Suarez and Sergio Busquets, had proven the demand for top talent among US fans

LOS ANGELES: FIFA president Gianni Infantino said Monday Major League Soccer needs to sign more top players in order to boost the profile of the sport in the US.

Infantino, speaking at a conference in Los Angeles, said he told MLS officials recently that bringing in the world’s best players would take football to the next level.

“I told them you have to be a bit more bold, a bit more in the game,” Infantino said at the Milken Institute Global Conference. “Bring in the best players.”

Infantino said Inter Miami’s signing of Lionel Messi, and the club’s acquisition of other big-name players such as Luis Suarez and Sergio Busquets, had proven the demand for top talent among US fans.

The FIFA chief alluded to the record 65,612 crowd who flocked to the New England Revolution’s recent home game against Miami at Gillette Stadium, home of the NFL’s New England Patriots.

“The ‘Messi effect’ if we want to call it that way, you see Messi and Inter Miami filling stadiums, and not MLS stadiums but NFL stadiums,” Infantino said.

MLS salary and roster restrictions mean that teams are unable to spend freely when it comes to signing top players.

However the league has faced growing calls — not least from broadcast partner Apple TV — to relax those rules in order to enable clubs to target more top talent.

Infantino said bringing in top talent would ultimately reap dividends at grass roots level in North America, encouraging young players to believe they could forge a career in soccer.

“We want to see the best so we need to bring them the best players, but also the best game, and the best spectacle,” Infantino said.

“For this we need to invest in the players because we want to show to the kids who play soccer when they are at school or when they are very young, that there is a path in soccer to glory to become one of these world stars.

“This is what maybe they don’t see yet. They see it in basketball, American football, in baseball and ice hockey. But in soccer, it’s still kind of far away. You have to go to Europe. And is there really a great American soccer player?“


Man Utd rut ‘not good enough’ but Ten Hag vows to fight on

Updated 07 May 2024
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Man Utd rut ‘not good enough’ but Ten Hag vows to fight on

LONDON: Erik ten Hag took responsibility for Manchester United’s miserable showing in a 4-0 thrashing by Crystal Palace on Monday, but said he is still the right man to turn the club’s fortunes around.
Palace completed a first ever league double over United in style as Michael Olize scored twice, while Jean-Philippe Mateta and Tyrick Mitchell were also on target for the in-form Eagles.
Defeat left Ten Hag’s men eighth and at risk of both their worst ever Premier League finish and missing out on European competition next season.
The Dutchman’s future is in doubt with structural change ongoing at Old Trafford since British billionaire Jim Ratcliffe bought a minority stake and took sporting control of the club earlier this year.
“It’s clear and it’s obvious this is under-performing,” said Ten Hag. “We didn’t act how we want to do it and this is by far not good enough.”
Ten Hag’s options were again limited by a mounting injury list.
Captain Bruno Fernandes missed a club game through injury for the first time in his career, while England international duo Marcus Rashford and Harry Maguire were also absent.
The makeshift center-back pairing of Casemiro and Jonny Evans were torn apart by Palace’s pace and invention.
“Absolutely,” added Ten Hag on whether believes he is the right man to lead United forward.
“If we have the right players available we have a good squad but we miss almost the whole back-line and then we have problems.
“I will keep fighting and I prepared the team in the best way I could do. It was not good enough, by far not good enough, so I have to take the responsibility for that but I will find the energy and I will prepare them for Sunday.”
Worse could be to come for Ten Hag when title-chasing Arsenal visit Old Trafford at the weekend.
United have never failed to finish in the top seven in the Premier League era and must do so or beat Manchester City in the FA Cup final to qualify for Europe.
But the embarassing scoreline at Selhurst Park is not unprecedented during Ten Hag’s reign.
United lost 4-0 at Brentford, 7-0 to Liverpool and 6-3 away to Manchester City during his first season in charge.
This season they have conceded 81 goals in all competitions, the club’s worst tally since 1976-77.
After a disappointing early exits from both the Champions League and League Cup, a FA Cup run has offered Ten Hag some relief.
But they booked their place in a second consecutive final only by surviving a penalty shootout against second-tier Coventry after blowing a 3-0 lead to draw 3-3.
“That was tough to watch,” said former United midfielder Paul Scholes of the Red Devils’ display at Palace. “That could have been 7-0.”
Ratcliffe’s INEOS group have already begun making appointments they hope will turn around a decade of decline at the 20-time English champions.
Jason Wilcox has been named the club’s new technical director, while Newcastle’s Dan Ashworth has been targeted as sporting director and former Manchester City executive Omar Berrada will take over as CEO.