Lucky-loser Peangtarn ousts French opponent for 1st home WTA match win #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

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Lucky-loser Peangtarn ousts French opponent for 1st home WTA match win

Feb 11. 2020
Peangtarn Plipuech

Peangtarn Plipuech
By Lerpong Amsa-ngiam

Lucky-loser Peangtarn Plipuech, a 27-year-old Thai player, capitalised on her persistent baseline game to upset world No 165 Chloe Paquet of France 7-6 (7-3) 3-6 6-4 in the US$275,000 WTA GSB Thailand Open at the True Arena in Hua Hin on Monday (February 10).

 

Petra Martic, Elina Svitolina (1st and 2nd from left) and Wang Qiang (right) during the opening ceremony.

Despite losing in the final qualifying round on Sunday, Peangtarn entered the main draw after Canadian star Eugenie Bouchard withdrew with injury.

Ranked 286th, she ran down all shots from the big-hitting Paquet, forcing error after error from the impatient opponent to prevail in two hours and 48 minutes.

“I didn’t expect anything coming into this match as I got in as a lucky-loser while my opponent has better raking,” said Peangtarn who has never advanced into round two of a home WTA event “I was so tired after this match but the win was really worth it,” added the Thailand national player.

This is her first WTA Tour. She will play the winner between seventh-seeded Zhu Lin of China and Varvara Flink of Russia in round two.

“I will have to play an even tougher opponent in the next round. I hope I can have another good match,” the Thai No 1 added.

Earlier in the day, fourth-seeded Sai Sai Zheng of China beat Natalija Kostic of Croatia 7-6 (8-6) 6-0. Eight-seeded Nao Hibino of Japan ousted Arina Rodionova of Australia 7-6 (7-5) 7-5. Storm Sanders of Australia moved past Ulrikke Eikeri of Norway 6-3 6-4 while Leonie Kung of Switzerland toppled Thai wildcard holder Patcharin Cheapchandej 6-0 6-3.

Top seed and world No 4 Elina Svitolina of Ukraine arrived in Hua Hin on Monday morning. She is to face Bibiane Schoofs of the Netherlands in the first round.

Leonie Kung of Switzerland  

LPGA Thailand cancelled due to coronavirus concerns #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

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LPGA Thailand cancelled due to coronavirus concerns

Feb 10. 2020
By THE NATION

The 14th edition of the LPGA Thailand and the Women’s World Championship have been cancelled in the wake of the novel coronavirus, the LPGA said in a statement released on Monday.

The country’s biggest golf tournament (with US$1.6 million in prize money) was originally due to be held in Pattaya from February 20-23. The HSBC Women’s World Championship in Singapore, scheduled for the following week, has also been cancelled.

“Due to the continued health concerns and recent advisories in some Asian countries that large-scale events should be cancelled or postponed as a result of the coronavirus, the LPGA and its partners have made the decision to cancel the 2020 Honda LPGA Thailand, which was scheduled to take place in Pattaya, Thailand, and the 2020 HSBC Women’s World Championship, which was scheduled to take place February 27-March 1 in Singapore,” LPGA said in a statement.

“It is always a difficult decision to cancel events and the LPGA greatly appreciates the understanding and all the efforts made by our title sponsors (Honda and HSBC) as well as IMG to host incredible events for our players. The health and safety of our players, fans and everyone working on the event is always our highest priority. While we are disappointed that these tournaments will not take place this season, we look forward to returning to Asia soon,” the LPGA said.

The LPGA Thailand was first held in 2006. Amy Yang of Korea won her third title last year, the most by a player in the tournament’s history.

Earleir, the Women’s Amateur Asia Pacific Golf Championship, initially due this week in Pattaya, was also cancelled.

Full house: Quartararo remains untouchable on Day3 #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

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Full house: Quartararo remains untouchable on Day3

Feb 10. 2020
By THE NATION
Frenchman fastest despite the timesheets tightening up – and some long runs raising a few eyebrows

Fabio Quartararo (Petronas Yamaha SRT) made it a full house at the Sepang Test as he topped the timesheets once again on Sunday, with the Frenchman putting in a 1:58.349 to end the session close to the fastest ever lap of the Malaysian venue. He had some close company, however, with LCR Honda Castrol’s Cal Crutchlow taking second place, 0.082 off, and Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) taking third within 0.101 of the top. All manufacturers ended the test within 0.345.

The weather was on side again on Sunday, with only the last half hour or so affected by rain – but a few finished a little early whether by design or mishap. For Quartararo it was a shorter day than Saturday, as the Petronas Yamaha SRT rider put in 57 laps, setting his fastest on his 17th. Teammate Franco Morbidelli, on his “A-spec” machine, did 58 laps and ends the test in P13.

Valentino Rossi (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) was actually the second fastest Yamaha rider on Sunday. His best was a 1:58.541 and that puts him in fifth after just over a half century of laps. Rossi’s teammate Maverick Viñales, meanwhile, was way down the timesheets yet positive about the test; his best a 1:59.169 in P18 – but after a whopping 83 laps and some impressive long run pace. On Saturday evening, the Spaniard was especially impressed by the top speed improvement from the new engine.

Test rider Jorge Lorenzo was out on track on Sunday too, with the Spaniard adding another 46 laps to the Iwata marque’s program and proving a key point of interest. But Yamaha had another slightly different talking point too – something that looks very much like a holeshot device, spotted on Viñales’, Rossi’s and test rider Katsuyuki Nakasuga’s machinery.

Honda’s test program workhorse Cal Crutchlow kept them in the hunt for the top on Day 3. The Brit’s best was a 1:58.431 and, predictably, he was one of the most prolific on track, completing 69 laps. Reigning Champion Marc Marquez did 47 laps and was P12, his day ending in a mishap at Turn 15 – rider ok. The Spaniard also reported in his debrief that he’s more focused on getting the technical side of the new season sorted, rather than worried about his shoulder recovery.

His rookie teammate Alex Marquez was 16th and did 49 laps, ending the test less than half a tenth off getting into the 1:58s. Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) did a best of a 1:59.860 a bit further back, completing 48 laps.

Alex Rins was back in charge of the Suzuki teammate battle for supremacy on Sunday. The number 42 almost made it three bikes in a tenth but for a single thousandth, and he did an apt 42 laps, downing tools a little early. Teammate Joan Mir was P10 after 32 laps, his best a 1:58.736 despite a crash at Turn 9. The positivity from the Hamamatsu factory seems positively brimming after the test, and some impressive long run pace in the mid 59s made for good reading too.

Ducati, meanwhile, saw their top position on the timesheets taken over by Francesco Bagnaia (Pramac Racing) as the Italian put in a 1:58.502 to secure P4 – only 0.052 off Rins. Ducati Team’s Danilo Petrucci was sixth with a 1:58.606, and Jack Miller (Pramac Racing) eighth… but just 0.010 behind the Italian. Bagnaia and Miller both crashed at Turn 15, riders ok.

Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team) was a little further down in P14 with a best of 1:58.859, with every GP20 rider putting in around 50 laps each on Sunday. But Dovizioso sounded pretty satisfied, working on setup and feeling on the new tyre in the morning – and pointing out that both he and Miller set their best on the medium…

Johann Zarco (Reale Avintia Racing), meanwhile, continued his improvement on the GP19 and ends the test 15th on Day 3, getting down to a 1:58.951 after 42 laps. Teammate Tito Rabat did a best of 1:59.549.

Pol Espargaro (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) finishes the Sepang test in a similar position to where he started it, in seventh, but the number 44 was nearly a second quicker on Day 2. He only put in 34 laps on Sunday, but was also at the shakedown with KTM. His teammate Brad Binder had a pretty solid Sunday too as he remained close to fellow rookie Alex Marquez on the timesheets; the South African shaving nearly a second and a half off his Day 1 best.

Red Bull KTM Tech 3’s Miguel Oliveira, meanwhile, impressed on Day 3, putting in a 1:58.764 as he returns from injury – and slotting into P11 just ahead of reigning World Champion Marc Marquez despite doing only 22 laps. Oliveira’s teammate Iker Lecuona put in just 23 laps as well, but the Austrian factory also fielded test rider Mika Kallio as the Finn took over from Day 2 hero Dani Pedrosa. Kallio suffered a crash at Turn 15, rider ok.

Aprilia also leave Sepang securely belonging in the top ten, having hit the ground very much running with the new RS-GP. Aleix Espargaro led the way for the Noale factory once again as he took ninth with a 1:58.694, putting in 45 laps – and saying there was also more to come from a single lap, which was proving a challenge to maximise. And that’s borne out in the awesome long run pace the number 41 laid down, with a host of mid 59s. Test rider Bradley Smith was also on duty once again, adding 61 laps for the Italian marque.

That’s it from Sepang, now it’s time to head for Qatar for the second – and final – pre-season test. That starts in a couple of weeks on the 22nd of February, with the grid now facing just three days of track time before the season begins in earnest. Keep up to date with everything on motogp.com in the meantime!

CLICK HERE FOR FULL RESULTS
Crutchlow slotted Honda into second
Rins impressed with his longer run
Bagnaia put his GP20 into P4
Rossi was up into the top five on Day 3
Binder seems to be settling in
Aleix Espargaro was another whose race simulation made for impressive reading

Basketball and me, throughout the decades #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

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Basketball and me, throughout the decades

Feb 10. 2020
By Special To The Washington Post · Bob Brody · HEALTH

Nobody has ever mistaken me for any kind of an athlete – unless maybe you count chess. At 5-foot-10 and 160 pounds, with an average physique, bald and wearing glasses, I more likely resemble a highly determined actuary. Plus, a potential dealbreaker here, I’m 67.

I’ve played basketball an average of about once a week for 59 years. I’ve kept playing through everything in my life – college, engagement, marriage, honeymoon, quitting cigarettes and hard liquor, the births of our son and daughter, financial problems, the deaths of my father and mother-in-law, a hernia operation, nine full-time jobs and layoffs at the ages of 46 and 56.

Since 1977, I’ve played almost exclusively in the playground at Russell Sage Junior High School, right around the corner from the apartment complex where I live in Forest Hills, Queens. I’m now at least twice as old as most other players in the catch-as-catch-can pickup games out there – anyone can join in, but it’s predominantly kids and young adults from the neighborhood – and more likely three and even four times older. Some kids now address me as “mister” or “sir.” I have false teeth older than some teenagers. They’re still going through puberty while I’m getting colonoscopies.

“More people over age 50 than ever before are now active athletically,” says Michael Rogers, a professor in the Department of Human Performance Studies and director of the Center for Physical Activity and Aging at Wichita State University. “They grew up participating in athletics more than previous generations, and so now have more interest in continuing with it, even past age 80 or 90.”

If age is any indication, though, it’s unlikely I’ll be going at it like this for all that much longer. Time is fast running out on me. I’m nearing my expiration date. Eventually, inevitably, I’ll have to decide to stop playing. Mostly it will depend on whether I can still find good reasons to stick with it. Through the decades, my reasons for playing this game keep changing.

In my 20s, my motivation was to improve, to refine my techniques. In my 30s, I played out of curiosity to see how much better I might still get if I kept pushing myself, imagining myself raining jumpers from the top of the key and slashing through the paint on drives to the basket.

In my 40s, I played mainly to keep myself in decent working order, and also because it cleared my head of all the clutter that accumulated from work and fatherhood. Besides, it helped me sleep more soundly. By my 50s, I played because I was hooked on hoops, craving the adrenaline rush. As I entered my 60s, I played to get more return on investment, the dividends for my long-standing commitment, and to see if my luck would hold out and I could somehow pull off a shot or move I’ve never done before.

I never expected to be going at it out there for nearly so long. At 30, I figured I might last until 35 or 40; at 40, 45 or 50; at 50, 55 or 60, and so on. I’ve kept revising my projections upward. No one is more surprised at the outcome to date – nor grateful – than I.

“Physical changes accelerate after age 65 or so,” says Alfred Gellhorn, director of sports medicine in the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine and NewYork-Presbyterian. “By your late 60s, your muscle mass and endurance strength decline about 25 percent, and by age 80 as much as 50 percent. But weight training can prevent or even reverse those declines – to a degree.” He sees more patients 70- and even 80-plus maintaining vigorous athletic schedules, even, in some cases, despite chronic diseases such as osteoarthritis and other adversities such as hip and knee replacements.

It’s only natural that at age 67 I experience certain technical difficulties. My body has long since begun its gradual betrayal. I’m at least half an inch shorter now. My vertical leap, never exactly Olympian, now hovers in the single digits. So the only rebounds I get are those that come directly to me rather than those I have to go after. The grunting I sometimes hear is me bending low to grab for a loose ball.

I usually arrive at the basketball courts feeling stiff, sore and slow. Before any serious game, I warm up with going-through-the-motions routines for at least 15 to 30 minutes just to loosen my joints. My lower back tends to tighten if I play hard for much longer than about 45 minutes. Over the past half-century, I’ve suffered twisted ankles, sprained hamstrings, jammed fingers, a torn meniscus in my left knee, a touch of osteoarthritis and even a detached retina. Occasionally, I wonder whether I should be accompanied to every contest by a paramedic.

But I do most everything I know how to do to stay in training. Every winter for 30 years, I climbed the steps in our 22-story apartment building, going up and down four, five, six times to sharpen my footwork and tax my heart and lungs. I lift dumbbells and do crunches and punch away at a heavy bag in the gym in our basement. I take long walks around our neighborhood, here and there breaking into a short sprint. I follow a pretty strict diet, seldom overeating and often going with salmon, spinach, roasted chicken, broccoli, bananas, blueberries, walnuts and the like.

“The key to longevity is consistency and regularity and taking few long breaks,” says Summer Cook, an associate professor of kinesiology at the University of New Hampshire. “If you stop playing, you might never get back to it – and it could be harder to do so because people already active have more fitness to lose than the inactive. Listen to your body. Knowing how hard to push yourself is a skill that comes with a lifetime of experience.”

“It’s unnecessary as an older athlete to train hard to get results,” explains Jack Daniels, exercise scientist, running coach and two-time Olympic medalist in the modern pentathlon. “Less is more. So avoid overtraining. Doing aerobics for about 30 minutes a day is ideal. But you plateau after 30 minutes – it’s a mistake to believe 60 minutes twice as good as 30.” At age 86, he runs two miles a day and lifts weights three days a week for 30 minutes at a time.

I’ve already decided I’m going to keep going out there only if I can still hold my own. I’ll have to be a threat to score if I have the ball in my hands. The opponent I’m guarding should be at least a little worried that I can stop him in his tracks. I have to maintain the competitive standard I’ve set for myself. Otherwise, I’ll start grading myself on a curve, and to me that’s cheating.

So what’s going to keep me playing now?

Certain reasons never change. I play because in a life that’s almost exclusively mental, it feels good to get physical; because I’ve never forgotten how it feels to be the last player picked and it’s as if I’m still trying to make the cut for that eighth-grade team; because in an existence that often feels premeditated, I need an occasional blast of spontaneity; because you’re never too old to act young and frisky; and, finally, because we should all do our utmost, and by any means necessary, to detain death. For me basketball is more of a lifeline than ever.

“Mind-set has a lot to do with motivating people to achieve athletic longevity,” says Scott Trappe, professor of human bioenergetics and director of the Human Performance Laboratory at Ball State University. “It’s a lifestyle, being an athlete. The benefits of keeping yourself going are psychological, even therapeutic.”

Other keys to staying with it culled from experts? Keep your fitness routine well-rounded through cross-training, occasionally trying something different from what you’ve always done (I now play some tennis, too). Follow the latest research being reported, now that so much reliable information is available (you could start with the latest guidelines about exercise for older adults from the American College of Sports Medicine and the American Heart Association).

Take advantage, too, of improvements in athletic equipment, such as running shoes, as well as advances in technology, such as Fitbit, that give you feedback on your performance. Go for an intensity level of 6 or 7 on a scale of 1 to 10 to reap the best benefits. Remember that with age your body becomes wise about how much it can do as well as its limitations. Find the dose of activity that’s just right for you through trial and error. And always, especially after hard workouts, give yourself plenty of opportunity to rest and recover.

As an athletic Methuselah, I have a different attitude toward playing basketball now.

I no longer worry about anything. I take setbacks in stride. I joke around more out there now, usually about myself. If an opponent makes me look hapless, I accuse him of having no respect for his elders. If I’m breathing hard, I’ll ask for an oxygen mask. Sometimes I leave the courts saying I have to get home to oil my wheelchair.

Once, some kids tried to convince me to play just one more game. “Sorry,” I said, “I have to get back to my nursing home before curfew.” One young man, obviously quite gullible, asked, “You live in a nursing home?” I had to explain I was just kidding.

Sixteen months ago, I discovered yet another incentive to keep playing: I became a grandfather. So call me Grandpa Hoops. Suddenly I have no choice but for the show to go on. My dear Lucia may someday need me to teach her how to hold her own out there.

– – –

Brody, a consultant and essayist in New York, is author of the memoir “Playing Catch With Strangers: A Family Guy (Reluctantly) Comes Of Age.”

Hee Young Park wins ISPS Handa VIC Open in a playoff #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

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Hee Young Park wins ISPS Handa VIC Open in a playoff

Feb 09. 2020
Hee Young Park (LPGA Photo)

Hee Young Park (LPGA Photo)
By THE NATION

For the first time in 6 years, 6 months and 26 days, Hee Young Park is an LPGA Tour champion.

The 32-year-old from the Republic of Korea survived a four-hole playoff with countrywomen Hye-Jin Choi and So Yeon Ryu to win the 2020 ISPS Handa Vic Open at -8 overall. It is Park’s first victory since the 2013 Manulife Financial LPGA Classic and also comes just months after she nearly quit the game rather than face a trip to LPGA Q Series.

“I wasn’t going to Q-School because I thought this is enough. But I tried the Q-School, made the Q-School, finished second,” said Park, who now makes her home in Los Angeles. “That kind of gave some other confidence. And then I just want to (have) the rookie-year feeling, you know? Back to refreshed.”

Park started the day at -9, three strokes off the 54-hold lead held by Ayean Cho. Just as on Saturday, winds increased throughout the day and as the final group of Cho, Madelene Sagstrom and Alena Sharp fell back, Park, Ryu and Choi surged to the top of the leaderboard. Choi’s early 3-under 69 gave her the clubhouse lead at –8. Some 30 minutes later, Park and Ryu forced the second three-person playoff of the season. Park birdied the par-5 18th to pull into the playoff, while Ryu got up and down for par after her tee shot went out of bounds.

On the first playoff hole, Park just missed a 6-foot eagle putt that would have captured the win. On the following hole, Ryu missed her birdie putt to drop out of the playoff. After two more birdies, Choi’s tee shot went into the trees and her punch-out found the opposite hazard. Park ultimately two-putted for par and a hard-fought victory.

“I didn’t really watch the leaderboards, so until the 17th I didn’t know what my spot was and realized I was really close,” said Park. “So I try my best 18 holes and luckily made a birdie and I got a chance and keep grinding.”

Cho entered the round three strokes ahead of the field but stumbled to a final-round 9-over 81 to finish T16. Sagstrom also shot 81 and finished T20, while Sharp’s 5-over 77 was still enough to notch a top-10 finish.

HEE YOUNG PARK’S #DRIVEON STORY – FROM NEARLY QUITTING TO WINNING IT ALL

In August 2013, Hee Young Park was 15th in the Rolex Women’s World Golf Rankings. This week, she entered the ISPS Handa Vic Open 191st, a steep fall for the two-time LPGA Tour champion. Coming off 2019, a season she called her worst year ever, Park admitted that she nearly put her clubs away for good. Life had changed. She was happily married to Joojong Joe, a K-Pop music executive. Priorities were different. Golf wasn’t necessarily high on the list.

“I married and it was really busy (with a) different life,” said Park. “I’m married and I have more family now, a housewife and golf and a lot of things going on.”

It got so bad that in her 12th year on Tour, she had to go back to Q Series. She admits – she didn’t want to make the trip to Pinehurst. But her husband, ever supportive, convinced her to give it one last go. Eight rounds later and she finished second, regaining full LPGA Tour status. And she quickly paid off on that hard work, earning a win that she dedicated to all her support back home in Korea and California.

“(This is) payback to my family and husband, and then I think this is pay back for everything,” said Park. “I’m getting old compared to other Korean girls on the LPGA and they keep grinding. Because I made it, I won the event, and I’m just giving back to inspire to other young golfers.”

SO YEON RYU PLEDGES GENEROUS BRUSHFIRE DONATION

She was obviously disappointed with failing the close out the win, but So Yeon Ryu found many more positives than negatives in her T2 finish. “After I finished my first round, I didn’t expect I was going to be in a playoff, or that I was going to be in contention because I was quite far back off from the leader,” said the 29-year-old two-time major champion. “The leader was like 8 under or something and I was only 1 under.  Considering that, I finished pretty strong.”

 

Despite failing to close out the victory, Ryu is a winner in Australia. The South Korean pledged to donate half her winnings from both the ISPS Handa Vic Open and the ISPS Handa Australian Women’s Open to brushfire relief efforts in Australia.

 

“I feel like even though I’m Korean and even though I spent a lot of time in America, I feel like Australia’s like my second home,” Ryu said. “I have a lot of Australian staff; my coach is Australian, my physio’s Australian and I’m surrounded by a lot of Aussies.  I came to Australia quite a lot to do winter training since I was 18.  I love Australia, you know, food, wine, coffee, but most importantly people are so nice.

 

“I feel like without having that experience in Australia, I couldn’t be who I am these days, so I always really think about what Australia has been giving to me. Then I saw what happened in the bushfire, I was like, I want to do something. I just had to promise myself I’m going to play really well. I already promised myself I was going to donate half of the prize money. So, that was my motivation to play well, to donate more money.

 

“This is not just about me,” Ryu said. “I hope I can be the inspiration to other people because it already has been almost a month, maybe people might forget about it, so hopefully people keep thinking about this and keep willing to help Australia.”

 

CME GROUP CARES CHALLENGE – SCORE 1 FOR ST. JUDE

The CME Group Cares Challenge is a season-long charitable giving program that turns aces into donations. CME Group donated $20,000 for each hole-in-one made on the LPGA Tour in 2019, with a minimum guaranteed donation of $500,000 to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, which is leading the way the world understands, treats and defeats childhood cancer and other life-threatening diseases.

In Friday’s second round, Jing Yan made the third hole-in-one of the 2020 season, acing the 154-yard third hole of the Beach Course with a 7-iron. It was her fourth career hole-in-one and first in a competitive round, and brought the season total to $60,000 donated.

The 2019 LPGA Tour season saw 32 aces from 31 different players, for a total of $620,000 donated to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. This more than covers the average cost of $425,000 needed to treat a pediatric cancer patient.

TOURNAMENT FORMAT

Staged at 13th Beach Golf Links on Australia’s Bellarine Peninsula, men and women play on the same courses, at the same time, for equal prize money of $1.1 million USD. For the second consecutive year, the ISPS Handa Vic Open is jointly sanctioned by the LPGA Tour, the ALPG, the European Tour and the ISPS Handa PGA Tour of Australasia.

A field of 144 men and 144 women will play one round on each of the first two days across the Beach and Creek Courses. After the second round, the field will be cut to the leading 60 professionals plus ties for both men and women. A second cut will be made after the third round to the leading 35 players plus ties for both men and women. The third and fourth rounds will be conducted on the Beach Course.

DC Defenders top Seattle Dragons as XFL relaunches in D.C. #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

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DC Defenders top Seattle Dragons as XFL relaunches in D.C.

Feb 09. 2020
By The Washington Post
Jake Russell

WASHINGTON – A new era of football began on a cool, sunny Saturday afternoon at Audi Field with the return of the XFL. The DC Defenders defeated the Seattle Dragons, 31-19, before an enthusiastic crowd of 17,163 in a relaunch of a league that lasted just one season in 2001.

The first iteration of the league, founded by wrestling mogul Vince McMahon, was fueled by wrestling promotion, sex appeal and “tough” football. This reboot is taking a measured approach, embracing ideas to make the game more appealing to fans, such as the double-forward pass and options to tack on one, two or three points after a touchdown to replace the standard one-point kicking option.

As for the football itself, a few familiar faces played key roles in leading the Defenders to the win.

Quarterback Cardale Jones, who helped Ohio State win the 2015 national championship, completed 16 of 26 passes for 291 yards and two touchdowns.

Former Redskins wide receiver Rashad Ross, who lit up Week 1 of the Alliance of American Football last spring, caught two passes for 52 yards and one touchdown in his XFL debut for the Defenders.

The Seattle Dragons are led by former Redskins coach Jim Zorn. Zorn, who was 12-20 in his two seasons leading the Redskins, had no qualms about coming back to the District of Columbia.

“No emotions about coming back to D.C., although nice job by the XFL making that happen,” Zorn said after the game. “I really enjoyed it here. It’s very familiar. I actually enjoyed it because of the familiarity of being here.”

 

“You had a good sense, based on the energy in the stadium, that we all love football,” Defenders Coach Pep Hamilton said. “. . . D.C. is a great sports town. The energy was great.”

Jones found Ross for a 31-yard touchdown late in the third quarter to put DC up, 25-19, and putting a charge into the Buzzard Point crowd.

“I thought [the environment] was awesome,” Dragons quarterback Brandon Silvers said. “It’s a soccer stadium but it looked damn good as a football stadium. They definitely got a nice home crowd.”

Defensive back Bradley Sylve bumped the Defenders’ lead to 31-19 with a 69-yard interception return, giving DC touchdowns on offense, defense and special teams.

Dragons wide receiver Keenan Reynolds, the former Navy signal caller who set the NCAA Division I record for touchdowns from scrimmage (88) and rushing yards by a quarterback (4,559), returned four kickoffs for 82 yards.

The Defenders led off the scoring with a 34-yard field goal from Ty Rausa . The Dragons answered with the first touchdown of XFL 2.0, a 14-yard catch from Austin Proehl, the son of longtime NFL receiver Ricky Proehl. Seattle attempted a one-point conversion from the 2-yard line but the pass was intercepted.

DC retook the lead with 6:56 left in the second quarter after defensive back Elijah Campbell blocked a punt that was recovered in the end zone by linebacker Jonathan Celestin. The Defenders’ two-point conversion attempt from the 5-yard line was unsuccessful.

Trey Williams scored in the final minute of the first half to give the Dragons a 13-9 lead before Rausa drilled a 54-yard field goal to close the half at 13-12.

The Defenders opened up the second half with a flea flicker that resulted in a 39-yard touchdown to former Bowie State tight end Khari Lee. A 2-yard extra-point run by Donnel Pumphrey gave the Defenders a 19-13 lead.

Proehl then pulled in a 57-yard touchdown reception to knot the game at 19.

McMahon’s son and WWE minority owner Shane McMahon was in attendance at Audi Field for the first game of the new XFL.

“It’s totally different,” Shane McMahon said. “There’s zero comparison on that. This is starting over, starting fresh. First game. [I] wanted to be here, experience it, feel it for myself, feel the energy of the crowd. That’s why I’m sitting here today.”

The Defenders host the New York Guardians next Saturday at 2 p.m. on ABC.

#SepangTest Day 2: Quartararo flies on the 2020 Yamaha #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

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#SepangTest Day 2: Quartararo flies on the 2020 Yamaha

Feb 09. 2020
By THE NATION
The Frenchman reigns again, now on the new YZR-M1, as Miller takes second and Pedrosa slots KTM into third

Fabio Quartararo (Petronas Yamaha SRT) was once again the man at the top of the timesheets on Day 2 of the #SepangTest, but this time the Frenchman made his mark on the 2020 factory machine as he got a taste of the new YZR-M1 on Saturday. The man he deposed was Jack Miller (Pramac Racing), who was once again the fastest Ducati, after the Australian had held on to P1 for some time. Third was another stellar performance that stole some headlines as Dani Pedrosa – erstwhile master of Sepang – put KTM into the top three and only 0.090 off the top; his 1:58.662 most definitely an eyebrow-raiser.

Day 2 saw the weather play nice, with track time uninterrupted and that proving valuable for many – and many putting in a good number more laps on Saturday. Quartararo’s 72 laps were testament to that and followed up a performance on Day 1 that was impressive but, in some ways, could have been expected – with the number 20 already having shown scintillating speed on the 2019 Yamaha. Getting on the new machine and proving able to put in a 1:58.572 not long after ensured Day 2 was more than a simple rinse and repeat. Teammate Franco Morbidelli was also quick in fifth after 60 laps, 0.259 off the top on an “A-spec” 2020 machine – without the new air intake and reportedly without the new engine. He crashed at Turn 2, rider ok.

Maverick Viñales (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP), meanwhile, slotted in right behind the Italian – only 0.062 in further arrears, although he did crash, just as he did on Day 1. The number 12 did 69 laps as both he and teammate Valentino Rossi continued to work with three machines each, and Rossi was tenth overall after 60 laps. ‘The Doctor’’s best was a 1:59.116. Yamaha test rider Katsuyuki Nakasuga suffered a crash, rider ok.

At Ducati, it was Jack Miller who was once again the fastest man on Borgo Panigale machinery. He did 50 laps and only lost out on the top by 0.069, with the positive reports on Ducati’s 2020 machinery continuing. In terms of position it was a “tougher” day on the timesheets for his fellow GP20 riders, however, with Danilo Petrucci (Ducati Team) in P13 followed by Francesco Bagnaia (Pramac Racing) and Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team) in 14th and 15th respectively; all three within a tenth and all three putting in nearly 60 laps. Dovizioso crashed at Turn 6, rider ok, causing a brief Red Flag solely to make sure he was away from the track and racing line.

Johann Zarco (Reale Avintia Racing), meanwhile, beat the laptime he set on Day 1 by over half a second, although he maintained the same position, and Ducati Corse Sporting Director Paolo Ciabatti Ducati Corse was spotted in the box with the Frenchman. Zarco’s teammate Tito Rabat was just behind him in position but three and a half tenths in arrears.

At KTM, Dani Pedrosa was the star attraction on the timesheets, and the ‘Little Samurai’ did his fastest lap at Sepang International Circuit – no mean feat given his number of premier class poles and wins at the venue. Pol Espargaro sung his praises too. Espargaro ended the day in P8 after nearly fifty laps and was happy with his day despite a tip off at Turn 1 – working on the new chassis and testing it with different setups, citing some key improvements in grip and stability. Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) also improved, shaving eight tenths off his day one best and getting closer to fellow rookie Alex Marquez (Repsol Honda Team).

Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull KTM Tech 3) was P16 at the end of the day after 42 laps, continuing his comeback from injury and after also having taken part in the shakedown. Likewise his rookie teammate Iker Lecuona, who put in 41 laps as he adapts to the premier class, ending Saturday on a 2:00.396, although he did suffer a crash.

Just missing out on the top three after Pedrosa’s late lunge were Suzuki. The tables turned on the timesheets on Day 2 as Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) was the leading Hamamatsu factory machine in P4, a 1:58.731 putting him only a tenth and a half off the top after 54 laps. Teammate Alex Rins put in 63 laps, and set his best of a 1:58.978 on the new chassis… citing it as a key step in the right direction. Mir saw it more as a balance of positives and negatives. Test rider Sylvain Guintoli was also on track and he did 58 laps.

For Honda, it was a more muted day on the timesheets, but it was reigning Champion Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) who took back the honour of quickest for the factory after Cal Crutchlow’s (LCR Honda Castrol) P4 on Day 1. Marquez was ninth with a best of a 1:59.097 after 47 laps, although he crashed at Turn 3. Rider ok, bike less so. Crutchlow did 64 laps, with his huge workload continuing as he remains on point for test duty, and a best of 1:59.247 put him in P12.

Alex Marquez was top rookie once again although, as stated, had Binder for close company, and Takaaki Nakagami’s (LCR Honda Idemitsu) comeback continued to prove a challenge. He was P21 after 47 laps.

Aprilia’s new 90-degree V4 ended the day in P11 in the hands of Aprilia Racing Team Gresini’s Aleix Espargaro, with the number 41 putting in 43 laps and setting a best of 1:59.224. Top speed seems a key area of improvement so far, and test rider Bradley Smith was also out on track working on the project. He did 61 laps.

Now all that remains at Sepang is Sunday Funday, with only one test day left before the paddock packs up and heads for Losail International Circuit in Qatar – so tune in again for After The Flag from 10:30am CET and check out all the reactions on motogp.com!

Teenager Cho takes one-shot lead into final round #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

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Teenager Cho takes one-shot lead into final round

Feb 08. 2020
Leaderboard by LPGA

Leaderboard by LPGA
By THE NATION

It was a Saturday of survival at the 2020 ISPS Handa Vic Open.

With steady winds all day and gusts to 30 MPH, 19-year-old Ayean Cho returned a 2-under 70, one of just five under-par rounds, and surged to the top of the leaderboard at -12. Cho, the KLPGA Tour’s Rookie of the Year in 2019, carded five birdies and three bogeys in the day’s blustery conditions, including a birdie at No. 18 to pull one stroke clear of the field.

“It was very windy, so my shots were not as good as yesterday,” said Cho through an interpreter. “But my putts were good so I could finish the holes with good putts.”

If Cho emerges victorious on Sunday, she would be eligible for immediate LPGA Tour Membership. She could also defer that Membership to the 2021 season.

Sweden’s Madelene Sagstrom, who held the lead after each of the first two rounds, stumbled to a 2-over 74 on Saturday, but birdied the final hole to stay within one stroke of the leader. She remains in contention to become the first player since Shanshan Feng in 2017 to win consecutive events.

“I think around seven, eight, I was like are we actually going to make it? I was like am I going to get a ball in the hole today?” said Sagstrom, who had one eagle, one birdie, two pars, three bogeys and one double bogey in her first eight holes. “It was definitely a grind out there. It was really, really difficult and then the breeze got so, so hard.”

Canadian Alena Sharp rounds out the top three at -10, joining Cho in the under-par group after shooting 2-under 70 on Saturday. She is aiming for her first career LPGA Tour victory in her 313th start.

“Warming up today I just kept the ball low,” said Sharp. “Very thankful that I had a nice lesson from my coach a few weeks ago. He’s actually an Aussie, Brett Saunders, and we worked on keeping the ball down with my wedges and I just did it with every club today. And I think it helped keeping the ball lower, spin control, and I was right around the greens when I missed the greens, so I think it really helped me get a good score today.”

Korea’s Hee Young Park is fourth at -9, with So Yeon Ryu and Pei-Ying Tsai tied for fifth at -8. Ryu took advantage of playing in the morning wave, shooting the round of the day at 4-under 68 in relatively calmer wind conditions.

Sunday’s final round will include one group of players from both the men’s and women’s competitions. The LPGA Tour’s Peiyun Chien will tee it up alongside the European Tour’s Geoff Ogilvy and Sam Horsfield.

WITH A WIN

Ayean Cho would be eligible for immediate LPGA Tour Membership or could defer Membership to the 2021 season

Ayean Cho would be the first 19-year-old LPGA Tour winner since Nasa Hataoka at the 2018 TOTO Japan Classic

Madelene Sagstrom would become the first player to win consecutive LPGA Tour events since Shanshan Feng won the 2017 TOTO Japan Classic and Blue Bay LPGA

Madelene Sagstrom would become the eighth player from Sweden with multiple LPGA Tour victories

Alena Sharp would become the first Canadian player other than Brooke Henderson to win an LPGA Tour event since Lorie Kane at the 2001 LPGA Takefuji Classic

At 38 years, 11 months and 1 day of age, Alena Sharp would become the second-oldest first-time winner in LPGA Tour history, behind Fay Crocker, who was 40 years, 6 months and 18 days of age when she won the 1955 Serbin Open

ALENA SHARP OH-SO-CLOSE TO FIRST LPGA TOUR VICTORY

Alena Sharp has come close to victory before. Perhaps this week at the ISPS Handa Vic Open will finally be her time. The 38-year-old Canadian is competing in her 313th career LPGA Tour event and sits two strokes off the lead, tantalizingly close to a breakthrough first victory.

“I don’t really think about winning but know that it’s there and really just stay in one shot at a time like I did today,” said Sharp. “I didn’t get ahead of myself, it was one shot after the next. It wasn’t, oh, I’ve got to hit a good drive on this next hole. No, I’ve got to make this putt first. Really stay in the present and stick to the process.”

Sharp’s best career LPGA Tour result came at the 2016 CP Women’s Open, where she finished fourth. She has 12 other top-10 finishes, including a tie for sixth at the 2019 ISPS Handa Women’s Australian Open.

PLAYER NOTES

Rolex Rankings No. 34 Ayean Cho (69C-66B-70B)

  • Hit nine of 14 fairways and 10 of 18 greens, with 27 putts
  • Competing in her sixth LPGA Tour event; her best finish is 38th at the 2019 BMW Ladies Championship
  • Cho is in her second full season on the KLPGA Tour, where she had two victories in 2019 and earned Rookie of the Year honors

Maryland overcomes another early deficit, wins at Illinois to stand alone atop Big Ten #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

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Maryland overcomes another early deficit, wins at Illinois to stand alone atop Big Ten

Feb 08. 2020
By The Washington Post · Emily Giambalvo · SPORTS, BASKETBALL 

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. – In the middle of last month, after Maryland lost at Wisconsin, a sense of disappointment surrounded the Terrapins. The team that entered the season with lofty expectations had yet to win a true road contest, and the Terps already had lost three conference games. Three weeks later, here they are – victorious at No. 20 Illinois, winners of six straight Big Ten games, including three on the road, and standing alone atop the Big Ten.

Maryland surged past the Illini after a key defensive adjustment transformed an early hole into a 75-66 victory. The No. 9 Terps (19-4, 9-3 Big Ten) came back from 14 down, overcoming a double-digit deficit to win for the fifth time.

“We’re just confident and rolling,” guard Eric Ayala said. “Everything is clicking right now. . . . We kind of get out there and it’s just natural.”

Five players scored in double figures for Maryland, led by Anthony Cowan’s 20 points, including a 3-pointer with 2:34 to go to give Maryland a nine-point cushion. By that point, the Illini (16-7, 8-4) finally had run out of answers.

Cowan, who also had seven assists and four rebounds, had a full complement of teammates providing help. Darryl Morsell scored 15 points, Jalen Smith had 11 points and 11 rebounds for his sixth straight double-double, and Aaron Wiggins added 10 points. Ayala, who was held scoreless three days ago against Rutgers, had 12 in a bounce-back performance for the sophomore.

“There’s no good team that doesn’t have players that step up – especially in time of need, especially in a crazy environment like Illinois,” Cowan said.

The Terrapins dug themselves a deep hole early before they switched to a zone defense, combined with a full-court press, and changed the trajectory of the game. The Terps still trailed by double figures when they made the defensive change, yet they went into halftime down just 42-40.

“We kind of lost ourselves for a little bit,” Coach Mark Turgeon said. “The zone changed it for us. Got us back in the game. We started to make some shots, gave us confidence, and then we were able to play defense in the second half the way we play defense – play man-to-man, lock in, guard. Guys locked in.”

Maryland’s defense stayed taut after intermission, holding the Illini without a field goal for eight minutes to start the half. By the time Illinois’ Andres Feliz made a layup with 11:58 remaining, Maryland had built a 53-46 lead. But an 8-0 run for Illinois cut Maryland’s lead to one with 8:44 to go before Ayala and Morsell answered with timely 3-pointers.

When these teams played in December, the Terps overcame a 15-point deficit in the second half to win, 59-58, at Xfinity Center. Cowan hit a tying 3-pointer with 21 seconds left and then made the decisive free throw when Illinois fouled with two seconds remaining. In Friday’s rematch, the Illini jumped ahead with ease, and the Terps rallied again.

“We just feel like we’ve been through it, been through a lot in the season,” Cowan said. “But we’ve been down a lot. We just have to bounce back and that’s what we did tonight, especially in the first half.”

Illinois scored 29 points in the first 10 minutes while the usually solid Maryland defense couldn’t get stops. Maryland’s coaches picked up two technical fouls early in the game – first when Mark Turgeon was livid after Cowan was called for a charge and then again with a foul called on the bench about four minutes later.

After the early struggles, Turgeon decided to start pressing and defending in a zone at the 8:35 mark in the first half. The Illini “lost their rhythm,” Turgeon said. Illinois immediately turned the ball over thanks to Maryland’s pressure, and the Terps suddenly began forcing their hosts into misses. Wiggins made a 3-pointer at the first-half buzzer, trimming the visitors’ deficit to two. Through the first half, Turgeon reminded his group the deficit was far from insurmountable. Ayala said his teammates feel comfortable in those situations.

“I don’t think we get rattled when we get down,” Ayala said.

Donta Scott, who scored 11 points in his past four games combined, had seven points during a four-minute stretch, helping fuel Maryland’s first-half climb. Cowan scored 13 points in the first half on 4-for-5 shooting. Smith had a quiet opening 20 minutes, scoring only two points on three shots. But he found his form in the second half when Smith and the others charged ahead.

The game had all the hallmarks of this Terrapins team – the slow start, the rally, crucial defensive stops and clutch shooting. Maryland’s key players made meaningful contributions, and as has been the case so often through 23 games, they didn’t panic in the face of a double-digit deficit. This time, on the road, the victory left the Terps looking down at the rest of the Big Ten.

USWNT clinches Olympic berth with 4-0 victory over Mexico #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

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USWNT clinches Olympic berth with 4-0 victory over Mexico

Feb 08. 2020
By The Washington Post · Steven Goff · SPORTS, SOCCER

CARSON, Calif. – The U.S. women’s national soccer team moves from mission to mission, its appetite as ravenous as if it had never won a darn thing. Of course, the Americans have won a lot of things in three decades of sensational soccer, but as the years pass and coaches and players change, the hunger for greater honors remains insatiable.

Seven months after winning the World Cup, they predictably booked a place in the Olympics on Friday with a 4-0 victory over Mexico. They’ll arrive in Japan this summer as favorites for a fifth gold medal in seven attempts.

By the 14th minute, the outcome was all but settled, thanks to goals by Rose Lavelle and Sam Mewis.

Mewis and substitute Christen Press scored in the second half before an announced crowd of 11,292.

The qualifying tournament was, as expected, little hindrance: three easy group-stage victories and a semifinal triumph to clinch one of two berths from the Concacaf region.

Canada also secured passage Friday, defeating Costa Rica, 1-0, in a match played at one-third the speed of the U.S. performance. Sunday’s final is for bragging rights only.

The top-ranked Americans have not lost in more than a year, a string of 27 matches, and remain unbeaten in Olympic qualifying history. Aside from Canada, the region offers a test every few years. In 39 meetings with Mexico, the United States has lost once and tied once.

That one defeat was a big one – a 2011 World Cup qualifier in Cancun that forced the Americans to earn a berth via playoff.

Though that shocker occurred many years ago, the U.S. players were aware of the precarious nature of these short tournaments.

“They reminded themselves,” first-year coach Vlatko Andonovski said of his players ahead of Friday’s match. As the state of the women’s game improves, “we have to be at our best every time we step on the field.”

In the opening moments, they were. They were fierce and focused, eager to kill Mexico’s spirit before the visitors could gain a sip of confidence.

Lavelle scored in the fifth minute, gathering Megan Rapinoe’s clever, no-look pass and taking on two defenders.

The Washington Spirit midfielder could have tried infiltrating the penalty area by taking a central route. But with a golden left foot – a weapon that sealed the World Cup championship against the Netherlands last summer in France — Lavelle steered left and stung a 22-yard shot against the grain to beat goalkeeper Emily Alvarado to the far corner for her 12th international goal.

Nine minutes later, Mewis got into the act. Rapinoe served a low corner kick. At the near post, Julie Ertz let the ball pass through to Mewis for a rising 8-yarder.

For the rest of the half and after intermission, the Americans were not as sharp with their passing and squandered several opportunities.

Mexico was not going to recover from the deficit, but the score line bolstered the Mexican cause and left the Americans itching for more goals.

They came. In the 67th minute, Mewis scorched a free kick from the edge of the penalty area through a tangle of players and into the far side for her 18th U.S. goal.

Six minutes later, Press chipped a 12-yard shot over Alvarado after her initial bid was blocked, increasing her international total to 56.

In the first match eighth-ranked Canada defeated No. 37 Costa Rica to earn a fourth consecutive Olympic berth.

After winning bronze at each of the past two Summer Games, the Canadians are looking to take the next step. Friday’s performance, however, did not inspire confidence in getting to the gold-medal match.

“We definitely looked a little beyond the qualifying because we want to be at the podium again,” said Kenneth Heiner-Moller, Canada’s Danish coach. “I do think we have the team for it.”

Canada did not impress. Possession was abundant but ideas and opportunities were sparse.

“You can definitely tell the players brought some nerves onto the pitch,” Heiner-Moller said.

The breakthrough came in the 72nd minute, but even that was not without a touch of anxiety.

Substitute Deanne Rose, whose entry injected life into the attack, crossed into the 6-yard box. Jordyn Huitema, an 18-year-old forward from French club Paris Saint-Germain, one-timed a left-footed shot off the left post.

The ball returned to her for a quick, right-footed finish into the lower right corner of the net for her seventh goal of the tournament.

The Ticas have shown growth in placing players in leagues beyond their borders and qualifying for the 2015 World Cup, but for the fifth consecutive time, they fell a victory short of the Olympics.

Costa Rica wasn’t a threat but wasn’t intimidated either, engaging in a bruising match that produced several injury stoppages.

“As the game went on,” Costa Rica Coach Amelia Valverde said through an interpreter, “the team’s confidence was growing.”

If not of winning inside 90 minutes, the Ticas entertained thoughts of dragging the match into extra time or penalty kicks.

Huitema’s goal, however, shattered their hopes and set the stage for another regional showdown with the Americans.