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Australia smash India to win hockey gold on final day of Commonwealths – Sport

BIRMINGHAM: Australia demolished India 7-0 in the men’s hockey final on Monday to maintain their perfect record at the Commonwealth Games and end their gold medal hunt in style.

The six-time defending champions showed their opponents no mercy in sweltering conditions on the final day of sporting action in Birmingham.

Australia have won every gold medal in men’s hockey since the sport joined the Commonwealth Games program in 1998.

The dominant Australians were 2-0 up after the first quarter and two goals from Jacob Anderson helped put them 5-0 up after 30 minutes.

GOLD medalists England’s James Willstrop and James Declan (C) stand on the podium alongside silver medalists England’s Adrian Waller and Daryl Selby (L) and bronze winners Greg Lobban and Rory Stewart of Scotland during the medal presentation ceremony for the men’s doubles squash event of the Commonwealth Games at the University of Birmingham Hockey and Squash Center on Monday.—AFP

Nathan Ephraums scored his second to make it 6-0 and Flynn Ogilvie completed the route early in the final quarter.

Australia’s Blake Govers said the team had saved their best performance until last.

That’s what we pride ourselves on,” he said.“It’s awesome to do it without too much of a heart problem. We had to play with confidence and play forward and take the game on from the start, and that’s what we did. That’s the difference between the two games [final and semi-final against England].” Host nation England beat South Africa 6-3 to take bronze.

AUSTRALIAN opener Beth Mooney plays a shot as Indian wicket-keeper Yastika Bhatia looks on during the women’s Twenty20 cricket gold medal match of the Commonwealth Games at Edgbaston.—AFP

Australia have topped the medals table with 67 golds — 10 ahead of England. Canada are third with 26 golds and India have 22.

The closing ceremony takes place at Alexander Stadium later on Monday, bringing to an end 11 days of sporting action at the 22nd Commonwealth Games.

Elsewhere on Monday, Scotland’s James Heatly and Grace Reid won the mixed synchronized 3m springboard final, with England pair Noah Williams and Andrea Spendolini-Sirieix taking gold in the 10m event.

PV Sindhu of India competes against Canada’s Michelle Li during their women’s singles badminton final of the Commonwealth Games at the NEC arena on Monday.—Reuters

India celebrated a golden double in badminton.

World number seven PV Sindhu won the women’s singles, overcoming Canada’s Michelle Li while Lakshya Sen beat Malaysia’s Ng Tze Yong to win the men’s gold.

India’s Sharath Kamal Achanta beat England’s Liam Pitchford 4-1 in the men’s singles table tennis gold-medal match.

The best two weeks of my 40 years of life,” said the winner, who won three golds and a silver in Birmingham. “It can’t get better.”

Birmingham 2022 CEO Ian Reid said the Games had been a huge boost for the city and the surrounding area.

He said more than 1.5 million tickets had been sold, with most venues above 90 percent capacity.

ENGLAND’S Delicious Orie (R) in action against Sagar Ahlawat of India during their super heavyweight boxing gold medal bout at the NEC Hall 4.—Reuters

One of the goals at the outset was to put the city on the world map and instill that huge pride across everyone that lives in the region and I think we’ve achieved that,” he told a briefing on Monday. I think that can lead to much bigger and greater things.”

On Sunday, Australia won the first women’s cricket gold medal in Commonwealth Games history as Scotland’s Laura Muir captured the 1500m title on the final night of athletics.

Elsewhere, England’s women won hockey gold and Australia beat Jamaica in the netball final.

Hot favorites Australia held their nerve to beat India by nine runs in a Twenty20 thriller in front of a big Edgbaston crowd and partied on the pitch as the lights went out around the stadium.

It’s absolutely huge,” said left-arm spinner Jess Jonassen. We are blessed enough to be part of some winning World Cup teams but to win the first gold medal for women’s cricket in the Commonwealth Games, you’re only ever going to do that once.”

Victory underlined the dominance of Australia’s women, who are also world champions in the 20-over and 50-over formats.

Muir ended her Commonwealth Games campaign with a flourish by winning gold in the 1500m at the Alexander Stadium.

SCOTLAND’S Laura Muir celebrates winning gold medal in the women’s 1,500m athletics final at the Alexander Stadium.—AFP

The 29-year-old’s team-mate, 10,000m champion Eilish McColgan, just failed in her bid for memorable double, finishing second behind Kenya’s impressive world silver medalist Beatrice Chebet in the women’s 5,000m.

Muir, who won bronze in the 800m on Saturday, kicked for glory before the bell and ran a fairly moderate field — lacking two-time Olympic champion Faith Kipyegon — ragged, timing 4min 02.75sec.

Wyclife Kinyamal defended his men’s 800m crown in a time of 1:47.52. It was an impressive turnaround for the 25-year-old, who finished last in the final of the world championships in July.

New Zealand cyclist Aaron Gate won the men’s road race to collect his fourth gold medal of the Commonwealth Games. In the women’s race, Australia’s Georgia Baker won her third gold of the games.

England won hockey gold for the first time after holding off a fightback from Australia to win 2-1.

Second-quarter goals from Holly Hunt and Tess Howard ultimately provided decisive 24 hours after the men’s team had suffered semi-final despair at the hands of Australia.

There was more joy for Australia in the netball competition, with a 55-51 over Jamaica in the final.

Australia also shone at the Sandwell Aquatics Centre. Cassiel Rousseau took the men’s 10m platform title and Maddison Keeney won her second gold of the games in the women’s 3m springboard.

England’s Delicious Orie won super heavyweight gold on a busy night of boxing, beating India’s Sagar Ahlawat.

India won three other golds in boxing but Northern Ireland took five, including a special double for Aidan Walsh and his sister Michaela.

final standings

Tabulated under (position, country, gold, silver, bronze, total medals) 1 Australia 67 57 54 178
2 England 57 66 53 176
3 Canada 26 32 34 92
4 India 22 16 23 61 5 New Zealand 20 12 17 49
6 Scotland 13 11 27 51
7 Niger 12 9 14 35
8 Wales 8 6 14 28
9 South Africa 7 9 11 27
10 Malaysia 7 8 8 23
11 Northern Ireland 7 7 4 18
12 Jamaica 6 6 3 15
13 Kenya 6 5 10 21
14 Singapore 4 4 ​​4 12
15 Trinidad and Tobago 3 2 1 6
16 Uganda 3 0 2 5
17 Cyprus 2 3 6 11
18 Pakistan 2 3 3 8
19 Samoa 1 4 0 5
20 Barbados 1 1 1 3
20 Cameroon 1 1 1 3
20Zambia 1 1 1 3
23 Grenada 1 1 0 2
23 Bahamas 1 1 0 2
25 Bermuda 1 0 1 2
26 British Virgin Islands 1 0 0 1
27 Mauritius 0 3 2 5
28 Ghana 0 2 3 5
29 Fiji 0 2 2 4
30 Mozambique 0 2 1 3
31 Sri Lanka 0 1 3 4
32 United Republic of Tanzania 0 1 2 3
33 Botswana 0 1 1 2
33 Guernsey 0 1 1 2
35 Dominican 0 1 0 1
35 Papua New Guinea 0 1 0 1
35 Saint Lucia 0 1 0 1
35 Gambia 0 1 0 1
39 Namibia 0 0 4 4
40 Malta 0 0 1 1
40 Nauru 0 0 1 1
40 Niue 0 0 1 1
40 Vanuatu 0 0 1 1

Published in Dawn, August 9th, 2022

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Nick Kyrgios beats Daniil Medvedev at Canadian Open before US Open

Nick Kyrgios and Daniil Medvedev put on one heck of a show during their second round clash at the Canadian Open on Thursday morning (AEST) as the Australian continued his brilliant run of form ahead of this year’s US Open.

Fresh from winning the Citi Open title in Washington, Kyrgios’ class on hard courts was on show once again as he came back from a set down to topple world No. 1 Medvedev 6-7 6-4 6-2.

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Kyrgios has won 14 of his past 15 singles matches, stretching back to his run into the Wimbledon final, which he lost to Novak Djokovic. It’s the second time in his career that he’s beaten a world No. 1 and he now boasts a 3-1 head-to-head record against Medvedev, the 2021 US Open champion.

Since landing in the States for the American hard court swing a couple of weeks ago, Kyrgios is 15-0 across singles and doubles.

American tennis icon Andy Roddick believes Kyrgios is now the favorite for the US Open, which kicks off in a couple of weeks, while Aussie tennis great Rennae Stubbs was in awe of what the Canberran is producing.

“@NickKyrgios I mean when he plays tennis and keeps his s**t together, he is seriously close to the best tennis player in the world,” Stubbs tweeted.

“His serve is untouchable at the moment. Fitness level is HIGH and his tennis acumen is unreal. That effort after losing the 1st set was impressive.”

Eric Hubbs of Barstool Sports tweeted: “Kyrgios domination continues. Finally playing to his potential and it’s awesome.”

But there is more than just tennis on Kyrgios’ mind. His mother Norlaila is in hospital back home in Australia, and he wrote “be strong, ma” on her camera after his victory.

“It’s hard because even traveling now, my mum is in hospital at the moment, my dad hasn’t been very well, my brother just had a baby and I don’t get to be there with my family when normal people would like to be with them,” Kyrgios said.

“It’s hard being from Australia because we can’t travel back and forth. There’s a lot of things people don’t see. They only see me winning, losing, throwing a racquet, doing those things. They don’t really understand the challenges that I face or what people on tour face, what’s going on in their personal lives.”

Kyrgios was the only player to have break points in the first set, but he failed to convert either of his opportunities at 5-4 and then was all over the shop during the tiebreak.

The 27-year-old smashed a ball out of the stadium in anger after dropping the opener, but was back at his mercurial best in the second set. Kyrgios broke Medvedev early on and maintained the rage to close out the set 6-4.

There were the usual antics from Kyrgios, who once again hit out at those in his player’s box.

Writer Allesandro Nivola tweeted: “Nick Kyrgios’s relationship with his box is so disturbing. He it’s like a deranged psychopathic dictator and his ‘advisors’ of him. They look terrified of saying the wrong thing or of standing up when they should sit down or of sitting down when they should stand up.”

However, Kyrgios composed himself for the decider to shut out Medvedev and progress to the third round in Montreal as his red-hot run continues.

He and Thanasi Kokkinakis won the doubles title in Atlanta then Kyrgios teamed up with Jack Sock in Washington to take out the Citi Open trophy.

That same day he also cleaned up in the singles draw, defeating Yoshihito Nishioka to win his first title in three years — a feat he last achieved at the same tournament in Washington back in 2019.

Speaking after his win over Nishioka earlier this week, Kyrgios opened up on his “transformation” after coming through some tough times emotionally.

“It was emotional for me to see where I was last year to now, it’s an incredible transformation,” Kyrgios said. “I just came out with great energy because I knew I had the experience on my side today.

“I’ve been in some really dark places and just to be able to turn it around…

“There’s so many people who have helped me get there but myself, I’ve shown some serious strength to just continue and just persevere and get through those really tough times and still be able to perform in tournaments like this one.”

Read related topics:Nick Kyrgios

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Keith Huewen: 41,000 fans is a statement, MotoGP needs to be cool again | MotoGP

With a Long Lap penalty from Assen for world champion and title leader Fabio Quartararo, the British MotoGP was always going to be unpredictable – and didn’t disappoint.

Four different riders took turns in the lead, with a continuous stream of overtakes throughout the field and the podium places ultimately covered by just 0.6s at the checkered flag.

But the thrilling race was witnessed by just 41,002 trackside fans, down from 67,000 last year and a fraction of the sell-out 142,000 spectators for last month’s Silverstone F1 race.

So why the drop?

“I know Silverstone, they’ve got great road infrastructure and it’s really well organised. But to drive straight in at 8am on a Sunday seemed odd to start with,” said former British champion and Grand Prix rider Huewen.

“41,000 is half of what it should have been, considering the package that was being put forward. We had three fantastic races. OK, we’re not to know that in advance, but we also had the best weather consistently through the week I’ve seen for a British Grand Prix. Everybody knew it was going to be beautiful weather.

“Now there are some things that you could argue… £90.00 for a ticket on Sunday. 30 odd quid for a car park on top of that. It is expensive. But you’re talking about seeing the world’s best in Britain for MotoGP.

“It was free on television, the first time ITV had got it as free to air. Obviously, BT were airing it as well, so their figures will have been down. Maybe trackside figures are down again because of ITV.

“But most people that follow bikes – and there are more than 41,000 of them – know that being trackside is the best atmosphere. To see a motorcycle on a track. You can’t replicate that on TV.

“You can have as many bounding presenters and well-known people walking through the camera as you like. But you’re never going to better, in my case, making the short walk to the end of the paddock and just standing on the inside of Copse corner to watch every class.

“It was just fantastic. I’m sitting here and the hair on my arms is going up thinking about it.

“I think Silverstone did a fantastic job. I really do and they really seem to care. In the past I was screaming from the rooftops that they don’t care. It’s all about Formula One. Nobody in the BRDC gives a flying wotsit about motorbikes.

“It was genuinely that way but it isn’t anymore. The BRDC suite is full of famous car race names and bike people from the past and they really care about what’s going on…

“[The attendance was] very disappointing. Especially off the back of a fantastic Formula One Grand Prix. And off the back of the pandemic. This is the first time [since then] that it’s really been a fully open do-what-you-like MotoGP in Britain.

“I can’t imagine why people didn’t go, but I’ve got a few ideas about how we can make it better.”

Before giving those ideas, Podcast host Harry Benjamin, also working on site at Silverstone this weekend, asked crash.net MotoGP editor Pete McLaren if factors such as the absence of Valentino Rossi and Marc Marquez, the cost-of-living crisis and being so close to the F1 event could have been to blame.

“It could be all of those things Harry and also, did people go to Donington Park for the World Superbike round instead? Costs are lower, there’s great racing between the top three in WorldSBK and a lot of British riders at the front, so did fans make a call on WorldSBK over MotoGP this year?

“We’ve had this same discussion about attendance at some other rounds, especially Mugello, and ticket prices – plus in this case parking prices – always seem to be a major factor.

“But it was still a surprise when the official figure came out on Sunday. It was 33,000 on Saturday so to rise by only 8,000 for race day was unusual. Last year it went up from 44,000 to 67,000.”

‘Formula One is propping us up’

Returning to Huewen, Benjamin asked: “So how do we solve this problem? What’s the plan?

“You can’t just solve it overnight,” Huewen replied. “If I’d have been Silverstone, I think one of the things that they missed – and I don’t recall seeing anything like this – would have been an exit survey of the people on site.

“The entertainment package after the races, including the Stereo MC’s and Ella Eyre, was pretty spectacular. But when did the fans first hear about the entertainment package? And does that kind of entertainment actually bring in more people?

“I’d want to know whether pricing in Ella Eyre and one or two others was actually good value for money, or whether you’d prefer a fiver off a ticket or whatever?

“Then it comes down to things like the parking costs, but I don’t think you can get over that issue.

“Bear in mind this is a 500-acre motorsport venue that has no government or local authority subsidy at all, whereas many other tracks around the world get some input from other places.

“Silverstone is a stand-alone operation. They have made mistakes in the past that have cost them dear and they are only really recovering from that… If it hadn’t been a good Formula One this year, I would suggest they’d be in trouble again.

“Formula One is propping us up [at Silverstone]! And I hate to say that, but that’s a fact at the moment.”

‘MotoGP needs to be cool again’

“I think we’re missing a fairly major part of the demographic,” Huewen added. “MotoGP needs to be cool again. We need to be that cool sport that everybody wants to be seen at and be part of.

“A bit like Formula One has become since they’ve opened up to social media and so on and so forth, since Liberty took it over.

“We all rail against the idea of ​​having those ‘influencers’ in pitlane. Martin Brundle [F1 driver turned TV pundit] is one of my favorites and whenever he bumps into someone who says they are an influencer, he’s a bit dismissive as I would be in his position as well. Coming across someone you’ve never heard of, got no interest in and are never likely to bump into again.

“But that bloke that you don’t recognize has probably got two million followers, and he’s probably considered to be absolutely cool.

“I met the Gas Monkey guy Richard Rawlings when I was over at the TT. I had no clue who Richard Rollins was, this rather loud American guy, slapping hands with everyone around the TT paddock. But he had a bigger following out there than Peter Hickman.

“We’re missing a trick when we’ve not got people like that trackside.

“But what we really need to be doing is catering just a little bit more to bring in those 14-15-16 year old kids, who force their parents to come to a racetrack – maybe not to watch the racing initially, it’s more to see Ella Eyre or whoever it might be that’s performing on stage.

“But then all of a sudden, the side product becomes the main product, which is motorbike racing.

“Which is cool, which is brilliant and we have got some great young men like Quartararo and Dixon, that all the kids are going to think ‘wow look at those two up on stage, what great personalities they are’.”

‘41,000 people trackside is making a statement’

“There are so many things that I think we can do, but we need to do it in advance. I know how hard all of the guys at Silverstone work, but it seems like the biggest two-wheel event went under the radar this year and I don’t understand that.

“It also really falls at the feet of Dorna. They’ve done a fantastic job of getting the rules right. They’ve made our sport the best it can be. It really is something special. But maybe the emphasis has been so much on the sport that it’s not been on the wider situation.”

“I’ve always said that paddocks should be designed to have big glass areas or fencing or whatever, so fans can see what’s going on inside without physically putting them in the paddock.

“And get rid of those advertising boardings that were blocking some of the views from trackside. That’ll be down to the commercial departments, but with so much CGI now you don’t need to physically put advertising everywhere to have it appear on TV, which is where it really matters.

“41,000 people at trackside is making a statement. It should have been 80,000 minimum. People stayed away for more than one reason and we need to work it out.”

Benjamin concludes by inviting listeners to leave their feedback in the YouTube comments sectiondescribing their experiences this weekend or why they didn’t go to Silverstone.

The trio then move on to the track action itself, which saw Francesco Bagnaia claim his second victory in a row from a charging Maverick Vinales to recover a massive 42-points from Fabio Quartararo’s title lead in just two rounds.

Jack Miller completed the podium on a day when Ducati riders filled four of the top five places, the kind of form that could soon see Bagnaia breathing down the neck of Quartararo and Espargaro.

The Frenchman lost less than 1.5s during his Long Lap penalty but was unable to fight his way forwards and even came under a late attack from Espargaro, bravely riding with foot injuries from a massive Saturday highside.

Moto2 saw victory for Augusto Fernandez, with rookie Alonso Lopez on the podium for Boscoscuro, while Jake Dixon delighted the home fans with third and Rory Skinner made his grand prix debut.

Both of Aspar’s title leaders crashed out of a dramatic Moto3 race, with Dennis Foggia keeping his championship hopes alive by returning to the top spot from Jaume Masia and Deniz Oncu, while John McPhee and Scott Ogden scored solid points.

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Star jockey Frankie Dettori to ride Verry Elleegant in her European debut

Sokolski thrilled with Dettori coup for Verry Elleegant

Verry Elleegant is edging closer to her European debut.  Picture: Reg Ryan-Racing Photos via Getty Images Verry Elleegant is edging closer to her European debut. Picture: Reg Ryan-Racing Photos via Getty Images

“Frankie finally gets to ride a Melbourne Cup winner!”

This was the quip from Brae Sokolski, part-owner of Verry Elleegant, as he confirmed Frankie Dettori will ride his champion mare in her European debut later this month.

Verry Elleegant, winner of the 2021 Melbourne Cup and Australia’s reigning Horse of the Year, is due to have her first run for new trainer Francis-Henri Graffard in the Group 1 Prix Jean Romanet (2000m) at Deauville on August 21.

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Dettori, the most famous jockey in world racing, has had a celebrated career in the saddle but the Melbourne Cup has proven frustratingly elusive.

He has ridden in the Flemington two-miler 17 times with seconds on Central Park (1999) and Max Dynamite (2016) his best results.

But Sokolski said it was a coup to secure Dettori to ride Verry Elleegant.

“We have the King (Dettori) and Queen (Verry Elleegant) combining – there is a real ‘romantic’ aspect to it,” Sokolski said.

“Frankie is getting towards the end of his career as our mare is, too.”

Brae Sokolski visiting Verry Elleegant at trainer Francis-Henri Graffard’s training base at Chantilly. Picture: Supplied

Sokolski said Dettori won’t get an opportunity to ride Verry Elleegant before the Deauville race.

“Ideally, we would have him aboard her for her final serious gallop but it is not going to happen,” Sokolski said.

“But Frankie has the experience and Verry Elleegant is a much more mature mare now.

“As a young horse, she was difficult to handle but she is quite relaxed now so it should be an issue.”

Sokolski recently spent time at Graffard’s training base at Chantilly and reported Verry Elleegant has quickly adapted to her new training environment.

But Sokolski conceded a lot hinges on Verry Elleegant racing at her best in the Prix Jean Romanet.

“It is somewhat sobering because she has to perform now,” Sokolski said.

“Verry Elleegant is up to a middle distance and we know how good she is over this trip, she never runs a poor race.

“So, if she doesn’t perform then we are going to be confronted with a pretty stark decision very quickly – but this mare has always produced when it mattered.”

Verry Elleegant, winner of 11 Group 1 races and nearly $15m prizemoney, is now a seven-year-old mare and is in the twilight of her race career.

Ascot Races

Frankie Dettori will ride Verry Elleegant. Picture: Alan Crowhurst-Getty Images

But Sokolski said the feedback from Graffard in recent days was very positive after plans to run Verry Elleegant first-up at 1600m earlier this month were aborted.

“Francis wasn’t sufficiently pleased enough with Verry Elleegant to run her before now, even last week he was a little bit reserved about how she was going,” Sokolski said.

“But I spoke with him yesterday (Tuesday) and he is absolutely thrilled with the mare. He believes he has got her on song for this first-up assignment. If she runs well, we are very much on track.”

Sokolski’s long-term aim is to run Verry Elleegant in Europe’s most prestigious race, the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe (2400m) at Longchamp in early October.

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Robertson’s intentions exposed in new All Blacks coaching revelation

New Zealand rugby reporter Robert van Royen has claimed Crusaders coach Scott Robertson is “definitely” not keen to take over the All Blacks right now.

Many believe the six-time Super Rugby title winner would be perfect for the role, having only achieved success since taking over at the franchise in 2017.

In comparison, current head coach Ian Foster has struggled with the All Blacks, with their most recent series loss to Ireland prompting many to believe Robertson’s injection would be the best way forward.

However, van Royen understands the coach is “set” on sticking with the Crusaders for the time being.

“From what I understand, yes, he definitely wasn’t keen to take the job,” van Royen said on SENZ Mornings.

“I believe before they even went and everyone was demanding a change before then that he definitely wasn’t keen at that stage.

“I also believe… even if it was offered to him a year out from the World Cup, there would have been some real thinking required to take it.

“When he signed that last contract … he basically set his sights on, ‘Look, I’m going to go for it in 2023’.”

Van Royen reiterated that should NZR look for a replacement for Foster at the close of the South African tour, Robertson would be unlikely to be in the mix.

“His mindset is set on the Crusaders until the end of next year and then if it comes up at the World Cup he gets it, if he doesn’t he goes elsewhere,” van Royen continued.

“He’s got that out clause even though he’s signed till 2024 with New Zealand Rugby, so yeah, he was really set on that.

“I haven’t been as in the loop talking to various people behind the scenes since I’ve been over here (in South Africa), but last I heard that’s definitely the case.”

Robertson is currently contracted with the Crusaders through to 2024 and has also been appointed head coach of the Barbarians FC who will take on the All Blacks XV in November.





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Ben Simmons denounces reports of text chat snub as Durant reiterates desire to be traded by Brooklyn

Ben Simmons’ return to social media after a two month hiatus came amid rumors whirling about the Australian’s private life and recent reports regarding a text chat with his fellow Brooklyn Nets teammates.

Reports in the UK questioned the Aussie’s relationship status with British model Maja Jama, with claims the NBA player and his partner had called off their engagement.

On top of that, NBA insider Ric Bucher, said Simmons left a group chat without replying to his teammates who asked him to play in their must-win game four against the Celtics in the first round of the playoffs, which Boston went on to win. .

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“They’re having a team chat before game four, thinking he’s going to play against the Boston Celtics,” Bucher said on Fox Sports in the US.

“From what I’m told, Ben just left the chat. They asked him, ‘Are you going to play?’ Ben left the chat. Like he did n’t even answer the question, he just left the chat. And KD [Kevin Durant] is like, ‘This is what I signed up for? This is who I’m playing with?'”

The Nets guard tweeted, “slow news day,” with a crying-laughing emoji in his return to the social media platform, but it’s unclear which story he’s referring to.

The Athletic’s Shams Charania denied Bucher’s report during an appearance on “The Pat McAfee Show.”

“This never happened … it’s an amazing story but it didn’t happen,” said Charania, who is managed by Simmons’ agent Rich Paul.

A three-time All-Star, Simmons is currently training in New York and continuing recovery from May back surgery.

“He’s looking good,” Charania said. “There are high expectations [in Brooklyn] for Simmons. He’s supposed to be ready for training camp … and he’s doing more and more on the court.”

The news regarding Simmons comes as teammate Kevin Durant again told Brooklyn Nets owner Joe Tsai that he wants to be traded, reiterating a request he first made nearly six weeks ago, a person with knowledge of the matter confirmed to the Associated Press.

Durant also told Tsai that he has concerns about the Nets’ direction under coach Steve Nash and general manager Sean Marks, said the person who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because neither the perennial All-Star nor the team confirmed details of the talks publicly.

The Athletic first reported details of the latest Durant-Tsai meeting.

“Our front office and coaching staff have my support,” Tsai tweeted Monday night. “We will make decisions in the best interest of the Brooklyn Nets.”

This is the latest phase of a saga that began June 30, when Durant told the Nets he wanted to trade just as this summer’s free agent period was beginning. Durant isn’t a free agent; he has four years and $284 million remaining on his contract with the Nets, who will undoubtedly demand a haul of players and draft picks in any trade agreement for the 12-time All-Star, four-time scoring champion, three-time Olympic gold medalist and two-time NBA champion.

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver has never been a fan of trade demands going public.

“This needs to be a two-way street,” Silver said last month. “Teams provide enormous security and guarantees to players and the expectation is, in return, they will meet their end of the bargain. I’m realistic that there’s always conversations that are going to go on behind closed doors between players and their representatives and the teams. But we don’t like to see players requesting trades, and we don’t like to see it playing out the way it is.”

Durant has spent three seasons with Brooklyn, not playing in the first of those years while he recovered from a torn Achilles. He averaged 29.9 points in 55 games last season, after leading the USA to Olympic gold at the Tokyo Games last summer.

– Additional reporting by Sacha Mirzabegian

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Prize money drawn against sign on fees, contracts, FedEx Cup

It turns out that at least some players who have ditched the PGA Tour for the riches of the LIV Golf Series aren’t actually earning a dime when it comes to their results in the lucrative, but controversial, Saudi-backed circuit.

That bombshell was revealed Tuesday in US District Court in San Jose, Calif., where a federal judge denied a temporary restraining order for three players currently suspended by the tour after leaving for LIV, the New York Post reports.

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They were seeking to be allowed to play in the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup Playoffs, which begins this week in Memphis.

During the hearing, a lawyer representing LIV said that players’ earnings are counted against the upfront money they receive for joining.

That means a $4 million first-place winner’s check would essentially amount to money a player has already been paid for signing with the rival faction. The lawyer said that not every contract is the same, but also said not all money is guaranteed, before moving on in the case.

Shark has lured the biggest names away from the PGA.  (Photo by Matthew Lewis/Getty Images)
Shark has lured the biggest names away from the PGA. (Photo by Matthew Lewis/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

That contradicts what a LIV official and some players have said up to this point.

When Brooks Koepka was pressed at the LIV tournament outside Portland, Ore., last month on whether a player’s winnings come out of the signing bonus, the four-time major champion said, “That’s not — no. Nope.” When questioned again on the issue, he said, “No. I don’t know — it’s irrelevant.”

The contract bombshell. (Photo by Matthew Lewis/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

At the end of the press conference in Portland, a LIV official in Portland tried to clear up the matter at the time.

“I just wanted to address [the] question earlier when you were asking about the prize purses and if they are in addition to the contracts,” she said. “The prize purses are in addition to. There is no draw at LIV Golf on any finances,” she said. “We just wanted to, on the record, it’s in addition to. And while you guys have, this is your first event, but you should know that from your contracts. You can test it. Thank you guys.”

That appears to not exactly be the case after all, however, according to one of LIV’s own attorneys.

This article originally appeared on the NY Post and was reproduced with permission.

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Essendon Bombers, Gold Coast Suns

Essendon captain Dyson Heppell doesn’t “owe” Essendon anything and the club wouldn’t begrudge him joining Gold Coast next season, according to Bombers coach Ben Rutten.

The Suns have reportedly tabled a four-year deal to the out-of-contract defender, comprising two years as a player and two as an assistant coach.

But Essendon have also offered Heppell a new contract, believed to be far inferior to the Suns’ deal, and Rutten said the Bombers weren’t putting a timeline on when they needed Heppell to make a decision on his future.

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“He is really clear on where he stands with us and we’d love to have him around next year. He knows that,” Rutten said at Tullamarine on Wednesday.

“He’s been a great servant for our footy club, he doesn’t owe us anything, so we’ll be really supportive of Dyson and all of our players whatever decisions they make.”

While Rutten said there would be “something special” about seeing Heppell finish his career as a one-club player, he tempered that by saying it wasn’t “the be all and end all” in the modern era – a view backed up by the likes of Hawthorn premiership heroes Luke Hodge, Sam Mitchell and Jordan Lewis all finishing their glittering careers at other clubs.

Dyson Heppell competes with Sam Durham at training. Picture: Darrian TraynorSource: Getty Images

Meanwhile, veteran defender Michael Hurley won’t play against Port Adelaide on Sunday evening despite continuing to make progress after overcoming a nasty hip infection that has sidelined him for the past two seasons.

He has now played four VFL games, and while he might be a chance to play Richmond in the final round, Rutten still couldn’t guarantee that or whether Hurley would be offered a new contract for next year.

“It’s something we are thinking through, the dynamics of that, there’s still some uncertainty around ‘Hurls’ moving forward,” Rutten said.

“We haven’t made a decision on what we’re doing there but there’s plenty of options for us.”

“All time Swans great” Emotional goodbye | 03:24

Rutten admitted the uncertainty surrounding Hurley’s playing future could affect his prospects of playing against the Tigers next week.

“There’s a fair bit to weigh up from our end, from Hurls’ end, which we’re talking through all the time,” Rutten said.

“He understands the rigors of AFL footy and the demands that you have to be up for.

“At the moment, he’s getting through a game and a half a training session – that’s not sustainable for him, or for anyone, to play a full season of footy.

“I think he’s still got the passion to play and the desire, (but) marrying that up with the physical part of it is the bit he and we are working through at the moment.”

One factor that might earn Hurley a new contract is Essendon being light on for experienced players.

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There are only three players aged 30 or older at the Bombers this year – Hurley, Heppell and ruckman Andrew Phillips.

“They’re certainly the things that we’re considering, that’s all part of the bigger picture for us,” he said.

“It’s important that we best support our less experienced players through the early parts of their career.

“In his time out, he’s spent a lot of time with our younger key position players in particular, and he’s now loving playing with them and they’re loving playing with him.”

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Cameron Smith dodges LIV Golf talk, reiterates his ‘goal here is to win the FedEx Cup playoffs’

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Despite published reports that indicate he is leaving the PGA Tour for the rival LIV Golf circuit, Australia’s Cameron Smith said Tuesday he’s preparing to win the FedEx Cup playoffs and is a “man of my word.”

Smith, the No. 2-ranked player in the Official World Golf Ranking after winning last month’s Open Championship at St. Andrews, has been linked to the Saudi Arabian-backed LIV Golf circuit for several weeks.

The Telegraph of London reported Tuesday that LIV Golf had reached a deal of more than $100 million to secure Smith. That report came after PGA Tour player Cameron Percy told an Australian radio station that Smith and Marc Leishman were joining LIV Golf.

During a tense news conference at TPC Southwind on Tuesday, Smith declined to address the reports that he would soon become the highest-ranked player to join the LIV Golf circuit, which is being fronted by Australian Greg Norman.

“My goal here is to win the FedEx Cup playoffs,” Smith said. “That’s all I’m here for. If there’s something I need to say regarding the PGA Tour or LIV, it will come from Cameron Smith, not Cameron Percy. I’m a man of my word and whenever you guys [reporters] need to know anything, it’ll be said by me.”

Smith, 28, is a six-time winner on the PGA Tour. He also claimed the Players Championship in March, winning $3.6 million, the largest winner’s purse in PGA Tour history. He has earned more than $9.8 million in 16 starts this season.

The Telegraph reported that Smith is expected to make his LIV Golf debut in Boston on Sept. 2-4. But Smith said Tuesday that he planned to play in the Presidents Cup, scheduled for Sept. 19-25 at Quail Hollow in Charlotte, NC.

“Absolutely, yeah,” Smith said of playing in the Presidents Cup. “That’s something that we’ve been looking forward to for the last three years. We missed a year because of COVID and that’s something that I look forward to being apart of.” of.”

The PGA Tour organizes the Presidents Cup, and Tour commissioner Jay Monahan has suspended Tour members who appear in LIV events without conflicting-event releases.

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Nick Kyrgios hot streak continues in Montreal to set up blockbuster with No 1 Daniil Medvedev | Sport

Nick Kyrgios has set up a second-round blockbuster with world No 1 Daniil Medvedev as Australia’s tennis ace continued his promising US Open preparations in Montreal. Fresh from his historic singles-doubles title double in Washington on Sunday, the 27-year-old Kyrgios defeated Argentine Sebastian Baez 6-4 6-4 to extend his hard-court winning streak to seven matches.

However, after going 64 games unbroken in the American capital, Kyrgios finally had his sequence stopped at 67 when he dropped serve in the opening set on Wednesday. Kyrgios held a comfortable 5-1 lead in the opening set, but Baez fought back to 4-5 before dropping the set. The Aussie managed to staunch the bleeding and was ruthless with his groundstrokes in the second set as he regained control and sealed victory after 85 exhilarating minutes.

Kyrgios has now won 14 of his last 15 matches and risen to No 37 in the ATP rankings. The win also elevated him into a seeding position for Flushing Meadows, the year’s final grand slam starting in New York on August 29. But the Wimbledon runner-up admitted he was a little jaded after claiming his first title in three years last week.

“Physically I feel fine. Mentally I’m just so tired,” Kyrgios said. “It’s never easy. I haven’t had much sleep the last couple of nights. But I’m trying to put that behind me. I’m in Montreal and I haven’t really played great tennis in Montreal in the past so I wanted to come out here today and get that match-up. Playing Medvedev next is a great test. It will be great fun.”

After being banned from Wimbledon, the Russian-born Medvedev has hit the ground running back on hard courts, winning the title last week in Los Cabos, Mexico without losing a set. He is still ranked No 1 on the ATP tour and will this month defend the 2021 US Open crown he won by defeating Novak Djokovic to deny the Serbian great a Grand Slam. His 2022 Australian Open defeat in five sets by Rafael Nadal, after taking a two-set lead was the second longest final ever played at five hours and 24 minutes.

“Medvedev is a hell of a player. He’s so unorthodox, he’s a great competitor and he’s just an animal and I’d like to see where I’m at,” Kyrgios said. “He’ll probably be feeling a little bit fatigued as well. I know I definitely am but I’m going to give it my best shot.”

Earlier, Australian Alex de Minaur moved comfortably in to the second round of the Masters 1000 event. The pocket rocket Australian No 1 needed only five points and three minutes to mop up a 7-5 7-6 (7-4) win after rain had forced the suspension of play on Monday with the second-set tiebreak locked up at 3- 3.

After claiming his sixth career title last month in Atlanta, de Minaur’s victory was his eighth from his past 10 hard-court matches. He is now ranked No 21 in the world. The 2020 US Open quarter-finalist next plays Grigor Dimitrov after the Bulgarian beat Canadian wildcard Alexis Galarneau 6-4 7-5 in his opener.