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Home Blog Page 8628

OVERWATCH News: Uprising, Defiant head to upper-bracket final at OWL West play-ins

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The Boston Uprising and Toronto Defiant each won their upper-bracket semifinal matches on Sunday during play-in action in the Overwatch League’s West Region.

Boston beat the London Spitfire 3-1, while the Defiant edged the Vancouver Titans 3-2. The Uprising will face Toronto in the upper-bracket final next Saturday, with the winner qualifying for the playoffs.

The fourth- through 10th-place teams from Summer Stage Qualifiers are competing in a double-elimination bracket, with the top two squads locking down a playoff berth. There is an upper and lower bracket, and all matches are best-of-five.

The ninth- and 10th-seeded teams opened play-ins with a knockout match on Saturday. The Washington Justice ousted the New York Excelsior in that meeting.

On Sunday, London opened with a 2-1 victory on Ilios before the Uprising stormed back with wins on Midtown (3-2), Suravasa (3-1) and Esperanca (1-0) to claim the match.

The Defiant had to pull off a reverse sweep to avoid the lower bracket. They dropped a 2-0 decision on Ilios and a 4-3 result on Numbani before prevailing 3-1 on Suravasa, 1-0 on New Queen Street and 4-3 on Dorado.

With the losses, Vancouver and London have been relegated to the lower-bracket quarterfinals, where they will face the San Francisco Shock and Justice, respectively.

Play-in action in the West continues next Saturday:
–Boston Uprising vs. Toronto Defiant (upper-bracket final)
–San Francisco Shock vs. Vancouver Titans (lower-bracket quarterfinals)
–Washington Justice vs. London Spitfire (lower-bracket quarterfinals)

West Region play-in results:
1. TBD — qualifies to playoffs
2. TBD — qualifies to playoffs
3. TBD
4. TBD
5-6. TBD
7. New York Excelsior

–Field Level Media

DOTA News: Gaimin Gladiators among early winners at BetBoom Dacha


Gaimin Gladiators downed 9Pandas 2-0 to grab an early first-place tie atop the standings during group stage play at BetBoom Dacha in Yerevan, Armenia.

Joining them as first-day winners were beastcoast and TSM.

Two round-robin groups of four teams apiece will stage best-of-two matches over three days to set the playoff bracket, which begins Wednesday.

The top two teams from each group will be seeded into the upper bracket, while the third-place team in each group will be slotted into the lower bracket. The playoffs will be best-of-three, double-elimination, with a best-of-five grand final.

The winning team will receive $150,000 as part of an overall $250,000 prize pool.

Gaimin Gladiators defeated 9Pandas in 35 minutes and 23 minutes, both times playing on green. They were paced by Anton “dyrachyo” Shkredov of Russia, who averaged eight kills and 8.5 assists.

The European squad took home a $1.2 million fourth-place prize at the Riyadh Masters series over the summer.

Beastcoast dumped Nigma Galaxy 2-0, winning on red in 28 minutes and on green in 44 minutes.

TSM outlasted Evil Geniuses, winning on red in 35 minutes and on green in 45 minutes.

BetBoom Team and Team Secret played to stalemate. Secret won in 33 minutes on red before BetBoom answered with a 33-minute victory playing on green.

Group A standings:
1. TSM 1-0-0 (2-0)
T2. BetBoom Team 0-1-0 (1-1)
T2. Team Secret 0-1-0 (1-1)
4. Evil Geniuses 0-0-1 (0-2)

Group B standings:
T1. beastcoast 1-0-0 (2-0)
T1. Gaimin Gladiators 1-0-0 (2-0)
T3. 9Pandas 0-0-1 (0-2)
T3. Nigma Galaxy 0-0-1 (0-2)

BetBoom Dacha prize pool:
1. $150,000 — TBD
2. $62,500 — TBD
3. $25,000 — TBD
4. $12,500 — TBD
5-6. no prize money — TBD, TBD
7-8. no prize money — TBD, TBD

–Field Level Media

CSGO News: ENCE wins first place in Group B at ESL Pro League Season 18


ENCE was forced to go the distance but pulled out a 2-1 victory over BIG on Sunday to win the upper-bracket final of Group B at the ESL Pro League Season 18 in Malta.

Both teams are heading to the playoff stage, as is Monte, who beat MIBR 2-0 on Sunday to earn the fourth and final Group B berth via the lower bracket. MIBR had defeated Evil Geniuses 2-1 to reach the lower-bracket final.

The $850,000 event features 32 teams broken up into four groups of eight. Group-stage winners advance to the quarterfinals; runners-up advance to the Round of 12 as the high seeds; third-place teams in each group advance to the Round of 16 as the high seeds; and fourth-place teams advance to the Round of 16 as the low seeds.

The group stage is triple-elimination with upper, middle and lower brackets. All matches are best-of-three until the grand final, which is best-of-five.

The Counter-Strike: Global Offensive tournament runs through Oct. 1. The winner earns $200,000 and qualifies for the 2024 IEM Katowice event and the 2023 BLAST World Final.

ENCE opened Sunday’s upper-bracket final with a 16-9 win on Ancient, but BIG rebounded to even the match, taking Anubis 16-14. In the decisive third game, ENCE prevailed 16-11 on Vertigo. Alvaro “SunPayus” Garcia of Spain was the star for the winners, posting 84 kills and a plus-37 differential.

In the lower-bracket final, Monte swept its way to victory with a 16-6 win on Vertigo and a 16-3 triumph on Anubis. Ukrainian teammates Viktor “sdy” Orudzhev (40 kills, plus-22 differential) and Volodymyr “Woro2k” Veletniuk (40 kills, plus-21 differential) led the way for Monte.

To reach the final, MIBR cruised to a 16-1 win on Ancient, dropped Mirage 22-20, then bounced back to edge Evil Geniuses 25-22 on Nuke. Rafael “saffee” Costa of Brazil carried the load for MIBR, finishing with 83 kills and a plus-24 differential.

ESL Pro League Season 18 prize pool:
1. $200,000, 3,000 BLAST Premier points — TBD
2. $90,000, 2,000 BLAST points — TBD
3-4. $50,000, 1,200 points – TBD
5-8. $35,000, 500 points — TBD
9-12. $25,000 — TBD
13-16. $20,000 — TBD
17-20. $15,000 — Gamer Legion, MIBR, TBD
21-28. $8,000 — Ninjas in Pyjamas, Grayhound Gaming, Heroic, Evil Geniuses, TBD
29-32. $4,000 — ORKS, Rooster, TBD

–Field Level Media

NAS News: Tyler Reddick wins late dash at NASCAR Cup Series at Kansas


Tyler Reddick made a strong late move at Kansas Speedway on Sunday afternoon — and one for a championship, as well.

The 27-year-old Toyota driver won a thrilling two-lap dash in the Hollywood Casino 400, NASCAR’s second playoff race, in Kansas City, Kan.

After playoff driver Chris Buescher blew a tire with seven laps left, Reddick restarted sixth on the final restart and made a hard charge off Turn 4.

He passed Erik Jones and Joey Logano, who had each taken two tires, as they raced side by side coming to the white flag and watched the No. 45 roar by all the way to the bottom of the frontstretch.

The 23XI Racing driver for NBA Hall of Famer Michael Jordan and minority owner Denny Hamlin sped away to his fifth career win and advanced to the upcoming Round of 12 playoff segment. Hamlin finished in second.

“We had really good pace but just couldn’t get ahead of Denny there,” said Reddick of his second win in 2023. “Then chaos ensued, people stayed out, some took two tires and the bottom lane opened up.

“I had four fresh tires and I was sitting in there and (slid) up. … I came back (to Kansas) to get the (45) back where it belongs.”

That would be Victory Lane.

That No. 45 car number has now won three of the past four Kansas races with three different drivers — Reddick, Bubba Wallace and Kurt Busch.

Hamlin appeared headed for his track-record fifth Kansas win before Buescher caused the ninth caution for the late restart.

“(Kyle Larson) was laying back so much, I was trying to back up to him,” said Hamlin, who led 63 laps. “I should’ve just kind of focused forward probably. … Sleeping on the restart, looking in the rear view instead of looking in the front.”

Jones, Larson and Logano completed the top five.

In the second Cup race of the Round of 16 playoffs, JGR’s Christopher Bell backed up his top qualifying run last week at Darlington with the Kansas pole speed with seven more of the playoff contenders qualifying in the top 10.

As it did last year in the postseason, the 1.5-mile speedway took a bite out of a playoff competitor early — Martin Truex Jr. on Lap 3.

The Joe Gibbs Racing driver lost control of his No. 19 Toyota after a right rear tire went down. He subsequently smacked the Turn 3 wall, bowed out the right front wheel and finished last.

Last week’s victor at Darlington, Larson passed Bell and held the point after the first round of pit stops, then won Stage 1 by beating Wallace. Playoff driver William Byron spun on Lap 63 but was unscathed.

Wallace brought out the fourth caution when he had a right rear tire explode and scrubbed the wall. Last year’s race winner, Wallace lost four laps and finished 32nd.

Late in Stage 2, Brad Keselowski passed leader Chase Elliott and beat second-place Hamlin for the segment’s bonus points.

–Field Level Media

INDY News: Scott Dixon wraps IndyCar season with another win


Multiple penalties early in the race couldn’t stop Scott Dixon from prevailing in the season-ending Firestone Grand Prix of Monterey on Sunday at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca in Monterey, Calif.

The veteran from New Zealand picked up his third victory of 2023 and the 56th of his storied IndyCar Series career, though it was too little, too late in terms of the current season. Alex Palou of Spain had clinched the series championship with one week to go by winning last week’s race in Portland, Ore.

Dixon was assessed both a starting grid penalty and an early on-track penalty, navigating multiple cautions en route to crossing the finish line first in his No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing Honda, 7.3180 seconds ahead of countryman Scott McLaughlin.

“We had a bit of an issue this morning,” Dixon said on the NBC Sports broadcast. “We got a grid penalty and had to go to — lose six spots, and then got up in some mayhem at the start. … I had nowhere to go, so I don’t know what they expect me to do, but we won. That’s all that matters. We won.”

It was Dixon’s third win in four races, though still not enough to catch Palou in the points standings.

“It’s been a special group to be a part of,” Dixon said of his team. “Obviously celebrating Alex’s second championship, which is big too. Obviously he tied it up last week.”

Palou finished the race third, Australia’s Will Power was fourth and Callum Ilott of Great Britain took fifth.

–Field Level Media

ATP News: Novak Djokovic wins U.S. Open for 24th Grand Slam title

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No. 2 seed Novak Djokovic defeated No. 3 seed Daniil Medvedev 6-3, 7-6 (5), 6-3 to win the U.S. Open for his 24th Grand Slam title on Sunday night in New York.

Djokovic concluded a historic year that saw him capture three of the four Grand Slams. By winning the Australian and French Opens, he vaulted into first place alone in men’s tennis history with 23 titles.

Now he is tied with Margaret Court for the most Grand Slam singles victories in tennis history, regardless of gender.

Djokovic also gained a measure of revenge on Medvedev, who beat him in straight sets in the 2021 U.S. Open final.

It’s the Serbian’s fourth U.S. Open after claiming the title in 2011, 2015 and 2018. At 36 years old, he is also the oldest man to win the tournament in the open era.

Djokovic had 38 winners and 35 unforced errors, while his Russian opponent finished with 32 winners and 39 unforced errors. Djokovic went 3-for-6 in breaking Medvedev’s serve while only losing one service game of his own.

Neither player lost serve during the second set, setting up a tiebreaker after they reached 6-6. Medvedev led 3-1 when Djokovic scored three straight points to move in front. Medvedev took two before it was Djokovic’s turn again, winning the final three points to claim the set.

When Medvedev returned a shot into the net on Djokovic’s first championship point, Djokovic calmly strode to meet him at the net and shake his hand before celebrating.

–Field Level Media

LPGA News: Minjee Lee beats Charley Hull in playoff for Kroger Queen City title

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Minjee Lee played a magnificent approach shot on the second playoff hole to defeat Charley Hull and win the Kroger Queen City Championship on Sunday in Cincinnati.

The Australian shot a final-round 71 to finish 16-under 272 through 72 holes at Kenwood Country Club. Hull, from England, posted a 69 to match Lee and ensure a playoff.

Both women replayed the par-4 18th hole and made par. On their second time down the 18th, Hull’s approach landed neatly on the green, but Lee followed by blasting out of the rough, her shot bouncing up onto the green and nestling about 3 feet away from the cup.

Hull missed her birdie putt and Lee tapped in her birdie, winning her first LPGA title since the 2022 U.S. Women’s Open.

Lee said she was looking for a strong finish in her last tournament in the United States before she returns in November for the CME Group Tour Championship.

“Resetting your goals is always hard after a really amazing year,” Lee told the Golf Channel broadcast. “I felt like I could really reset well here, and then have a great Asia (swing) and CME.”

Lee held a two-stroke lead after 54 holes and birdied the second, seventh and eighth holes Sunday to move to 18 under. But a costly double bogey at the par-5 12th brought her back down to the pack.

She parred the six remaining holes, allowing Hull to catch her with three straight birdies at Nos. 14-16.

“I think I had a few moments where I was like, I really felt like I was losing, but I wasn’t,” Lee said. “The score was, we were pretty much tied. I was like, ‘Let’s just play till the end and see where it ends up.’ So I didn’t give up, I just played every shot to the best I could.”

China’s Ruoning Yin posted a 67 to finish third at 14 under. Ally Ewing, who won last year’s inaugural edition of the tournament, placed fourth this year at 12 under after a final-round 66.

A large tie for fifth at 11 under featured Mel Reid of England (66 Sunday), Mi Hyang Lee of South Korea (67), Ariya Jutanugarn of Thailand (71), Japan’s Yuka Saso (72), Swizterland’s Morgane Metraux (73) and Peiyun Chien of Taiwan (74).

–Field Level Media

EPGA News: Vincent Norrman surges to Irish Open win; Rory McIlroy 16th

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Vincent Norrman of Sweden shot a 7-under-par 65 on Sunday to capture a one-stroke victory at the inclement weather-delayed Irish Open.

Norrman, who improved 20 spots in the final 18 holes, shot a bogey-free round and surged past contenders to finish at 14-under 274 at The K Club in Straffan, County Kildare.

His pursuers included third-round leader Hurly Long of Germany — an even-par 72 on Sunday to finish at 13 under — and Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy (74), who fell 13 spots down the leaderboard to tie for 16th.

Norrman carded his only unblemished round of the tournament, following rounds of 68, 71 and 70 with seven birdies on Sunday, including at the par-5 18th hole for the third time.

“It means everything,” Norrman said of his second DP World Tour title in his 14th appearance. “Obviously, such a cool event to play. The fans have been incredible. I’ve really had a fun week.”

Norrman, who won July’s Barbasol Championship in a playoff in a PGA Tour/DP Tour event in Kentucky, made birdies at Nos. 7, 9, 10, 11, 13, 14 and 18 on Sunday.

“The front nine was huge,” he said. “I was playing so-so and then I birdied the seventh and ninth to get some momentum going into the back. I think that was key today.

“Obviously if you win, you’re doing something good. It’s a world-class event, and honestly I can’t believe it’s happened.”

Long, who entered the day one stroke ahead of England’s Jordan Smith and two better than McIlroy, had an adventurous round. He birdied Nos. 4, 9, 12 and 18, but made bogey at Nos. 2, 8, 13 and 14.

Four players tied for third at 12 under: Grant Forrest (70) of Scotland, Ryan Fox (70) of New Zealand, Thriston Lawrence (66) of South Africa and Ireland’s Shane Lowry (68), the 2009 Irish Open champion.

McIlroy, ranked No. 2 in the world, birdied the first hole as well as No. 4, 13 and 18. He also bogeyed the par-4 No. 11, double-bogeyed the par-5 No. 7 and posted an eight on the par-5 No. 16, where he went par-eagle and bogey the first three rounds.

–Field Level Media

OVERWATCH News: Spark, Dynasty win grand finals in OWL Summer Stage knockouts

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The Hangzhou Spark and Seoul Dynasty each recorded 4-1 wins on Sunday in their respective grand finals of the East Region Overwatch League Summer Stage knockouts.

In a Group A clash, the Spark jumped out to a three-map lead, defeating the Dallas Fuel 2-1 on Ilios before notching 3-2 victories on Numbani and New Junk City. The Fuel countered with a 1-0 victory on Esperanca before the Spark answered with a 3-1 triumph on Dorado.

Like the Spark, the Dynasty recorded a three-map advantage in their Group B tilt. They posted 2-1 wins over O2 Blast on Lijiang Tower and Eichenwalde, respectively, and a 3-0 victory on Suravasa. O2 Blast countered with a 1-0 triumph on Esperanca before the Dynasty posted a 3-2 win on Dorado.

The winners of each grand final and the runners-up advanced to the postseason play-in tournament, which be played next weekend.

Overwatch League East Region Summer Stage knockouts standings:
1st-2nd: Hangzhou Spark, Seoul Dynasty
3rd-4th: Dallas Fuel, O2 Blast
5th-6th: Poker Face, Seoul Infernal
7th-8th: Dreamers, San Prisa Gaming
9th-12th: PANTHERA, Rhodes, Guangzhou Charge, Shanghai Dragons

–Field Level Media

Team USA falls to Canada, fails to medal in World Cup


Dillon Brooks scored 39 points and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander added 31 points and 12 assists on Sunday, helping Canada capture the bronze medal of the FIFA World Cup with a 127-118 overtime victory over the United States in Manila, Philippines.

RJ Barrett contributed 23 points for Canada (6-2), which posted its first medal at a global men’s tournament since 1936. The Canadians dropped a 19-8 decision to the U.S. in a gold-medal game that was played outside in a rainstorm at the Berlin Olympics.

Anthony Edwards scored 24 points and Austin Reaves added 23 for the Americans (5-3), who failed to medal for the second straight World Cup after losing three of their final four games in the tournament.

“The United States hasn’t won the World Cup since 2014,” U.S. coach Steve Kerr said. “It’s hard. These teams in FIBA are really good, well-coached, they’ve got continuity and they’ve played together for a long time. This is difficult and it’s been difficult already.”

Mikal Bridges had 19 points, highlighted by a four-point surge in the final 4.2 seconds of regulation to send the game to overtime. He made a free throw and intentionally missed the second before running down the loose ball. He lofted up a 3-pointer that forged a tie at 111-111.

“Just tried to miss it right. That’s kind of where you want the ball to be at in situations like that,” Bridges said. “Just read and react … went and shot it.”

The United States wasn’t at full strength, playing without Brandon Ingram, Paolo Banchero and Jaren Jackson Jr. due to illness.

Both teams qualified for the 2024 Paris Olympics, representing the Americas region.

In the gold-medal game, Dennis Schroder scored 28 points and Franz Wagner added 19 as Germany won its first-ever World Cup, defeating Serbia 83-77.

–Field Level Media