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Home Blog Page 8628

WTA News: Madison Keys routs No. 3 Jessica Pegula at U.S. Open

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Madison Keys smashed No. 3 seed Jessica Pegula 6-1, 6-3 Monday to reach the quarterfinals of the U.S. Open for the first time since 2018.

Keys, the No. 17 seed, needed just over an hour to win the all-American affair. She converted five of nine break chances and finished with 21 winners to just six for Pegula.

“It’s always tough having to play a friend,” Keys said during her courtside interview. “… When we get on the court it’s all business.”

Keys was the runner-up to Sloane Stephens at Flushing Meadows in 2017 and a semifinalist in 2018.

“I’ve had so many amazing moments in New York,” said Keys, who won 77 percent of her first-service points in a match that featured few long rallies.

She will next face No. 9 seed Marketa Vondrousova of the Czech Republic. The reigning Wimbledon champion rallied to beat unseeded American Peyton Stearns 6-7 (3), 6-3, 6-2 in the fourth round on Monday.

“She was playing great from the beginning, and I just tried to stay in the game,” Vondrousova said. “I’m very happy. I actually didn’t expect it after Wimby — it was a lot of pressure. We’ll see what happens next.”

Vondrousova served nine aces and took advantage of 52 unforced errors by Stearns, including 21 in the final set, to reach her first U.S. Open quarterfinal.

–Field Level Media

ATP News: Defending champ Carlos Alcaraz cruises into U.S. Open quarters

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World No. 1 Carlos Alcaraz eased past Italy’s Matteo Arnaldi 6-3, 6-3, 6-4 to reach the U.S. Open quarterfinals on Monday in New York.

The Spanish 20-year-old joined Andre Agassi as the only men to reach three U.S. Open quarterfinals before the age of 21 in the Open Era (since 1968).

“The intensity from the start to the last ball, I think I played a really solid match,” Alcaraz said. “Less mistakes. I played my game. Tried to go to the net all the time. I am really happy with the performance and I am happy to be through.”

Alcaraz, the defending U.S. Open champion, had just two aces against Arnaldi’s four, and Arnaldi saved 7 of 12 break points. But Alcaraz won 38 of his 49 first-service points (77.6 percent) and 27 of 37 points at the net (73 percent).

Alcaraz had 31 winners to Arnaldi’s 22.

“Right now my favorite surface is hard court, and when I won Wimbledon I said I fell in love with grass,” Alcaraz said. “I am really comfortable with the three surfaces, but right now hard courts is my favorite one.”

In the quarters, Alcaraz will face either German No. 12 seed Alexander Zverev or Italian No. 6 seed Jannik Sinner, who were scheduled to face off later Monday.

No. 8 seed Andrey Rublev of Russia got past Great Britain’s Jack Draper 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4 to reach the quarterfinals.

Draper edged Rublev 18-14 in aces, but Rublev won an impressive 53 of 63 first-service points (84.1 percent). He overcame Draper saving 13 of his 17 break points and capitalized on Draper’s 36 unforced errors.

The other Round of 16 match scheduled for Monday pits Russian third seed Daniil Medvedev against No. 13 seed Alex de Minaur of Australia.

–Field Level Media

MLS News: FC Dallas brace for test against West-leading St. Louis City

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FC Dallas will attempt to build on an emotional win over an in-state rival when they visit Western Conference-leading St. Louis City on Wednesday.

FC Dallas (9-9-6, 33 points) moved into eighth place in the West by defeating Austin FC 1-0 on Saturday on defender Nkosi Tafari’s winning header in the seventh minute of second-half stoppage time.

Tafari entered this season with one career goal in 49 matches (32 starts) for Dallas. He has started 19 of his 21 appearances in 2023 and has tallied three goals while completing 83.1 percent of his passes.

In his postgame press conference, FC Dallas coach Nico Estevez said Tafari’s growth as a player is a point of pride.

“‘You have to believe in yourself and you have to want to be one of the best center backs in the league,'” Estevez said he told Tafari. “… And I think he understood the message and he has been great so far.”

FC Dallas are 7-3-2 at home this season but are 2-6-4 on the road. They will be up against a St. Louis side that is 9-3-1 at home.

“They’re a big threat,” St. Louis coach Bradley Carnell said of Dallas. “They get a good win now in injury time against Austin. Yeah, to be reckoned with, for sure. And this is important for us, how we put teams under pressure at home, how we dominate at home.”

St. Louis (14-9-2, 44 points) has played twice since MLS play resumed after the Leagues Cup. The expansion club throttled Austin FC 6-3 at home on Aug. 20 but dropped a 2-1 decision at Orlando City on Saturday.

Rasmus Alm tied the match for St. Louis City in the 78th minute, but Facundo Torres converted a penalty kick in the first minute of second-half stoppage time for Orlando.

St. Louis City forward Joao Klauss (five goals, four assists) returned Saturday from a four-month absence due to a quad injury. St. Louis’ leading scorer Nicholas Gioacchini (10 goals) picked up a shoulder injury against Orlando, but it turned out to be minor and Carnell didn’t rule him out for Wednesday.

The first meeting between these teams was suspended in the 50th minute due to inclement weather in Frisco, Texas. The match resumed on June 7, and Jesus Ferreira and Marco Farfan scored in the final 10 minutes for a 2-0 Dallas victory.

–Field Level Media

MLS News: Dynamo face Crew, look to extend win streak

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The Houston Dynamo look to continue their momentum when they host the Columbus Crew on Wednesday.

It has been a busy but productive schedule for the Dynamo (10-10-5, 35 points) since Aug. 20 with MLS victories against Portland and Real Salt Lake and another victory over RSL in the semifinals of the U.S. Open Cup on Aug. 23.

With so many matches, Houston coach Ben Olsen will continue the rotation of his players against Columbus (12-7-6, 42 points).

“It creates depth. It helps camaraderie when everybody helps a little,” he said. “We want to keep it rolling right now.

“We still don’t have the luxury to not keep it rolling and have to put our best foot forward Wednesday against Columbus. They are a very good team. They are one of the better teams in the league right now so we’ll have our hands full, but it’s a matchup we’re looking forward to.”

The Crew have consecutive shutouts of FC Cincinnati and Toronto FC since resuming MLS play after the Leagues Cup.

Both of those victories were at home but the Crew are on the road, where they are 2-6-3, for the next three matches and six of the final nine.

Playing in sweltering Houston is not the ideal place to start but Crew coach Wilfried Nancy said jokingly that he found a way to prepare the team.

“We invited all the players to the jacuzzi of Bez just to get used to the hot weather,” he said, referring to Crew president and general manager Tim Bezbatchenko.

Nancy was in a good mood in part because Diego Rossi scored against Toronto in his first start for the Crew after playing the past two seasons in Turkey.

Rossi had 48 goals for Los Angeles FC from 2018-21.

“He’s a fantastic player,” Crew wingback Yaw Yeboah said. “We believe and know that he’s going to help us a lot. He’s going to score a lot of goals. We need to play like him: faster. He’s a good finisher. We’re so happy to have him.”

— Field Level Media

NHL News: Former Minnesota D Brad Maxwell, 66, dies of lung cancer


Brad Maxwell, who spent parts of nine seasons of a 10-year NHL career with the Minnesota North Stars, died on Sunday due to lung cancer that had spread through his body. He was 66.

Maxwell was Minnesota’s No. 7 overall pick of the 1977 NHL Draft and played for the franchise 1977-84 and 17 games of the 1986-87 season. He was an All-Star selection in 1983-84.

“We want to express our sincere gratitude for the love and support shown to us during this difficult time,” Maxwell’s family wrote on a GoFundMe page Sunday. “It is with heavy hearts that we share the news of the passing of Brad ‘Maxy’ Maxwell on Sept. 3, 2023. Those who knew him were truly lucky, and he will be deeply missed. Please keep his family in your thoughts and prayers.”

Maxwell also played for the Quebec Nordiques (1984-85), Toronto Maple Leafs (1985-86), Vancouver Canucks (1986-87) and New York Rangers (1987).

He tallied 98 goals and 270 assists (368 points) across 613 regular-season games. He also suited up for 79 playoff games and added 12 goals and 49 assists (61 points).

Maxwell played for the North Stars team that lost the 1981 Stanley Cup Final to the New York Islanders in five games.

–Field Level Media

PGA News: European team adds three Ryder Cup rookies

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Three Ryder Cup rookies were among the six captain’s picks announced for the European team on Monday.

Captain Luke Donald selected Shane Lowry of Ireland, and Justin Rose and Tommy Fleetwood of England along with first-timers Ludvig Aberg of Sweden, Sepp Straka of Austria and Nicolai Hojgaard of Denmark.

They will join the six automatic qualifiers for the biennial competition against the United States taking place from Sept. 30-Oct. 1 at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club outside Rome, Italy.

Donald’s picks join Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy, Spain’s Jon Rahm, Scotland’s Robert MacIntyre, Norway’s Viktor Hovland and England’s Matt Fitzpatrick and Tyrrell Hatton. MacIntyre is also new to Ryder Cup competition.

“I think it’s fine to have rookies in a Ryder Cup. My first one in 2004, you always want that chance to shine. I think 2004 we had five rookies and you know how that result ended,” said Donald, referring to Europe’s 18 1/2-9 1/2 win at Oakland Hills in Michigan. “There’s nothing wrong in having these young fresh guys going in there to battle.”

The rapidly rising Aberg, 23, turned pro in June. He carded four straight birdies late in Sunday’s final round to win the European Masters in Switzerland.

“I think he’s a generational player,” Donald said of Aberg. “He’s gonna be around a long time and he’s gonna do amazing things. If he wasn’t going to play this one, he was going to play the next eight Ryder Cups. That’s how good I think he is.”

Aberg will reportedly become the first player to compete in a Ryder Cup before playing in his first major championship.

“If you would have told me a couple of months ago that I was gonna be in these conversations I probably wouldn’t have believed you,” Aberg said. “Obviously super, super fortunate to be in this position and I can’t thank the captain and the vice-captains enough.”

Straka, 30, is a two-time winner on the PGA Tour with top-10 finishes this season at the PGA Championship (T7) and The Open Championship (T2).

Hojgaard, 22, is a two-time winner on the European Tour and currently No. 78 in the Official World Golf Ranking.

Poland’s Adrian Meronk, winner of this year’s Italian Open at Marco Simone, was the most notable omission from the European roster.

The U.S. team is the defending champion, coming off a record-setting 19-9 victory at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin in 2021.

–Field Level Media

NCAAF News: Deion Sanders, rebuilt Colorado draw No. 17 TCU for opening act


No. 17 TCU played in last season’s College Football Playoff title contest, but Colorado is the program creating the overwhelming buzz leading into Saturday’s season opener at Fort Worth, Texas.

Deion Sanders, inducted into both the College Football and Pro Football Halls of Fame as a player, is the new coach of the Buffaloes and attempting to turn the downtrodden program into a winner.

Colorado went 1-11 last season and Sanders — who refers to himself as “Coach Prime” — emptied the roster in a manner never seen before in college football history.

Only 10 of last season’s 84 scholarship players are still with the program — seven on offense, three on defense. According to BuffZone, there are 114 players in the program, including walk-ons, and 86 of them are in their first season at Colorado.

“I know it was a huge overhaul, but it had to be done,” Sanders told the publication.

Sanders was hired after going 27-6 in three seasons at Jackson State. He brought his two sons — quarterback Shedeur and safety Shilo — as well as highly regarded cornerback/receiver Travis Hunter from the Tigers.

He heavily worked the transfer portal but many prognosticators don’t expect such a philosophy to create an immediate turnaround.

“We’ve got a lot of doubters — I don’t know why,” Shilo Sanders said. “But we don’t have an underdog mindset. That’s how we’re coming. I’m not thinking we need to prove a lot. We just need to go out there and do what we do.”

The Buffaloes need to improve on defense. The unit ranked last in the nation in scoring defense (44.5) last season. Safety Trevor Woods (84 tackles) is the unit’s top returning player.

Shedeur Sanders is expected to pump up the offense. He started for two seasons at Jackson State and passed for 6,983 yards, 70 touchdowns and 14 interceptions. He also rushed for nine scores.

The Horned Frogs (13-2 in 2022) routed Colorado 38-13 in last season’s opener in the first meeting between the schools.

But TCU coach Sonny Dykes said he won’t be watching that game film due to the roster shakeup.

“Obviously, that tape is not going to be worth anything,” Dykes said Monday. “I haven’t even watched it because there is no reason to.”

TCU is operating in a bigger spotlight this season after putting together a surprise campaign for the ages. The Horned Frogs crashed the four-team playoff and beat Michigan in the semifinals before being steamrolled 65-7 by Georgia in the national championship game.

Dykes allows the final game was ugly but doesn’t think reaching the title contest was a one-time occurrence.

“Anybody can have a good year every now and then,” Dykes said. “We want to be a program that’s consistently in the Top 25. We want to be a program that consistently plays for conference championships, that’s in a conference race in late November. We do those things, we’re going to be in the college football playoff conversation.”

Max Duggan had a magical season and was the Heisman Trophy runner-up but few people remember he wasn’t the opening-game quarterback.

Chandler Morris won the job but sustained a left knee injury in Game 1 that opened the door for Duggan.

Morris said he has a chip on his shoulder “because you go out and you win the job in camp and you get hurt in the third quarter like 27 plays into the game and you’re done.”

–Field Level Media

NCAAF News: Nebraska TE Arik Gilbert arrested on burglary charge


Nebraska tight end Arik Gilbert was arrested early Tuesday for suspicion of burglary in Lincoln, Neb., authorities said.

The former five-star recruit is a two-time transfer currently awaiting an NCAA eligibility ruling after previous stops at LSU (2020) and Georgia (2021-22).

Gilbert, 21, was arrested without incident and booked into the Lancaster County jail on a felony burglary charge, according to the Lincoln Police Department.

Officers responded to a burglary report about 2 a.m. local time and found the glass door to a liquor and vape store shattered.

They found Gilbert holding a bag containing more than $1,600 worth of stolen items, police said. Damage to the store was estimated at $650.

Gilbert was ranked by ESPN as the No. 6 overall recruit in the Class of 2020. He caught 35 passes for 368 yards and two touchdowns as a true freshman at LSU.

He transferred to Georgia and appeared in just two games for the Bulldogs, catching two passes for 16 yards and one touchdown last season.

Because Gilbert already used his one-time transfer exemption, he is waiting on a waiver from the NCAA in order to be eligible this season.

Nebraska opens the season Thursday night at Minnesota.

–Field Level Media

NCAAF News: No. 2 Michigan, sans Jim Harbaugh, casts focus on East Carolina


Second-ranked Michigan is without suspended head coach Jim Harbaugh when it opens the 2023 season against East Carolina on Saturday at Ann Arbor, Mich.

The Wolverines (13-1 in 2022) don’t figure to miss Harbaugh, who serves the first of a school-imposed three-game punishment for his role in NCAA violations involving recruiting and coaching time. Defensive coordinator Jesse Minter will run the Wolverines against the Pirates, who posted an 8-5 record last season.

“I’ve heard people comment that it’s a slap on the wrist,” Harbaugh said Monday of the suspension. “It’s more like a baseball bat to the kneecaps or to the shoulder.”

Offensive coordinator Sherrone Moore is also serving a suspension Saturday due to the NCAA issues. Quarterbacks coach Kirk Campbell will call the plays.

Campbell figures to often get the ball to returning first-team All-American running back Blake Corum against the Pirates.

Corum finished seventh in Heisman Trophy balloting last season when he rushed for 1,463 yards, the eighth highest single-season total in Wolverines’ history. He rushed for 18 touchdowns before effectively missing the final 3 1/2 games due to a serious knee injury.

Corum tore the meniscus, sprained the MCL and sustained a bone bruise in the second quarter against Illinois on Nov. 19. He attempted to play against Ohio State the following week but left after two carries and missed the rest of the season.

The injury prevented Corum from leaving for the NFL. He now sees the good side of the adversity.

“It took me a while to realize that this is just something small,” Corum said. “There’s a lot of people out there doing way worse than I was. A lot of people are quick to get down when something small happens, when there’s people out there really struggling.

“This is something I can come back from, and I got it repaired. Some people can’t repair a lot of things.”

J.J. McCarthy is again the quarterback. He passed for 22 touchdowns and rushed for five while guiding Michigan to the College Football Playoffs. The Wolverines lost 51-45 to TCU in the semifinals.

East Carolina is in reloading mode after losing four key offensive performers from a team that routed Coastal Carolina 53-29 in the Birmingham Bowl. It was the program’s first bowl victory since 2013.

Quarterback Holton Ahlers (3,708 yards, 28 touchdowns), running back Keaton Mitchell (1,452 yards, 14 TDs on the ground) and wideouts Isaiah Winstead (1,085 yards) and C.J. Johnson (1,016) all need to be replaced.

Mason Garcia (38 passing attempts over three seasons) and Alex Flinn (zero career attempts) are competing for the quarterback job. Coach Mike Houston has yet to announce a starter.

“You just go out there and compete your butt off,” Garcia told reporters. “Do what you got to do for the team. Everybody wants this team to be good.”

Whoever gets the call will be facing long odds as few people expect East Carolina to give Michigan a close battle in the first all-time matchup between the programs.

“The big thing with situations like that is that they can’t pay any attention to the outside world and what their opinion is,” Houston said. “They’ve got to focus on themselves.

“… It’s going to be the largest stadium any of them have ever played in so you must be able to handle that. You have to settle down and go play ball.”

–Field Level Media

NCAAF News: Hurricanes seek fresh start facing other Miami, the RedHawks


The Miami Hurricanes have a lot to prove.

Coming off a disappointing 5-7 season in their debut under coach Mario Cristobal, the Hurricanes will open their 2023 season at home on Friday night against the Miami (Ohio) RedHawks in Miami Gardens, Fla.

The Hurricanes, favored by 17 points, are led by quarterback Tyler Van Dyke, who is back for his third season as the starter. Slowed by injuries last year, Van Dyke for his career has completed 62.5 percent of his passes for 4,766 yards, 35 touchdowns and 11 interceptions in 21 games (17 starts).

Henry Parrish Jr. is the Hurricanes’ top running back. He had a career-high 616 rushing yards last year, averaging 4.7 per carry and was voted to the All-Atlantic Coast Conference third team.

Slot receiver Xavier Restrepo is Van Dyke’s top target, but there’s also emerging talent Colbie Young on the outside.

Watch out for wide receiver Nathaniel “Ray Ray” Joseph, one of several true freshmen who figure to contribute to the Hurricanes this season. That list also includes starting right tackle Francis Mauigoa, offensive tackle Samson Okunlola, running back Mark Fletcher Jr., tight end Riley Williams, defensive end Rueben Bain Jr. and cornerback Damari Brown.

“This freshman class has over a dozen guys who don’t flinch,” Cristobal said. “They don’t sit back waiting to inherit a job. They want to go win one.”

The Hurricanes also added some key transfers, including center Matt Lee, who started 36 games at UCF; left guard Javion Cohen, who made second-team All-SEC at Alabama in 2022; linebacker Francisco Mauigoa, who was a standout at Washington State; and cornerback Davonte Brown, who started 31 games in three seasons at UCF.

In addition, the Hurricanes may have the ACC’s best safety duo in James Williams and 2022 first-team All-American Kamren Kinchens.

Meanwhile, the RedHawks finished 6-7 last season, losing starting quarterback Brett Gabbert due to a broken collarbone but still rallying to reach a bowl game.

The RedHawks lost to UAB 24-20 in the Bahamas Bowl.

Gabbert, who has 31 games of college experience including four starts last season, is back for his fifth year with the RedHawks. His career completion percentage is just 58.8 percent, but his touchdowns-to-interceptions ratio is impressive at 45-14.

The RedHawks, though, lost three key offensive players to transfers: running back Tyre Shelton (Louisiana Tech), second-team All-MAC center Rusty Feth (Iowa) and left guard Caleb Shaffer (Oklahoma). The RedHawks also graduated their top receiver in Mac Hippenhammer (54 catches, 769 yards and nine touchdowns), a second-team All-MAC selection.

On the plus side, the RedHawks gained transfer wide receiver Gage Larvadain, who caught 95 passes for 1,252 yards and seven touchdowns in two years for an FCS program, Southeastern Louisiana.

The RedHawks also brought in two other potential starters from the transfer portal: ex-Notre Dame receiver Joe Wilkins Jr. and former Kentucky center John Young, who will join three returning RedHawks starters on the offensive line.

Defensively, the RedHawks return seven starters from a unit that led the MAC in fewest points allowed (22.6). The biggest loss was starting cornerback John Saunders, who bolted to Ole Miss. He could be replaced by Southern Cal transfer Jayden Williams.

“We have a chance to be a really good football team,” RedHawks coach Chuck Martin said. “We’re excited about our first opportunity, playing one of the most storied programs in college football.

“This will be different for our kids to go across the country to play an opponent we’re not familiar with.”

–Field Level Media