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Raptors’ game at Chicago postponed; Toronto unable to field NBA minimum 8 players

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The NBA has postponed Toronto’s game at Chicago on Wednesday night because the Raptors do not have the required eight players available.

A Raptors spokesperson confirmed Wednesday that forward OG Anunoby has become the eighth player on the team to enter the league’s COVID-19 protocols. Anunoby had just returned from a left hip pointer that kept him out of 13 games.

Fred VanVleet, Malachi Flynn, Scottie Barnes and Precious Achiuwa were added to the protocol on Tuesday, joining Gary Trent Jr., Pascal Siakam and Dalano Banton. Players in the league’s protocol have not necessarily tested positive for COVID-19.

Additionally, centre Khem Birch is out with knee swelling, while Justin Champagnie is unavailable with what the team calls a non-COVID-related illness and David Johnson is out with a calf injury.

Despite the depleted lineup, the team travelled to Chicago on Tuesday. The Raptors attempted to make up the numbers by signing several players from the G-League under the NBA’s hardship clause.

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It’s the third game the Raptors have had postponed, along with Monday’s home game against Orlando and a home date with the Bulls on Dec. 13.

Toronto is next scheduled to play the Cavaliers in Cleveland on Dec. 26.

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© 2021 The Canadian Press


Domenicali: Red Bull and Mercedes relationship must be recovered

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Domenicali: Red Bull and Mercedes relationship must be recoveredFormula 1 CEO Stefano Domenicali said on Tuesday that the relationship between Red Bull and Mercedes must be recovered, after the intense battle the two teams were locked in this year.

The Italian was speaking to Autosport after he was awarded the prestigious Lorenzo Bandini Award in Italy on Tuesday night, on the back of his first season as F1 CEO.

Needless to say, 2021 was a season for the history books, with the Championship fight between Mercedes and Red Bull, and their drivers Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen respectively becoming nasty and persona at one point, as Toto Wolff and Christian Horner took the animosities to another level.

Responding to whether he had any concerns for 2022, Domenicali said: “Those who live with certainties mean that they sleep well!

“But we have many doubts and we have to face them. We have issues that will eventually have to be managed,” he acknowledged.

The F1 chief touched on the level of hostility witnessed between the title-contending teams and their respective bosses, Wolff and Horner

“We will have to evaluate day-by-day the relationship that must be recovered between Red Bull and Mercedes, to avoid the personal clashes that we have seen that serve no benefit,” he pointed out.

Better remain silent about Abu Dhabi for now

Domenicali then revealed that the 2021 Abu Dhabi GP controversy has been raised with newly elected FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem, Jean Todt’s successor.

“We have already spoken with the president,” he said.

“We talked about the priorities he will have to face, and there are many.

“But, at this stage, it is right to remain silent so as not to create further controversy in an area that was very overheated,” Domenicali cautioned, before shedding light on the 2021 season’s positives.

“But I would like to say that we come from an extraordinary season, followed by more than two billion people,” he went on.

“The last Abu Dhabi GP was the most followed sporting event in 2021.

“These are stratospheric numbers that we must be proud of,” the former Ferrari boss said.

As to what he predicts for the FIA under the new leadership, the 56-year-old Italian said: “With the change of presidency within the FIA ​​there may also be a change in the balance within the FIA, which for us has an absolutely fundamental role.”

Domenicali has taken over as CEO and President of Formula 1 last January, replacing American Chase Carey in the role, thus becoming the second CEO of the sport under the ownership of Liberty Media.

Joseph Parker beats Derek Chisora in breathtaking heavyweight rematch – ‘One tough guy!’ | Boxing | Sport

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The Kiwi heavyweight outpointed his British rival in a close match which saw the pair slug it out through 12 rounds. Parker, 29, dropped the Brit twice over the match and left him held up by the ropes on another occasion but Chisora, 37, showed off his incredible stamina and recovery to hear the final bell.

Chisora was ultimately forced to accept his fate after the judges returned scores of 115-110, 115-111 and 114-112 in favour of the New Zealand boxer.

In a victory interview, Parker said: “Derek always comes for war, he was one tough guy and never stopped coming forward until the end

“I felt a lot stronger. It was important to start strong and not be negative from the beginning.

“You can see there are improvements to be made.

Parker continued: “Derek Chisora is a credit to the sport of boxing.

“The crowd went mental when he walked out. They just want to support him.”

The match last night was the second time the rivals had faced off, after Chisora was dealt a devastating defeat in their match seven months ago, in which Parker won out after a split-decision.

Saturday’s match saw the Brit come out swinging in the opening round, leaving Parker on the canvas before falling off pace as the match went on.

READ MORE: Joseph Parker beats Dereck Chisora in heavyweight clash

The loss for Chisora now marks his 12th defeat in a 44-fight career. 

Asked if he would like to see Chisora retire from boxing, Parker replied: “Personally I’d like to see him walk away.

“He has given boxing everything he has. The atmosphere is amazing when he fights. I’d love to see him walk away but that’s his decision.”

NBA commissioner Adam Silver says there are no plans right now to pause the season amid COVID-19 surges

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NBA commissioner Adam Silver told ESPN’s Malika Andrews that the league has no plans to suspend its season as COVID-19 surges through the league.

“No plans right now to pause the season,” Silver said in an interview on NBA Today on Tuesday afternoon. “We have of course looked at all the options, but frankly we are having trouble coming up with what the logic would be behind pausing right now.

“As we look through these cases literally ripping through the country, let alone the rest of the world, I think we’re finding ourselves where we sort of knew we were going to get to over the past several months, and that is this virus will not be eradicated, and we’re going to have to learn to live with it. I think that’s what we’re experiencing in the league right now.”

The NBA has had to postpone seven games over the past week — including five over the past three days — as the omicron variant of COVID-19 has swept through the league, just as it has throughout societies around the world.

Silver said that the omicron strain is “beyond dominant” within the league at the moment, something the NBA can track as it has the ability to sequence every positive test it receives from its players, coaches and staff members around the league.

“We’re up around probably 90% of the positive cases we’re seeing right now are omicron,” Silver said.

Silver’s position on not stopping play is in keeping with the memo the league sent to teams Sunday evening announcing new rules regarding replacement players. Teams now have much more flexibility to add them immediately upon losing players to the league’s health and safety protocols — and, once they have at least two players in the protocols, are required to begin signing them.

But one thing he said the league is not yet prepared to do is to openly change its stance on how long players have to sit out in the wake of a positive test. Currently, the NBA’s health and safety protocols say that a positive test requires either sitting out for 10 days or getting two negative PCR tests taken more than 24 hours apart.

Silver, however, told Andrews that the league has seen through the data it has collected that players who have received booster shots have both shown either no symptoms or very mild ones and have passed the virus through their systems faster — which could, at some point in the future, pave the way for the league to shorten the amount of time players have to miss.

“We always are measuring viral loads with our PCR test,” Silver said. “So that’s something, again, that it’s not just our doctors but the medical community is looking at. I think they’re already realizing that you can move away from the 10-day protocol when you have players who are vaccinated and boosted.

“It seems the virus runs through their systems faster. They become not just asymptomatic but, more importantly, they’re not shedding the virus anymore. That’s the real concern in terms of others. And so we are actively looking at shortening the number of days players are out before they can return to the floor.”

And while Silver said the NBA isn’t ready to change its stance on testing when it comes to asymptomatic players — as, for example, the NFL did over the weekend — he did say that the league’s data makes it clear that boosters work, and that he is hopeful that the league’s current percentage of players who have been both vaccinated and boosted, 65%, will continue to increase.

“We have a lot of data we look at. In terms of players and coaches that have gone through the three-shot protocol, meaning the two mRNA shots and then the booster, and then past two weeks, only a very small number of those people have been breakthrough cases where they’ve turned positive,” Silver said. “And they essentially have been asymptomatic or very mild symptoms. We’re also dealing with a large group that either have one J&J shot or haven’t been boosted yet.

“I would just say to our community, really to everyone, at least based on the data the NBA has, that the boosters are highly effective, and we are strongly encouraging everyone to get them. In fact, in our league right now, we’re around 97% vaccinated, but we’re up to about 65% of our players have been boosted and we’re in active discussions with the players’ association to get that number even higher. So we’re not, in terms of your question, in essence whether we can treat this as endemic, and people begin to move on and we only test those that are symptomatic and deal with those, we’re not quite there yet, but we’re paying a lot of attention to what other leagues are doing.”

But while Silver was quick to point out the efficacy of both the vaccine and booster shots, one thing he said hasn’t been discussed is another push to have a leaguewide vaccine mandate.

While San Francisco and New York have required players who play for teams in those markets to be vaccinated — a decision that is keeping Brooklyn Nets star Kyrie Irving from playing in any home games this season — no other cities have followed suit, and the NBA has not circled back on its mandate proposal to the National Basketball Players Association from before the season began.

“No,” Silver said, when asked whether he had brought it back up again. “It’s something that we proposed. It’s something that the players’ association wouldn’t agree to. Having said that, we’re at roughly 97% of our players having been vaccinated. So from my standpoint, I’d rather focus on the 97% than the 3%. And, incidentally, many of the 3% now have gotten COVID, so they have developed antibodies.

“To me, the focus is on boosters for the 97% of players who have been vaccinated. As I said before, among those players who are eligible to get boosters because, as you know, there’s a waiting period after your second shot, but among those who are eligible to be boosted we are about 65%, and ideally I’d like to see that number get to 97% as well. That’s what we’re focused on right now with the PA.”

The NBPA issued a statement Tuesday evening about the effort to get booster shots to players.

“Today, we committed to facilitating the delivery of booster shots to all eligible players and the NBPA is strongly encouraging all of our players to receive a booster as soon as possible,” the union said.

In the meantime, however, teams are dealing with having to rush to sign replacement players, in many cases, just to fill out their rosters to be able to play in games. Silver admitted that isn’t an ideal situation to be in but said that ultimately there isn’t much of an alternative for a league that is going to continue playing games in the middle of the pandemic still raging throughout society.

“I think there’s a recognition that these are the cards that we’ve been dealt,” Silver said. “Of course there’s an amount of unfairness that comes with playing in certain cases with some teams where particular players are out because of COVID protocols, but the other advantage is we do have an 82-game season and we do have a long playoffs, and my sense is things will work out by the end of the season.”

Two PSG players test positive for Covid-19 ahead of Lorient visit — Sport — The Guardian Nigeria News – Nigeria and World News

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Two Paris Saint-Germain players have tested positive for Covid-19 and a third is in isolation, the club said Wednesday a few hours before a Ligue 1 match at Lorient.

They are one of several Ligue 1 clubs to reveal positive tests, though not at the same level as England, where a raft of matches have been postponed in the Premier League and lower divisions.

PSG’s two positive cases are German international defender Thilo Kehrer and the 21-year-old French midfielder Eric Junior Dina-Ebimbe.

They “are subject to the appropriate health protocol”, said their club.

Argentine international midfielder Leandro Paredes was placed in isolation on Tuesday “as a precaution”, PSG said.

All three played Sunday in a 3-0 French Cup win over Entente Feignies-Aulnoye.

The evening game at Lorient is not in danger since, under the latest French League protocols, a team can play if it has 20 available players, including a goalkeeper.

Alongside the announcement of the positive tests, PSG also released a list of 22 players who have made the trip to Brittany. They include Lionel Messi and Sergio Ramos.

If the 35-year-old Spanish defender plays it will be the first time since joining PSG from Real Madrid in July that he has been able to appear in two consecutive games. He appeared in one league game in November and played 45 minutes in the cup on Sunday.

Other Ligue 1 sides have also reported positive Covid-19 tests.

Bordeaux’s game against Lille will go ahead after they reported no further players had tested positive.

Nine of their squad and six members of the backroom staff tested positive earlier this week.

Reims and Angers have also been affected with the former — who play Marseille — announcing six positive tests: four players and two staff.

Angers did not give the number of positive tests but said they would delay their departure for Montpellier.

Phil Mickelson to play Tournament of Champions after 21-year absence

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KAPALUA, Hawai’i — Phil Mickelson is headed back to Hawai’i for golf, not a vacation, committing to play the Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua for the first time in 21 years.

Mickelson won the winners-only tournament at La Costa Resort in 1998, then has played only twice since it moved to the Plantation Course at Kapalua in 1999, most recently in 2001 when he tied for 28th against a 33-man field.

He qualified this time by winning the PGA Championship at Kiawah Island at age 50, making him the oldest major champion in history.

His appearance means all four major champions will be at Kapalua on Jan. 6-9, with Lefty joining Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama, U.S. Open victor Jon Rahm and winner of the Open Collin Morikawa.

The field also includes Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas. Among those not playing is Wells Fargo Championship winner Rory McIlroy, who starts his season in the Middle East swing that is part of the European tour.

Paralympians shine at third Lagos Valuejet Para Table Tennis Open — Sport — The Guardian Nigeria News – Nigeria and World News

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The trio of Tokyo 2020 Paralympians, Isua Ogunkunle, Faith Obazuaye and Olufemi Alabi, dominated the third Lagos Valuejet Para Table Tennis Open held on Saturday at the Molade Hall of the Teslim Balogun Stadium.

Ogunkunle, who is the top seed in Africa, won gold in the singles and open in the men’s class four events, while Alabi, a bronze medalist at Tokyo 2020, claimed the men’s class 10 in the singles and open events, as Obazuaye, sustained her control of the women’s class 10 when she won the gold medal in singles and open events.

In other matches, Ifechukwude Ikpeoyi won the women’s class five when she beat experienced Faith Obiora to cart away gold medal in the singles and open events, while also Tokyo 2020 Paralympians, Ahmed Kolesoho and Victor Farinloye won gold medals in the singles event of men’s class three and eight respectively, but couldn’t make it to the top spot in the open events.

Speaking at the grand finale, the Lagos State First Lady, Dr. (Mrs.) Ibijoke Sanwo-Olu expressed delight to be part of the final day of the 2021 edition of Valuejet Para Table Tennis Open jointly organised by the Nigeria Table Tennis Federation, Para Division and Sunday Odebode Para Table Tennis Foundation.

She said: “Let me start by congratulating and commending the organisers of this all-important championship for deeming it fit to put it together as part of efforts designed to play up welfare and interests of the differently able in the society.

“This yearly championship is an important tournament for table tennis athletes, who are living with disabilities to showcase their talents and compete, while also serving as a national ranking event of note in Nigeria.”

Mrs. Sanwo-Olu added: “My message to you, therefore, is that whilst you continue to invest the right energy and zeal into training, you must also take your education even more seriously and equally draw inspiration from great table tennis players, who are making waves nationally and internationally.

“For the Lagos State government, the commitment remains the same and that is to continually put measures in place to play up the welfare, wellbeing, and interests of people living with disabilities”.

The Ashes 2021-22 – Mark Wood admits England needed ‘kick up the bum’ after Adelaide thrashing

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Fast bowler keen to defy injury “stigma” ahead of likely MCG recall

England were given “a kick up the bum” by Chris Silverwood, the head coach, in a post-match debrief after their 275-run defeat at Adelaide Oval, according to Mark Wood, who is set to return to the side for the Boxing Day Test at the MCG.

But reports have subsequently suggested that the batting group came in for heavy criticism during a dressing-room meeting in which several players were made to watch their dismissals on video.

Wood said that there was no tension between England’s batters and bowlers, insisting that the squad are “all in it together” and “desperate to play better than we are”.

“We probably needed it – a brutally honest discussion at the end of the game in the dressing room” Wood said on Wednesday. “Chris Silverwood spoke and put some footage up. Stokesy [Ben Stokes] and Rooty spoke honestly to the group about things we felt weren’t going well and what we’d do better.

“It was a conversation that isn’t usual for us. It was a kick up the bum to say: ‘look, we are 2-0 down now, and the same mistakes keep on happening’. It was a good discussion. As a bowling group we can always get better – I just feel like with the batting, as we discussed in the meeting, these heavy collapses we keep having is what’s costing us Test matches.

“It doesn’t feel like it’s a batters v bowlers thing, with all the batters in one corner giving snidey talk about the bowlers, and all the bowlers in the other corner snidey-talking about the batters. It’s not like that. We’re just desperate to play better than we are. We’re all in it together but we’re coming under a bit of fire at the minute for batting and bowling, because we’re getting soundly beaten.”

Wood took 3 for 85 in Australia’s first innings in the first Test at the Gabba, regularly passing 90mph/145kph and taking the key wicket of Steven Smith, but was a surprise omission from an England attack that lacked variety at Adelaide.

He looks certain to return to the side at the MCG, with Chris Woakes likely to miss out after taking three wickets at 76 apiece across the first two Tests, and Wood stressed that he is keen to lose the “stigma” of injury, insisting that his fitness work in recent years means he should be available for back-to-back Tests if required in the rest of the series.

“I have managed to play back-to-back tests in the last couple of years,” he said. “It’s something I’ve worked hard at with my fitness. Obviously the times where I’ve broken down, I’ve tried my best to make them less and less [common].

“I was ready to go if required for this game [the second Test] but the decision was made that I would be left out and I accept that. That was the decision made for this game. Selections are constantly made throughout the tour about what’s best for the team, whatever that might be, so there was no set plan.

“I’ve tried to get that sort of stigma away from me where I can’t play back-to-back games. I’m trying to get away from that. Five Tests in a row, I don’t know if I could have stood up to that. But I was certainly going to try if selected, and it will be the same with the last three games. Hopefully my body holds up – it’s a constant conversation with physio, doctor, head coach and captain, trying to minimise risk.

“If I do get the nod in Melbourne, that’s something you can say is special in your life and I can tell my son one day that I got up in front of that many people on a massive sporting occasion with everything on the line. If that’s the case then I’ll give everything I’ve got, 100%, charging in to try to get us the right result to get us back in the Ashes.”

NHL players won’t be going to Beijing Winter Olympics, league confirms – National

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The NHL has officially announced that its players won’t be going to the 2022 Beijing Olympics.

The move, confirmed to The Canadian Press on Tuesday by a person with direct knowledge of the decision, comes amid COVID-19 concerns that have seen an explosion of cases and 45 games postponed since Dec. 13.

NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said in a statement that “profound disruption” to the league’s schedule caused by COVID-19-related events made Olympic participation “no longer feasible.”

Read more:

NHL players will not participate at 2022 Beijing Olympics due to COVID-19: reports

The NHL and NHLPA officially committed to sending players to China for the 2022 Games back in September, but that agreement with the International Ice Hockey Federation allowed either party to withdraw if COVID-19 conditions rendered participation “impractical or unsafe.”

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The league currently has more than 15 per cent of its players in virus protocol, forcing a string of postponements.


Click to play video: 'NHL scraps weekend Canucks games as spread of Omicron shuts down B.C. events'







NHL scraps weekend Canucks games as spread of Omicron shuts down B.C. events


NHL scraps weekend Canucks games as spread of Omicron shuts down B.C. events

NHL Players’ Association executive director Don Fehr said in a statement that while players are disappointed in not being able to participate in the Beijing Games, completing an 82-game season in a campaign mired with interruptions caused by COVID-19 took precedence.

Fehr said he expects that NHL players will return to the Olympics in 2026.




© 2021 The Canadian Press


Jake Paul takes fresh swipe at Tommy Fury after not hearing ‘a f****** peep’ | Boxing | Sport

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Paul, 24, still stepped in the ring on the date he was due to fight Fury, 22, but arranged a rematch with Tyron Woodley as an alternative.

The YouTuber produced a brutal knockout to defeat the former UFC star for the second time.

The American took to twitter to express his frustration with the lack of dialogue between his team and the Fury family.

“Just asked my team if we have heard from the Fury’s, Frank Warren, or Queensberry… not a f*****g peep!,” he fumed.

“Fumbles and fake fooks they are.”

JUST IN: Jake Paul aims brutal dig at Tommy Fury with message on ring-walk outfit