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Oleksandr Usyk leaps to Anthony Joshua’s defence but sends rival rematch warning | Boxing | Sport

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“I am very proud to be the new champion but I mostly focus on just living my life and continuing to train hard in the gym in anticipation of the rematch.”

While Usyk seems happy with life as a heavyweight champion, Joshua has himself been searching for answers as to how he can up his game ahead of their second meeting.

The Londoner has spent time in the United States, meeting with world-renowned trainers to “get some new teachings”.

It has also added to speculation that Joshua is looking to make changes to his corner, as he did after his shock loss to Andy Ruiz Jr in 2019.

Coach Rob McCracken is rumoured to be the one in the firing line, while the fighter has admitted he feels those in his corner have to improve the way they work together.

Tunisia’s Jabeur becomes first Arab tennis player to reach top 10 — Sport — The Guardian Nigeria News – Nigeria and World News

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Tunisia’s Ons Jabeur became the first Arab tennis player to break into the world’s top 10 on Monday, while Indian Wells champion Paula Badosa gained 14 places in the WTA rankings.

Jabeur, a Wimbledon quarter-finalist earlier this year, was beaten by Spain’s Badosa in the Indian Wells semi-finals last Friday.

Before the tournament, 14th place was the highest achieved by Arab players, a record which was jointly held by Jabeur and former Moroccan star Younes El Aynaoui.

The 23-year-old Badosa, who beat Victoria Azarenka in Saturday’s final in California, started the year as the world number 70 but has now climbed to 13th.

Four-time Grand Slam champion Naomi Osaka moved up two places and back into the top 10 despite not playing last week.

WTA top 20:

1. Ashleigh Barty (AUS) 9,077 pts

2. Aryna Sabalenka (BLR) 7,115

3. Karolina Pliskova (CZE) 5.320

4. Barbora Krejcikova (CZE) 4.748 (+1)

5. Garbine Muguruza (ESP) 4.425 (+1)

6. Elina Svitolina (UKR) 4.096 (+1)

7. Maria Sakkari (GRE) 4.005 (+2)

8. Ons Jabeur (TUN) 3,500 (+6)

9. Belinda Bencic (SUI) 3,365 (+1)

10. Naomi Osaka (JPN) 3,326 (+2)

11. Iga Swiatek (POL) 3,306 (-7)

12. Angelique Kerber (GER) 3,265 (+3)

13. Paula Badosa (ESP) 3,248 (+14)

14. Sofia Kenin (USA) 3,130 (-6)

15. Petra Kvitova (CZE) 3,035 (-4)

16. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (RUS) 2,986 (-3)

17. Elena Rybakina (KAZ) 2,883 (-1)

18. Elise Mertens (BEL) 2,835

19. Simona Halep (ROM) 2,807 (-2)

20. Anett Kontaveit (EST) 2,766

Lucas Herbert wins Bermuda Championship for first PGA Tour victory

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SOUTHAMPTON, Bermuda — Lucas Herbert had two birdies during the toughest, wind-blown stretch of Port Royal and held steady to the end Sunday for a 2-under 69 to win the Butterfield Bermuda Championship.

Herbert closed with four pars to hold off Danny Lee (71) and Patrick Reed, who finished with four birdies over his last six holes for a 65 and then waited to see if it would be enough.

Herbert, the 25-year-old Australian who won the Irish Open earlier this year, stayed in front by closing with two good par saves and missing a pair of 7-foot birdie attempts he didn’t need.

His first PGA Tour victory, and third worldwide, sends him to the Masters for the first time.

“It opens up so many doors,” said Herbert, who earned his PGA Tour card through the Korn Ferry Tour Finals two months ago. He had missed the cut in his other two starts this season.

The wind and rain, which caused tee times to be moved up, was as fierce as advertised, and play was halted briefly without having to bring the players off the course.

“I felt like I grinded really well early and I had the right attitude going into the day that it wasn’t going to be easy,” Herbert said. “You just knew it was going to be one of those days where you had to battle really, really hard. Under par was going to be a great score.”

He finished at 15-under 269.

Taylor Pendrith of Canada, who started the final round with a 3-shot lead, failed to make a birdie in closing with a 76 to tie for fifth.

Pendrith had three straight bogeys starting at No. 6 and was still very much in the mix, 1 shot behind going to the reachable par-5 17th. But he pulled his drive into the water, hit his third into the water and missed a 5-foot putt to take double bogey.

He wasn’t the only player who can look back at missed chances.

Danny Lee had a 1-shot lead and appeared to be in control of his game until it all fell apart for him on the 12th hole. He went long of the green, pitched to the back collar and then used a fairway metal to bump his shot about 7 feet by the hole, missing that to take double bogey.

Herbert rolled in a 20-foot birdie putt and went from 1 shot behind to the lead. After a bogey on the par-3 13th, Herbert made a 30-foot birdie putt to get to 15-under par.

Reed was well ahead of them and didn’t appear to be in the mix until he knocked in a pair of 30-foot birdie putts, made a 12-foot par putt on the par-3 16th and finished with two birdies.

That wasn’t the best round of the day. Scott Stallings started 14 shots behind, began his round on No. 10 and pulled to within 2 shots before running out of birdies. Stallings still managed a 62 and went from a tie for 50th to a tie for fifth.

Patrick Rodgers had a 70 and finished alone in fourth.

Lee followed his double bogey with a pair of bogeys before making one last push. He birdied the next three holes, sending his tee shot on the par-3 16th out over the ocean and letting the wind bring it back to 15 feet.

Trailing Herbert by one on the 18th, Lee missed the green and had to get up-and-down for par. Herbert played wisely and conservatively, using his power to lean on a driving iron on the final two holes that eliminated trouble.

“This finishing stretch kind of played into my hands a little bit,” Herbert said. “I felt like probably the strengths of my game — the longer game, whether it be long irons or 3-woods, drivers off tee — I felt like that really played in my wheelhouse. So I just tried to really stay positive with the swings.”

Villeneuve back to winning ways

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Jacques Villeneuve wins in EuroNASCARJacques Villeneuve is back to winning ways, as the former 1997 Formula 1 World Champion has won for the first time while competing in NASCAR Whelen Euro Series.

The Canadian’s win came at the opening race of the final weekend for the series at the Autodromo di Vallelunga in Italy, overcoming a five-second time penalty.

Villeneuve was clearly ecstatic about his result and was speaking to motorsport.com.

“Finally, it’s been a long time coming,” he said. “We have been fighting at the front a lot and the car was good in the race. We had a hard time in practice but in qualifying the car was really amazing.”

The Ex-Formula 1 racer, who remains to date the last driver to bring the the Drivers’ and Constructors’ Championships into the Williams F1 team’s coffers since 1997, spoke of the penalty he received which did not stop him from claiming  the win for the Academy Motorsport/Alex Caffi Motorsport team.

“I got a penalty at the start,” he said, “I’m not sure why because the rules say ‘go’ on green, so I must have missed something in the rulebook, so I’ll go check.

“But a good thing I jumped the start because I didn’t have the horsepower against Alon, which was obvious until Turn 1,” the winner of 11 grands prix pointed out.

The 50-year old pointed out that his previous experience on ovals Stateside played a role in his maiden NASCAR Euro Series triumph.

He revealed: “I guess having raced so much on the ovals in the States, I didn’t have to lift on the outside of Turn 1 there.

And summed up: “I just went for it and Alon lifted.”

Villeneuve’s win rounded up a season where he sits ninth in the standings with one win, two top-five finishes, and four top-ten finishes.

Oleksandr Usyk gives Tyson Fury verdict and aims brutal dig at Andy Ruiz Jr | Boxing | Sport

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“I’ve been spending time with my kids,” the 34-year-old explained.

“I’ve been fishing, walking around doing nothing. Just relaxing… nothing changed much. I keep thanking the Lord for everything I have in my life.

“I keep cheering up, loving life and spending my time doing things I love.”

In recent weeks Joshua visited the United States to speak with potential new trainers in a bid to expand his team ahead of his Usyk rematch.

Atlanta Hawks’ Trae Young gets $15K fine for making contact with referee

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NEW YORK — Trae Young was fined $15,000 by the NBA on Friday for making contact with a referee.

The star guard was penalized for his actions with 6:41 left in the second quarter of Atlanta’s 122-111 loss to Washington on Thursday.

Young was driving left and bumped by defender Raul Neto, his momentum carrying him across the baseline after he missed the shot but didn’t earn a foul call. As he ran back onto the court, Young bumped his arm into official Ben Taylor, who called him for a technical foul.

Young is one of the players who was expected to lose out on some foul calls he previously received after the NBA emphasized this season cutting down on calls against defenders when the offensive player initiated the contact.

Knicks play the Raptors on 3-game win streak

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Toronto Raptors (4-3, seventh in the Eastern Conference) vs. New York Knicks (5-1, first in the Eastern Conference)

New York; Monday, 7:30 p.m. EDT

BOTTOM LINE: New York seeks to build upon its three-game win streak with a victory over Toronto.

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New York finished 25-17 in Eastern Conference play and 25-11 at home during the 2020-21 season. The Knicks gave up 104.7 points per game while committing 20.8 fouls last season.

Toronto went 27-45 overall and 17-25 in Eastern Conference play during the 2020-21 season. The Raptors averaged 111.3 points per game last season, 43.6 in the paint, 18.6 off of turnovers and 13.7 on fast breaks.

INJURIES: Knicks: Nerlens Noel: day to day (knee).

Raptors: Yuta Watanabe: day to day (calf), Pascal Siakam: out (shoulder).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.




© 2021 The Canadian Press


Solskjaer’s tactical tweaks pay off as Man Utd return to winning ways | The Guardian Nigeria News

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Ole Gunnar Solskjaer took Manchester United south to play Tottenham with his job on the line but lives to fight another day after his decisions paid off handsomely in a 3-0 win.

The pressure on the Norwegian was intense after last week’s 5-0 horror show against Liverpool, in which Jurgen Klopp’s men embarrassed their historic rivals.

United travelled to London for Saturday’s game after taking just one point from a possible 12 to fall well off the pace in the Premier League.

AFP looks at three talking points after the win against Spurs lifted United back within touching distance of the top four.

Veteran strike force
Solskjaer chose to pair Cristiano Ronaldo and Edinson Cavani up front at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, selecting a strike force with a combined age of 70. It was the first time they had started together.

Young guns Marcus Rashford and Mason Greenwood were sacrificed to make way for the veteran double act, potentially depriving United of thrust down the flanks.

But Ronaldo and Cavani both got on the scoresheet and proved a constant headache for the Spurs defence.

Solskjaer said it was the oldest team he had picked for United, adding he had decided it was time to bank on experience.

“The old men led from the front,” he told Sky Sports. “They play well together. They have loads of respect for each other. The work-rate and quality they put in is second to none.”

Steady Varane
United’s defending at home against Liverpool was catastrophic, summed up by an incident in which Harry Maguire and Luke Shaw collided in the lead-up to Liverpool’s second goal.

Solskjaer chose to bring back France defender Raphael Varane against Spurs for his first game for the club since October 2, switching to a central back three, with Shaw and Aaron Wan-Bissaka pushing forward.

“Raphael Varane is a top player,” Solskjaer told the BBC. “He reads the game well. He’s quick and so experienced. To get him back is massive for us.”

United looked calm and assured at the back and goalkeeper David de Gea did not have a single save to make as they recorded just their second clean sheet of the season in all competitions.

‘Man of the match’ McTominay
Ronaldo was named man of the match after he scored one goal and created another for Cavani but Solskjaer said Scotland midfielder Scott McTominay was his pick as the standout player.

McTominay and Fred were bypassed by Liverpool’s quicksilver attackers last week but established control in London as part of a midfield four and provided a platform for the men up front.

“Man of the match for me, by a mile,” said the United boss.

“That’s the Scott we have seen a few times before. He’s had his injury, he’s had his operation (on a groin injury) this season but today I thought he was absolutely brilliant.

“He won his tackles, drove forward, kept the ball simple, switched play, headed away a few set-plays. So, absolutely top.”

Sainz: We were just going through a rough patch

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Carlos Sainz was not happy with how Drive to Survive portrayed Ferrari Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz admits that Netflix series “Drive to Survive” has played a role in increasing Formula 1’s popularity Stateside, although he isn’t happy with how his team was portrayed in it when they were just going through a rough patch.

The Netflix series that has attempted to shed light on F1 has been the subject of debate lately, with Max Verstappen labeling it as a fake, while other drivers defended it.

Sainz was playing golf with teammate Charles Leclerc and speaking to GQ Magazine ahead of the 2021 United States Grand Prix in Austin last weekend, and gave his views on how the American fans are dealing with F1 these days.

“I’ve certainly felt quite a bit of change in the sport’s following from social media with American fans,” he revealed. “I think obviously Netflix had the biggest impact on that.

“As a sport, we’ve always been relatively [behind] closed doors, and Netflix has allowed fans in America, and all over the world, to see the personalities of the drivers.”

However, the 27-year old from Madrid was not impressed with how Ferrari were seen through the lens of last season’s Drive to Survive, when the team was having a tumultuous time with a disastrous car, and four-time champion Sebastian Vettel on his way out, after a bitter split with the team.

“The season three episode [of Drive to Survive] about Ferrari is not so great,” Sainz pointed out, “and I was relatively disappointed when I watched it because Ferrari is a lot cooler, a lot bigger, a lot better, than how it appears [in that episode].

“We were just going through a rough patch, and I think all great teams in every single sport go through difficult years.

“And now we are on our way back up,” the Spaniard claimed. “We are doing everything we can to make this team great again and champions again, and I think we have a really good team atmosphere going on with Charles and the engineers, and we are a serious contender for the future.

“And I mean, it’s Ferrari – who doesn’t like Ferrari in normal life?” he insisted.

Sainz, who replaced Vettel at the Maranello-based squad at the beginning of 2021, has done a great job integrating himself within his new environment, which was no mean feat, especially when the guy on the other side of the Red garage is a certain Charles Leclerc.

The two are getting along well up to now, reminiscent of the “Bromance” Sainz shared with Lando Norris at McLaren, on which he commented: “Bromance is a strong word, but we are getting on very well, having a lot of fun away from the race track and even on [it].

“We keep the competition clean and fun, we’re pushing the team in the same direction, pushing each other really hard.

“It’s the perfect atmosphere for the team, and we play a lot of sports together – like today, golf – always hanging around, and it’s good fun,” he concluded.

And it seems that the good atmosphere within the team, and the new power unit, naturally, are paying dividends as the Scuderia has recently been on a upward performance curve.

In Austin, Sainz and Leclerc out-qualified both McLaren cars and went on to finish seventh and fourth respectively in the race. A strong result from the Monegasque, while Sainz was hindered by a botched pit stop which allowed Valtteri Bottas and Daniel Ricciardo to beat him to sixth and fifth respectively.

Nevertheless, this means that Ferrari have closed the gap to McLaren down to 3.5 points in the Constructors’ Championship, and are well placed to take third from the Woking-based outfit with five races remaining this season.

Sainz has played an integral role in this achievement, scoring three podium finishes for his team, and is currently seventh in the Drivers’ Standings just 5.5 points behind Leclerc in sixth.

(Follow me on Twitter @MallakJad)

Anthony Joshua raises eyebrows with reason for wanting to ‘step away’ and find a new coach | Boxing | Sport

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He suggested that while he is enduring some ‘tough sparring’, McCracken is the only one offering advice – which is why the Brit went to America recently. 

Joshua, whose record stands at 24-2 went to learn more and bring vital information back – and he is not ruling out the addition of another experienced coach.

“I said, “Rob, look, I got to go out there and I’ve got to find a new coach to work with and learn from as well’,” Joshua continued.

“I’m not basing myself in the states. I’m a UK resident, I’m not living out in the states.

“So, to find a new coach must mean I train 11 months, 10 months out of the year and for me, I’m not going out to the states to live and find a new coach.

“I might go out there. I’m probably going to shoot out there again and do some training.

“Rob’s in Lithuania or something like that or Siberia, like so I’ve got to find other ways to keep myself busy.”