High school seasons are about halfway done – or more – so this is a good time to take a look at some things happening across the country. Today, Rivals national recruiting director Adam Gorney gives five thoughts on the 2023 running backs.
No one has the No. 1 spot locked up, as Rueben Owens leads the all-purpose backs and Justice Haynes tops the running back rankings, but a lot of decisions still need to be made following senior seasons and especially all-star games.
Owens and Haynes are having very strong seasons so far, but let’s give credit where it’s due because so are USC commit Quinten Joyner and Texas pledge Cedric Baxter, who’s already over 1,000 yards and is pacing toward a 2,000-yard season.
Statistics are only one consideration with running back rankings because some of these players have very weak offensive lines or play in systems where they’re not getting the ball as often as others. That is definitely something to consider and why all-star performances are so crucial to get a real apples-to-apples comparison on these guys.
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THE FIVE-STAR DISCUSSION
Rivals rankings are based off expected college performance and also projected NFL Draft position, so that has to play a factor when we look at the running back spot.
Recent history is just not on the side of making running backs five-stars since over the last five drafts there have been only six first-round draft picks, most of them coming toward the tail end of the first round.
Najee Harris was a superstar in high school, a superstar at Alabama and he was a pick later in the first round. Only Saquon Barkley is an outlier as he was the second pick in the 2018 draft and has already missed significant NFL time because of injuries, although he’s still a special talent.
Over the last few years, we’ve made a conscious effort to not completely withhold five-star rankings from running backs but to certainly dial it back. It’s been reflected in the 2022 class and even before as that all-purpose player – someone who not only can run between the tackles but also catch passes out of the backfield – might even provide more value.
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GUYS HAVING BIG YEARS
Roderick Robinson (Nick Lucero/Rivals.com)
There are a lot of high-profile players at both running back and all-purpose back that are putting up insane stats this season – and they should not go unnoticed.
UCLA commit Roderick Robinson, who just visited Texas A&M and will visit Georgia soon, has 1,501 yards and 21 touchdowns on 121 carries for his San Diego Lincoln squad. He had a great summer and it’s carried over in a big way to his senior year.
Or how about LSU commit Trey Holly, who now holds the Louisiana state record for rushing yards and has 1,177 and 16 TDs so far? Let’s not forget Auburn pledge Jeremiah Cobb, who could push higher in the all-purpose rankings with 1,045 yards and 17 rushing scores to go along with four receiving TDs.
How about Dante Dowdell, an Oregon commit who is being pursued by SEC teams? He has totaled 1,074 yards and 13 scores. Douglasville (Ga.) South Paulding’s Jamarion Wilcox has 1,077 yards and 12 scores on 109 carries and could be pushing for that fourth star.
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WILL ANYONE FLIP?
Dante Dowdell (Nick Lucero/Rivals.com)
Flip season is coming up. Things slow down drastically during the season when players are in their groove, coaching staffs are generally settled and weeks fly by. But the time of the year leading into the Early Signing Period is crazy and there are some names that will be on flip watch.
Rueben Owens will be one, depending on Louisville coach Scott Satterfield’s job status and whether the El Campo, Texas, standout wants to stay closer to home. Right now, his pledge remains firm.
Roderick Robinson will be another to watch as his Texas A&M visit could not have gone any better, and he’s also visiting Georgia. But UCLA is undefeated, too, and his commitment is strong there.
Will Dante Dowdell stick with Oregon even with Ole Miss and others in the SEC fight for him? Miami is coming after Ohio State pledge Mark Fletcher from Plantation (Fla.) American Heritage. There are also coaching changes at Wisconsin, Georgia Tech and elsewhere to consider as things pick up in a few weeks.
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PLAYERS LEAVING HOME
Daylan Smothers
Of the top 10 running backs committed, 80% are headed out of state.
In a snake draft if you don’t have the No. 1 pick, you’ll have a hard time getting Nikola Jokic. However, in a salary cap draft you can absolutely land the Joker, you just need to pony up.
The reigning two-time MVP has been going for an average of $70 of the standard $200 budget used in ESPN salary cap drafts. You can even pair him with his rival Joel Embiid for a cool $130 and create an incredibly talented, if awkward, MVP competition on your own fantasy roster. This strategy leaves you little left to build out the rest of your team, but speaks to the freedom managers have in this format.
With this freedom comes the responsibility to refine and define your strategy and player valuations. You determine which players best fit your philosophy, rather than the draft spot you have. Longtime ESPN fantasy hoops analyst Jon Cregan even wrote an evergreen opus covering all things salary cap. If you want to dive into the details of budgeting strategies and team-building philosophies germane to salary drafts, start with that piece.
Some might call paying up for Embiid and Jokic the beginning of a “stars and scrubs” approach, one that surrounds a handful of pricey superstars with a series of sleepers and fringe fantasy options. The extreme version suggests, in snake draft terms, you pay for two or three first rounders and then 10 late-round players.
This isn’t an ideal approach, mostly because there are so many high-level NBA stars and thus scarcity isn’t in your favor when pursuing a top-heavy build. Such an approach is more palatable in fantasy football, where there is more scarcity of reliable elite skill players.
In basketball, you can argue there are nearly 20 players “worthy” of first-round consideration in statistical terms. You should still pursue multiple stars atop your hoops roster, but it shouldn’t take up such a disproportionate part of your budget.
While snake drafts can certainly offer surprises and create real pivot points you might not have expected, the volatility of the unique market that develops in each salary cap draft is more pronounced. Being informed allows you to be adaptive in the draft, so you can recognize where to spend and where to stay patient.
What makes fantasy basketball so rewarding is how managers recognize and value versatility. Save for points formats, most leagues are driven by categories. You need your superstar wings to produce, but you also need rim-protection specialists to supplement the build.
You know who the high-dollar superstars are but can you get the best price? It’s good to have some price points that you really stick to. There’s not a ton of strategy when it comes to pairing Durant and Dejounte Murray to open your draft if the driving force was purely value.
If you believe Durant is still a bankable $55 player (worth more than that last season) and you can land him at $46, that’s highly advisable. If the room was too scared to pay market value for Murray amid the mystery of his fit with Trae Young, that can prove profitable. Some drafts might unfold and see each player go well above expectations or projections. Variance from draft to draft is a feature of the format.
My favorite approach in recent years has been to identify a collection of sleepers and specialists at each position who can serve to complement whatever collection of higher-dollar stars I’ve already built. Which is to say, I’m more likely to consistently target and land these players given their markets aren’t as fluid as those of star players. I might not intend to draft Damian Lillard and Anthony Davis, but I am fine doing so if the prices are true values. I do intend, however, to draft Desmond Bane in almost all salary cap leagues this season.
Bane leaps off the page as a major value in salary cap drafts because he going to see a career high in minutes, he’s entering his prime in his third season, and the Grizzlies’ dont have much depth behind him. If Bane cruises past 30 minutes per night, he is on the path to posting prime Klay Thompson lines, with an average price point of just $8 in ESPN drafts.
In addition to Bane, I also like Herbert Jones for his incredible steal and block rates and scoring forces Jamal Murray and Collin Sexton. These are players that are going below $10 that could triple their current value this season. Guys like Devin Vassell, Gordon Hayward, Monte Morris, and P.J. Washington won’t cost much more than a dollar in most drafts, but will be on almost all of my rosters. Having a list of players you want will often result in you landing a lot of those players.
Being nimble during those early big-name nominations is pivotal. Value will absolutely develop; it just might not be in those first few names. Then you can pursue your own list of sleepers and values at each position. It sounds like something on a terrible motivational poster, but the balance between patience and preparation is what we aim to strike in salary cap drafts.
{{ timeAgo(‘2022-10-04 08:17:08 -0500’) }} football Edit
Clint Cosgrove
• Rivals.com
National Recruiting Analyst
Clint Cosgrove sits down five-star defensive lineman Justin Scott to recap his Ohio State visit and preview next weekend’s game day visit to Miami. Scott also shares his thoughts on the recent coaching change at Wisconsin and how it impacts his recruitment with the Badgers moving forward.
SYDNEY — Players at this year’s World Cup had a few concerns about the competition, including the compact schedule and the timing of the tournament, and the women took their complaints right to the top.
FIBA Secretary General Andreas Zagklis talked with many of the players during the course of the recently competed tournament. He offered a quick solution for the rest concerns, but changing the date will take more work.
The next World Cup in 2026 will once again feature 16 teams instead of the 12 at this year’s tournament — and players will have more time to recuperate between the final rounds.
“We will not play three days in a row, that will not happen again,” Zagklis said. “This is not something we want to see repeated. It’s too heavy on the players.”
At this year’s tournament, the quarterfinals, semifinals and medal games were played over three straight days. Overall, teams that reached the gold-medal game would have played eight games in 10 days. The 2018 World Cup had a break between the quarters and the medal round.
While the scheduling change is a welcomed positive step for the players, there’s still the issue of timing. The WNBA tried to work with FIBA by shortening its season. Still, the league’s playoffs continued until the start of the World Cup, forcing about a dozen players to basically travel a few thousand miles, get off a plane and start playing for their national teams.
Many European leagues tip off soon after the World Cup ends, so it’s difficult to move it to a later start date.
Zagklis said FIBA will be working with the stakeholders to provide the best possible solution for the players — though indicating the change will likely have to come from the WNBA or the other pro leagues.
“The World Cup is turning next year 70 years old, the women’s world has been there much before virtually every women’s league in the world and it is the top female competition,” Zagklis. “So the calendar starts again with the World Cup.”
USA Basketball chairman Martin Dempsey said there is a sense of urgency for FIBA to address the scheduling problem, especially with the WNBA set to expand over the next few years.
“The time to have that conversation is before it happens, not after,” Dempsey said. “So we really do need to figure out with the ‘W,’ the NBA and FIBA how to keep all of these enterprises viable because we don’t want to run the risk of creating a very diluted World Cup.
“We’ve got to have a really serious ongoing conversation about how to keep things in sync so that they don’t clash.”
Five of the U.S. players competed in the WNBA Finals that ended three days before the World Cup started. Chelsea Gray, Kelsey Plum and tournament MVP A’ja Wilson missed the first two games for the U.S.
Before the scheduling change was announced, players made their positions clear.
“I don’t know if FIBA gave a damn about anyone,” Plum said.
“Rest would be a good thing,” Wilson said. “Having some time between would definitely help.”
The site for the 2026 World Cup hasn’t been announced yet and getting to Australia might have been the most difficult place for everyone because of its location.
Serbia coach Marina Maljković noticed how tired many players were. She coaches in Turkey in the winter and said players across the leagues need a break.
“You see a lot of players that lacked freshness. You can see it, any single team going from club season to WNBA, WNBA to national team,” Maljković said. “This year it’s very, very complicated. … Talking to players, they really suffered this season because of the tight schedule everywhere. I guess there will be smart people who will sit around the table and see what we can do about that.”
Aside from the logistical issues, the World Cup was a huge success in Australia. The total attendance of 145,519 was the highest in the history of the competition. There were nearly 16,000 fans at the gold-medal game between the U.S. and China, which was the largest since the 1953 championship game played in Chile in a stadium that had 35,000 fans.
“By all metrics, we have seen a tremendous effort by the hosts,” Zagklis said. “Record sales in merchandise, record attendances, fantastic atmosphere in the games, so it’s hard to challenge the conclusion that we’ve been able to experience the best World Cup ever.”
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More AP women’s basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/womens-basketball and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports
There are now five open Power Five jobs and in today’s Tuesdays with Gorney, Rivals national recruiting director Adam Gorney gives his thoughts on each and ranks them in order of which program has the best chance of winning fast:
Paul Chryst won 72% of his games and got fired. He was basically winning at the same clip as Jim Harbaugh at Michigan but maybe under the hood there were some issues brewing that needed to be figured out.
One is that the recruiting department seemed to be lacking severely, especially for a place like Wisconsin. Secondly, losing Jim Leonhard to another program was not something the Badgers wanted to do, so they’re gambling by getting rid of Chryst in place of Leonhard, who could be the long-term answer in Madison.
Wisconsin has not had a losing season since 2001. Ten of the last 17 seasons have brought double-digit victories. This is a place where winning football happens, the system works and while Chryst was very successful running the program the Badgers have now set a new course with the hopes that Leonhard can be the long-term answer.
The Scott Frost era saw the first four-straight losing seasons since the late 1950s and early 1960s at Nebraska, which is hard to believe because there was so much hope that Frost would lead the resurrection of the program.
There are certainly many positives about the Huskers job since the program is steeped in tradition, it has a willing fan base that is aching for relevancy on the national stage again and it literally cannot get much worse. So, any marked improvement will be seen as a bright light by those in charge.
It’s still a difficult ask in recruiting, though, since there is limited in-state talent and then regionally many other Big Ten programs have an established footprint. Still, though, with some creativity and the proper assistant coaches in place with relationships at talent centers across the country, this is still a prime-time job.
There have been a few bright spots in recent years when it comes to Arizona State whether, it was two eight-win seasons by Herm Edwards or two 10-win campaigns by Todd Graham, but otherwise the Sun Devils have been 7-6 or 6-7 for many of the other years.
The Herm Edwards experiment ended up not working and he might’ve been fired on the field by friend and athletic director Ray Anderson after the Sun Devils’ embarrassing loss to Eastern Michigan a few weeks ago. There is a looming NCAA investigation to deal with as well, so any potential coaching candidates will have to navigate through that to determine if they even want to get involved.
But there are many positives to this job where I believe the Sun Devils could flourish. There is plenty of in-state talent, but keeping those players home has been a significant challenge for both Arizona State and Arizona over the past several years. The weather, the campus, the – let’s say – social scene are all very beneficial. ASU is a place where winning can happen, but the right coach needs the right staff and in-state recruiting must pick up.
What Georgia Tech has going for it is that it’s located in one of the most talent-rich areas of the country, so while many top prospects will leave for Georgia or other SEC powers, the Yellow Jackets have a real chance to load up with local talent each and every recruiting cycle.
One problem is that Geoff Collins’ revamp following the successful Paul Johnson years did not work, so the new coaching staff will have to come in and basically start over again. With the transfer portal and Atlanta-area talent, that could be done quicker than most rebuilds.
From 1997 to 2014, Georgia Tech went to a bowl game every single year. Since that time, the Ramblin Wreck have only gone twice. I don’t think national titles are around the corner, but expectations of going to a bowl game – and a surprise ACC upset here and there – should be a solid starting point after three straight 3-9 seasons under Collins.
Karl Dorrell did not have an ample amount of time to implement his system at Colorado as he came in during the COVID year mess, then had one full season and was fired after an 0-5 start to this season, during which the Buffaloes were hardly competitive in any game. Colorado lost every game by double digits and gave up more than 40 points in its last four losses. So Dorrell is gone and a new coaching search starts.
The Buffaloes haven’t been piling up four-stars in recent recruiting classes but they haven’t been at the bottom of the Pac-12, either, so there is some talent there, a great college town, proximity to the talent in Denver and the suburbs and they’ve had success in Texas, California and other states before. Dorrell inspired no excitement in the program, and that’s what Colorado needs to get jumpstarted again.
David Evans will return to Ascot with Rohaan on Qipco British Champions Day following his latest cosy success at the Berkshire track.
The hold-up sprinter was much too good for his 12 rivals in the Bengough Stakes on Saturday, cruising to a length and a half success under Adam Kirby.
The British Champions Sprint may now be the springboard to a winter campaign abroad, according to the Monmouthshire trainer.
“There are a couple of options,” said Evans. “We’ll get Champions Day out of the way first – I think he’s got a hell of a chance there. If he goes there in the same sort of form, I think he’ll win again, but he’s got to get there and do it.”
The consistent four-year-old son of Mayson has won nine of his 27 races, despite suffering from a few niggling setbacks.
Image: Crystal Palace defender James Tomkins co-owns Rohaan
“He had his problems, with bleeding and what have you, but we’ve sorted that out,” said Evans. “If the horse is not hurting, he’ll put it in and he has got his confidence back.
“He has got the ability, it is just getting it out of him on the day. He is very easy to train, anyway.”
Image: Ryan Moore and Rohaan win the 2022 Wokingham Stakes at Royal Ascot
Evans is already looking beyond his six-furlong Group One engagement on October 15.
He added: “We went to Saudi last year, but I think this year it will be different. If we went aboard again, we could go to Dubai.
“If we got an invite to Dubai, he would probably go there on World Cup night.
“It’s so nice to have a horse like this – it has taken all my life to get one.
“It changes your life a little bit. Even for the staff in the yard and everything. You really appreciate it when you have a horse this good.”
The independent investigation into player abuse in women’s professional soccer found a long list of failures by National Women’s Soccer League coaches and executives, as well as the United States Soccer Federation itself.
“Our investigation has revealed a league in which abuse and misconduct — verbal and emotional abuse and sexual misconduct — had become systemic, spanning multiple teams, coaches, and victims,” the report read. “Abuse in the NWSL is rooted in a deeper culture in women’s soccer, beginning in youth leagues, that normalizes verbally abusive coaching and blurs boundaries between coaches and players.”
The summary report, a copy of which was obtained by ESPN, also details recommendations for the USSF to implement going forward. The investigation was conducted by former U.S. Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates, on behalf of the USSF.
The report includes a previously undisclosed revelation as to the manner of Racing Louisville’s firing of Christy Holly as manager back in August 2021. The report details how Holly called a player, identified as Erin Simon, in for a film session, stating he would touch her “for every pass” she made a mistake on. (ESPN’s policy is to not publicly identify victims of abuse, but Simon, through a spokesperson, agreed to be identified.)
Holly then proceeded to put his hand “down her pants and up her shirt.” Simon would try to “tightly cross her legs and push him away, laughing to avoid angering him,” adds the report, stating that when her teammate picked her up to drive home, Simon broke down crying.
Holly was later fired for cause, though the reason for his firing wasn’t publicly disclosed.
“There are too many athletes who still suffer in silence because they are scared that no one will help them or hear them,” Simon said in a statement through a spokesperson. “I know because that is how I felt. Through many difficult days, my faith alone sustained me and kept me going. I want to do everything in my power to ensure that no other player must experience what I did. This report allows our voices to finally be heard and is the first step toward achieving the respectful workplace we all deserve. It is my sincere hope that the pain we have all experienced and the change we have all brought about will be for the good of our league and this game we all deeply love.”
In a statement, USSF president Cindy Parlow Cone said: “This investigation’s findings are heartbreaking and deeply troubling. The abuse described is inexcusable and has no place on any playing field, in any training facility or workplace. As the national governing body for our sport, U.S. Soccer is fully committed to doing everything in its power to ensure that all players — at all levels — have a safe and respectful place to learn, grow and compete. We are taking the immediate action that we can today, and will convene leaders in soccer at all levels across the country to collaborate on the recommendations so we can create meaningful, long-lasting change throughout the soccer ecosystem.”
The investigation was initiated following a report in The Athletic in 2021 that detailed allegations of sexual harassment and coercion from 2015 made against former Portland Thorns manager Paul Riley. Former Thorns players Mana Shim and Sinead Farrelly alleged that Riley invited both players back to his apartment and asked them to kiss each other in exchange for getting the team out of a conditioning drill the next day, as well as drinking with players and sending lewd photos to Shim.
The Thorns fired Riley following an investigation, though they failed to follow up on additional allegations from Farrelly that included having a sexual relationship with him. The allegations against Riley were by no means unique.
The report stated: “Players described a pattern of sexually charged comments, unwanted sexual advances and sexual touching, and coercive sexual intercourse.”
The abuse by coaches wasn’t always sexual in nature, the report found, with former Chicago Red Stars manager Rory Dames among those found to have verbally and emotionally abused players.
“We heard report after report of relentless, degrading tirades; manipulation that was about power, not improving performance; and retaliation against those who attempted to come forward,” the report read.
Among the report’s findings was that throughout the league’s existence, teams, the NWSL and USSF failed to put in place basic measures for player safety. The report also detailed how abuse in the NWSL was systemic and that NWSL teams, the league and the federation failed to adequately address reports and evidence of misconduct.
“Teams, the League, and the Federation not only repeatedly failed to respond appropriately when confronted with player reports and evidence of abuse, they also failed to institute basic measures to prevent and address it, even as some leaders privately acknowledged the need for workplace protections,” the report read. “As a result, abusive coaches moved from team to team, laundered by press releases thanking them for their service, and positive references from teams that minimized or even concealed misconduct. Those at the NWSL and USSF in a position to correct the record stayed silent. And no one at the teams, the League, or the Federation demanded better of coaches.”
Because the teams, the NWSL and USSF failed to identify and inform others of coaches’ misconduct, the abuse was allowed to continue. This was due in part to a culture of abuse, silence and fear of retaliation due to a lack of job security.
The report also provided more details as to how Riley was allowed to continue coaching in the NWSL, despite being fired for cause by the Thorns following the aforementioned abuse allegations. Former NWSL commissioner Jeff Plush, in an email to then USSF president Sunil Gulati, USSF CEO Dan Flynn and USSF general counsel Lisa Levine, conveyed his understanding that Thorns president of soccer Gavin Wilkinson told the Western New York Flash that Riley was “put in a bad position by the player,” and that Wilkinson would “hire [Riley] in a heartbeat.”
ESPN previously reported that Wilkinson had given the Flash a positive job referral for Riley. He was hired by the club in early 2016. Although Plush, Gulati, Flynn and Levine all had received Shim’s detailed complaint — and Plush and Levine received a 2015 Thorns report — none appeared to provide the Flash with additional information.
ESPN also reported that later, when Riley was in contention for the managerial position for the U.S. women’s national team, Thorns owner Merritt Paulson told North Carolina Courage counterpart Steve Malik it would be “a good idea” for Riley to withdraw. The Yates report details how following “at least fourteen conversations among eleven people at the Federation, the League, the Portland Thorns, and the NC Courage, Riley publicly withdrew himself from consideration.” But during those conversations, USSF chief legal officer Lydia Wahlke never conveyed a report that Riley had a “relationship with a Portland player to the League, others at the Federation, or the Courage.
The report found that three organizations — the Chicago Red Stars, the Portland Thorns and Racing Louisville — didn’t fully cooperate with the Yates investigation, despite public statements to the contrary.
“The Portland Thorns interfered with our access to relevant witnesses and raised specious legal arguments in an attempt to impede our use of relevant documents,” the report read. “Racing Louisville FC refused to produce documents concerning Christy Holly and would not permit witnesses (even former employees) to answer relevant questions regarding Holly’s tenure, citing non-disclosure and non-disparagement agreements it signed with Holly. The Chicago Red Stars unnecessarily delayed the production of relevant documents over the course of nearly nine months.”
The report added that the Thorns tried to claim that certain information, including the Thorns’ 2015 report of their investigation into Riley, was protected by attorney-client privilege or common interest privilege “despite evidence to the contrary.” The Thorns only relented after a period of months after the initial requests by investigators.
“In general, teams, the NWSL, and USSF appear to have prioritized concerns of legal exposure to litigation by coaches — and the risk of drawing negative attention to the team or League — over player safety and well-being,” the report stated.
That wasn’t the only failing of the NWSL and the USSF.
Even in cases where the federation and/or the league was aware of the misconduct, the report adds, it typically did nothing to correct the team’s inaccurate description or minimized the coach’s misconduct. For example, the Portland Thorns, the Federation, and the League failed to ensure Riley’s conduct was accurately disclosed to Western New York Flash or North Carolina Courage.
Despite such interference, the investigation conducted over 200 interviews, including over 100 past and present NWSL players.
In terms of recommendations, the report called for greater transparency so abusive coaches can’t move from team to team. This includes eliminating the use of nondisclosure and non-disparagement agreements that serve to shield information about abusive coaches.
In terms of accountability for the behavior, the report acknowledged that this responsibility lies mostly with the NWSL and its teams. The USSF is not empowered to sanction executives and team owners. But the report noted that, “No organization took ownership over player safety,” and that the USSF could put additional teeth into its licensing requirements, requiring coaches to get annual recertification. The report also recommended suspending the licenses of coaches found to have engaged in misconduct, which in the case of Riley, the USSF had already done.
The report also recommended that the USSF should require the NWSL to “conduct timely investigations into allegations of abuse, impose appropriate discipline, and immediately disseminate investigation outcomes.”
Clear rules were needed regarding what constituted prohibited behavior to whom the policies applied, concluded the report, while noting that the current prohibited conduct policy, which sets forth USSF’s anti-harassment and anti-bullying policy, does not apply to professional leagues or non-national team players.
To better establish a single point of contact for player safety, the report recommended that the USSF, the NWSL and teams should each designate an individual within their organizations who is responsible for player safety. It recommended that the USSF should also require the NWSL to solicit feedback from players via surveys and provide the results to the USSF.
In terms of discipline, the report recommended that while none of the coaches mentioned are still coaching in the league, some executives and owners still are. “The NWSL should determine whether discipline is warranted in light of these findings and the findings of the NWSL/NWSLPA Joint Investigation,” the report read.
The investigation was initiated on Oct. 2, 2021, a day after The Athletic report was published. The USSF retained Yates and the law firm King & Spalding to conduct an investigation. A parallel investigation is also being conducted by the NWSL and the NWSL Players Association. A source with knowledge of the Yates investigation acknowledged that while the two investigations did share information on occasion, they were done separately.
The NWSLPA released the following statement on Monday after the findings were released: “As difficult as this report is to read, it has been even more painful for Players, whether known or unknown, to live it. We appreciate their efforts to seek the truth in support of our work to transform NWSL.
“The NWSL Players Association’s joint investigation with NWSL is separate from the U.S. Soccer investigation and remains ongoing. This joint investigation is a product of our collective action; to our knowledge, this is the first investigation of its kind where Players have direct access to evidence through our own representatives, an oversight role, and a voice in the process. Our goal is to marshal all the facts to inform evidence-based recommendations about how to advance the goal of a league centered on player safety. We appreciate the recommendation of Sally Yates and her team to NWSL to take further action through our joint investigation, and we expect full cooperation from both U.S. Soccer and all NWSL Clubs with our joint investigation.”
In a news release in conjunction with the findings of the Yates investigation, the USSF announced it was already instituting some changes as it relates to player safety. These include: establishing a new office of participant safety to oversee the USSF’s conduct policies and reporting mechanisms; publishing soccer records from SafeSport’s centralized disciplinary database to publicly identify individuals in the sport who have been disciplined, suspended or banned; and mandating a uniform minimum standard for background checks for all U.S. Soccer members at every level of the game, including youth soccer, to comport with United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee standards.
In addition to those most steps, the USSF has created a new committee of the board of directors to address the report’s recommendations going forward. The committee will be chaired by former U.S. women’s national team player Danielle Slaton alongside U.S. Club Soccer CEO Mike Cullina, the vice chair.
A statement from the USWNTPA in reaction to the report recognized the bravery of those who spoke out and asked the USSF to act on the findings.
“All players and employees deserve to work in an environment free of discrimination, harassment, and abusive conduct,” it read. “The USWNTPA commends the courage of the survivors, current players, and former players who came forward to speak out against abusive practices that have become far too normalized in the NWSL and women’s soccer generally. At the same time, USWNTPA is dismayed that some NWSL clubs and USSF staff impeded the investigation; those who have not done so should fully cooperate with the ongoing NWSL/NWSLPA investigation immediately.
“Finally, although it should not have taken an independent investigator to bring light to these practices and to recommend common sense reforms, USWNTPA urges USSF to implement the recommendations immediately, and it stands ready to work with its partners at the NWSLPA, FIFPro, USSF, NWSL, and FIFA to prioritize player safety across the sport.”
“Truth Be Told — The Fight For Women’s Professional Soccer” debuts Tuesday at 7 p.m. ET on ESPN, ESPN+
TOKYO — A top executive at a major Japanese publisher was charged Tuesday with bribing a former Tokyo Olympics organizing committee member.
The charges against Tsuguhiko Kadokawa, a major figure in Japan’s movie and entertainment industry, are the latest in the unfolding corruption scandal related to last year’s Tokyo Summer Games.
Kadokawa was arrested Sept. 14 on suspicion of bribing Haruyuki Takahashi with 69 million yen ($480,000).
Takahashi, a former executive at advertising company Dentsu who joined the Tokyo Olympic organizing committee in 2014, had great influence in arranging sponsorships for the Games. He has been arrested and re-arrested three times since August.
All the while, he has remained in custody and is also facing bribery allegations involving two other companies: Aoki Holdings, a clothing company that dressed Japan’s Olympic team, and Daiko Advertising Inc.
Tagging on additional allegations, which keeps a suspect in custody, is known as “hostage justice,” and is a widely criticized but common practice in Japan.
Analysts say the arrests and charges may continue for months in the Olympics scandal, as more than 50 companies were sponsors.
Kadokawa, the son of the publishing company’s founder, said in a statement carried on Japanese media that he would quit as chairman.
“I feel I must take responsibility. Kadokawa is facing a serious challenge, and a new leadership is needed so it can be overcome,” he said.
Several other officials at the companies accused of bribery have been arrested, including two other Kadokawa employees.
Tokyo-based Kadokawa Group, which also makes movies and games, said it takes the charges seriously.
“We deeply and repeatedly apologize to our readers, users, writers and creators, shareholders and investors and all others who may have been affected,” the company said in a statement.
Prosecutors say Takahashi acted in ways to favor the companies with business benefits related to the Olympics in return for the bribes.
The official price tag for the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics was $13 billion, mostly public money. The Games were postponed for a year because of the coronavirus pandemic.
———
Yuri Kageyama is on Twitter https://twitter.com/yurikageyama
———
More AP sports: https://apnews.com/hub/sports and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports
FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. — Atlanta Falcons running back Cordarrelle Patterson was placed on injured reserve after having a procedure on his knee Monday morning.
Falcons head coach Arthur Smith said Monday he expects Patterson to return this season and that they “expect him back sooner rather than later.”
The 31-year-old Patterson had missed two days of practice last week and practiced on a limited basis Friday. He played Sunday against the Cleveland Browns, but on a limited basis with a season-low nine carries, and was also held off kick returns, where he is one of the best returners in NFL history.
Patterson had been off to a hot start in 2022, his second season as a full-time running back, rushing 58 times for 340 yards and three touchdowns, including two 100-yard games. He entered Week 4 as the NFL’s No. 3 rusher.
“It was something that he had been managing,” Smith said. “I’m not the doctor, but you’re trying to weigh all that, and there’s nothing that he did that put it at any further risk. You got to assess if it’s something that you want to have week-to-week and how’s it going to go.
“We have a great medical team, and CP, I hate to talk for him, but obviously he wouldn’t have played if that had been the case. Just something that will help him more importantly in the long run and help the team.”
Patterson would be eligible to return for Atlanta’s game on Nov. 6 against the Los Angeles Chargers. He will miss games against Tampa Bay on Sunday and against San Francisco, Cincinnati and Carolina.
“He definitely has been setting the tone for us offensively with the way he’s running the ball,” Falcons left tackle Jake Matthews said. “So he’s going to be missed, for sure, and hope he has a speedy recovery and gets back quick.”
To replace Patterson on the roster, the Falcons signed Caleb Huntley after his 10-carry, 56-yard performance, including a touchdown, during a practice squad call-up against Cleveland on Sunday. Huntley has 11 carries for 59 yards and a touchdown this season.
With Patterson out, the Falcons will use a combination of Huntley, fifth-round pick Tyler Allgeier out of BYU and Avery Williams. Allgeier has 26 carries for 139 yards, and Williams converted from cornerback this past offseason and has four carries for 37 yards. They also have fullback Keith Smith as an option.
The Falcons could also bring back running back Damien Williams, who is eligible to return from injured reserve next week after suffering a rib injury on the second drive of the season against New Orleans in Week 1.
Atlanta has the NFL’s fourth-ranked rushing offense with 672 yards and averaging 5.1 yards a carry.
Atlanta also has five players eligible to come off injured reserve this week, and Smith said they’ll assess all five but did indicate cornerback Isaiah Oliver, who was the team’s starting nickel corner before tearing his ACL against Washington on Oct. 3 last year, “will be back sooner than later.”
Minnesota Vikings rookie safety Lewis Cine has undergone the first of two procedures to repair a compound fracture of his lower left leg, the team confirmed Monday afternoon. The second procedure will take place Tuesday at a hospital in London, where he will remain until the “appropriate time,” according to the team.
Cine suffered the injury in the first quarter of the Vikings’ 28-25 victory over the New Orleans Saints at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Members of the team’s medical staff accompanied him to a local hospital, and one will remain with Cine until he returns. Coach Kevin O’Connell said Monday that the fracture was “compound,” which means that Cine’s bone punctured his skin. That adds a level of complexity to the treatment and recovery.
Cine is in “great spirits,” according to a team statement, and O’Connell said he spoke with him for about 20 minutes after the team returned late Monday night to Minnesota. But O’Connell demurred when asked if he knows enough to be certain that Cine will be able to resume his career at some point.
“I think that’s a tough question right now,” O’Connell said. “We’ve been so short-term as far as making sure that he’s getting the care both medically and then support wise from us as an organization.”
O’Connell, who was an assistant coach with Washington when quarterback Alex Smith suffered a similar injury, said he wanted Cine to know that the organization will be “right there with him as he makes his way back to hopefully a full recovery” and added: “I have no doubt that he’s going to be attacking that every step of the way.”
SANTA CLARA, Calif. — In their two losses this season, the San Francisco 49ers‘ defense just needed a little help from the offense. On Monday night against the Los Angeles Rams, it turns out what was really needed was a heaping helping of Deebo Samuel.
The Niners’ previously struggling offense got the spark it needed from Samuel, who ignited the offense with a whirling dervish of a 57-yard touchdown catch and went on to a six-catch, 115-yard night. San Francisco’s suffocating defense took care of the rest in a 24-9 victory that was the Niners’ seventh straight against the Rams in the regular season. The victory pushed the 49ers to 2-2 on the season and 2-0 in the NFC West.
San Francisco 49ers
Eye-popping Next Gen stat: Samuel’s 57-yard touchdown catch in the second quarter included 51 yards after catch over expectation, per NFL Next Gen Stats. That’s the second most on any pass play for the Niners since 2016, behind only the 83-yard catch he had to set up a score in a Week 8 win against the Chicago Bears in 2021. Samuel ran a total of 79.7 yards on the touchdown.
Buy Talanoa Hufanga‘s breakout performance: The Niners’ second-year strong safety looked like an emerging star in the season’s first three weeks with his fearless, attacking style and better-than-his-40-time coverage skills. But Hufanga made a big statement in front of a national audience Monday night, stepping in front of a short Matthew Stafford throw and juggling the ball a bit before securing it and racing 52 yards for the game-sealing touchdown. The Niners’ defense is already star-studded, but it looks like they’ll need room for one more.
QB breakdown: 49ers quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo insisted all week that finding a rhythm was a work in progress and would take some time. And while that was clearly still the case on Monday, Garoppolo undoubtedly improved from Week 3 to Week 4. Garoppolo missed some throws he needs to make, but he was mostly on time and getting rid of the ball quickly behind an offensive line missing star left tackle Trent Williams. Most important, he had zero turnovers in a game in which a giveaway could have turned the outcome. He finished 16-of-27 for 239 yards with a touchdown for a passer rating of 100.7. –– Nick Wagoner
Underrated statistic to know: The first-quarter field goal by Rams kicker Matt Gay marked the first points the 49ers have allowed on their first defensive possession this season. It was also the first points allowed by the 49ers in a first quarter this season. They were the last team to allow a first-quarter point.
Next game: at Panthers (4:05 p.m. ET, Sunday)
Los Angeles Rams
Coach Sean McVay said after the Los Angeles Rams‘ Week 3 victory that the offense was still figuring out its identity. In the Rams’ loss on Monday night, that identity did not involve finding the end zone against an excellent San Francisco 49ers defense.
QB breakdown: For the second week in a row, Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford did not throw a touchdown, but this time, Los Angeles’ offense couldn’t do enough for an NFC West victory. Stafford completed 32 of 48 passes for 254 yards with an interception and a fumble. The offense once again ran through Cooper Kupp on Monday night, as the wide receiver finished with 14 catches for 122 yards. Only Kupp and tight end Tyler Higbee had more than three catches for the Rams.
Troubling trend: After allowing seven sacks to the Buffalo Bills in the season opener, the Rams’ offensive line held steadier in Weeks 2 and 3. But against the 49ers on Monday night, Stafford was sacked seven times, including four in the first half. Stafford was pressured 17 times, his second most since joining the Rams, per ESPN Stats & Information research. The Rams are dealing with several injuries on the offensive line and were down to their third-string center, Jeremiah Kolone, after center Coleman Shelton left the game with an ankle injury.
Biggest hole in the game plan: Stopping Samuel continues to be an issue for Los Angeles. Including the playoffs, Samuel has scored five touchdowns against the Rams since the start of the 2021 season. According to ESPN Stats & Information research, that is tied for the most by any player against any team since the start of last season. Samuel finished with six catches for 115 yards, although 57 yards came on the biggest play of the game, when Samuel evaded several Rams tacklers for a long catch and run for the touchdown. Samuel had two plays for 29 or more yards on Monday. The Rams have one of that distance or more all season. — Sarah Barshop
Underrated statistic to know: Stafford’s pick-six that Talanoa Hufanga returned for a 52-yard score in the fourth quarter was just the third on a screen pass in the past three seasons across the league (Tom Brady threw one in 2021 and Cam Newton threw one in 2020).
MIAMI — Jesús Luzardo struck out 12 in six innings, Bryan De La Cruz hit a two-run homer and the Miami Marlins prevented Atlanta from clinching its fifth straight NL East title by beating the Braves 4-0 on Monday night.
After sweeping the rival Mets at home over the weekend, Atlanta arrived in Miami needing one win or a New York loss to wrap up the division crown and a first-round playoff bye.
The Braves were unable to solve Luzardo or slow De La Cruz — and the Mets were rained out at home against Washington. New York is 1 1/2 games behind Atlanta heading into Tuesday’s doubleheader versus the last-place Nationals, while the Braves will play the second of three games at fourth-place Miami.
“You just can’t go out and win a baseball game. There are a lot of moving parts in it,” Atlanta manager Brian Snitker said. “These are dangerous teams, there are guys out there with talent. It’s hard to win a game. We’ll go get a good night’s sleep, come back and do it again.”
Dansby Swanson had two of Atlanta’s four hits, all off Luzardo (4-7). Braves sluggers Austin Riley and Matt Olson struck out three times each against the left-hander, who walked one in his first win since Aug. 7.
“It’s extremely satisfying,” Luzardo said. “Just wanted to go out there and do the same thing I’ve been doing: give us a chance to win, go long into a game. The result was great and definitely wanted to keep the train going.”
It was the fifth time the Braves were shut out this season, and the first time Miami blanked them since Sept. 8, 2020.
“Tough last three days, then night travel, we just couldn’t score runs,” Riley said. “There’s no panic. Come back (Tuesday) and lock this thing down.”
De La Cruz also doubled and singled, finishing a triple shy of the cycle for the third time in his last nine starts. Jesús Sánchez doubled twice and singled as Miami snapped an eight-game losing streak to the Braves.
“Hopefully next time I have that opportunity needing a triple, I’ll try to hit one out and perhaps the outfielder will dive, miss it and the ball will bounce around,” De La Cruz said.
Atlanta starter Bryce Elder, who threw a shutout against Washington in his previous outing, was lifted after giving up four runs in five innings. Elder (2-4) allowed six hits, walked one and struck out five.
“Would have liked to keep it closer than four,” he said.
Swanson doubled leading off the sixth before Luzardo fanned Michael Harris II, Riley and Olson. It was Atlanta’s final hit, as relievers Jeff Brigham, Bryan Hoeing and Richard Bleier each tossed a perfect inning for Miami.
Run-scoring doubles from De La Cruz and Sánchez in the first gave the Marlins a 2-0 lead.
De La Cruz’s two-run shot in the third made it 4-0. The second-year outfielder drove Elder’s sinker over the wall in center for his 13th homer this season. He raised his batting average to .390 with five homers and 22 RBIs since being recalled from Triple-A on Sept. 7.
“That’s who I am, the player they brought in last year,” De La Cruz said. “And that’s how I will continue to be the rest of my career.”
CLOSING STATEMENTS
Luzardo’s dominant final start of the season followed similar performances by teammates Sandy Alcantara and Pablo López against Milwaukee last weekend. Alcantara, a top NL Cy Young Award contender, threw his major league-leading sixth complete game in a 1-0 loss, while López tossed seven scoreless innings and got a no-decision.
“Our guys have kept us there and given us chances,” Marlins manager Don Mattingly said. “If you look at the whole season, it’s been a pretty strong suit. For the most part, they’ve been pretty solid.”
DIFFERENT SITUATION
When Elder made his previous start in Miami on Aug. 14, he was a one-day call-up from Triple-A to take the 27th roster spot for the doubleheader. Now, he could figure in Atlanta’s postseason plans after his third outing since being recalled a fifth time Sept. 19.
“He’s definitely going to be in the conversation,” Snitker said. “He’s pitched his way into it.”
FAMILIAR HONOR
Harris accomplished in September what he had previously done in June and August. The 21-year-old center fielder earned his third NL rookie of the month award. Harris hit .324 and finished with six homers and 19 RBIs in September.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Braves: 2B Ozzie Albies (right pinkie fracture) traveled with the club to Miami, where he will continue his rehab.
Marlins: SS Miguel Rojas will undergo surgery to repair cartilage damage in his right wrist Wednesday.
UP NEXT
Braves RHP Jake Odorizzi (5-6, 4.53 ERA) will start the middle game of the series Tuesday, while the Marlins go with LHP Braxton Garrett (3-6, 3.56).
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More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports
SANTA CLARA, Calif. — The Los Angeles Rams continue to lose offensive linemen to injury after center Coleman Shelton was ruled out of Monday’s game against the San Francisco 49ers with an ankle injury.
Shelton, who was the Rams’ backup center, injured his knee on the first drive of the game, but came back out for the Rams’ second offensive drive. He was later ruled out for the remainder of the game and replaced by Jeremiah Kolone.
The Rams are down to just two Week 1 starters on their offensive line after the injury. Shelton was playing in place of center Brian Allen, who injured his knee in the season opener. After the game, Rams head coach Sean McVay said he expected Allen to miss two to four weeks with the injury.
The Rams were also without guard David Edwards, who entered the concussion protocol on Saturday after telling the team that he “was a little bit foggy.” The Rams have lost five offensive linemen to injury at some point this season.
Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford had been sacked twice for a loss of 19 yards when Shelton was ruled out.
CLEVELAND — The county prosecutor’s office in Cleveland has opened an investigation into an apparent cheating scandal during a lucrative walleye fishing tournament on Lake Erie last week.
A video posted to Twitter shows Jason Fischer, tournament director for the Lake Erie Walleye Trail, cutting open the winning catch of five walleye on Friday and finding lead weights and prepared fish filets inside them.
The winning anglers, Jacob Runyan, of Broadview Heights, Ohio, and Chase Cominsky, of Hermitage, Pennsylvania, were immediately disqualified. The video shows Fischer urging Runyan to leave for his own safety as people hurled expletive-laced insults at him.
Fischer told WOIO-TV that he cut the fish open because they appeared heavier than typical walleye of that length.
A spokesperson for the Ohio Department of Natural Resources said Monday that the agency’s officers gathered evidence from the tournament and were preparing a report for the Cuyahoga County Prosecutor’s Office.
Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Michael O’Malley said his staff will be meeting with the agency’s officers Tuesday.
“I take all crime seriously, including attempted felony theft at a fishing tournament,” O’Malley said. “These individuals will be held accountable.”
Messages seeking comment were left Monday for Runyan, Cominsky and Fischer.
NEW YORK — The scheduled game between the Washington Nationals and New York Mets was postponed by rain Monday night and will be made up as part of a single-admission doubleheader Tuesday at Citi Field.
The first game is set to begin at 4:10 p.m., though the forecast Tuesday is similarly soggy.
New York (98-61) began the day two games behind the first-place Atlanta Braves in the NL East with three to play. The playoff-bound Mets have led the division for 175 days this season, but their chances of winning it all but disappeared last weekend when they were swept in three games at Atlanta.
The only way the Mets take the NL East and bypass a best-of-three wild-card series this weekend is by sweeping three games from the last-place Nationals while Atlanta loses all three at Miami.
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More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports
Five-time winner Michael Van Gerwen beat rival Gary Anderson, while defending champion Jonny Clayton scraped into the second round by coming from a set down to defeat 2020 finalist Dirk Van Duijvenbode; Peter Wright and Adrian Lewis also won through at the World Grand Prix
Last Updated: 04/10/22 1:49am
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Watch the best checkouts from a thrilling opening night of the World Grand Prix in Leicester
Watch the best checkouts from a thrilling opening night of the World Grand Prix in Leicester
Michael van Gerwen won the battle between two darting giants as he set aside a nervy start to ease past Gary Anderson on opening night of the World Grand Prix.
Van Gerwen – chasing a sixth World Grand Prix success – ran out a resounding 2-0 winner against two-time World Champion Anderson in a repeat of the 2016 final.
Jonny Clayton survived a scare as he began his title defence with a comeback victory over Dirk van Duijvenbode, while Peter Wright and Adrian Lewis also progressed in Leicester.
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Check out the best of the action from the opening night of the World Grand Prix
Check out the best of the action from the opening night of the World Grand Prix
Monday, October 3 – Results
First Round
Callan Rydz
0-2
Krzysztof Ratajski
Brendan Dolan
0-2
Stephen Bunting
Chris Dobey
2-0
Luke Humphries
Dimitri Van den Bergh
2-1
Dave Chisnall
Jonny Clayton
2-1
Dirk van Duijvenbode
Peter Wright
2-0
Kim Huybrechts
Michael van Gerwen
2-0
Gary Anderson
Jose de Sousa
0-2
Adrian Lewis
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Anderson could help but smile after he scored just nine in his emphatic defeat to Van Gerwen
Anderson could help but smile after he scored just nine in his emphatic defeat to Van Gerwen
Van Gerwen reeled off a scrappy first set without reply, despite Anderson missing darts to win every leg – squandering 11 darts at double in total.
The Scot responded with a clinical 84 to seize control of the second set, but after firing back with a 15-dart riposte, ‘The Green Machine’ followed up his third 180 with a 106 finish to seal victory in 12 darts.
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Van Gerwen booked his spot in the second round spot with this incredible 12-dart leg…
Van Gerwen booked his spot in the second round spot with this incredible 12-dart leg…
“The first round at the World Grand Prix against Gary Anderson is never going to be easy,” admitted Van Gerwen, who averaged 101 in a superb second set display.
“You never know with Gary. He still has a lot of talent and is a brilliant player, so you have to perform well.
“We both missed so many doubles in the first set, but the second set is something to build on for the next round.”
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MVG is targeting more success having already claimed victory in this year’s Premier League and World Matchplay
MVG is targeting more success having already claimed victory in this year’s Premier League and World Matchplay
Clayton was handed a tough assignment against 2020 runner-up Van Duijvenbode in the unique double-start event, but recovered from a shaky start to book a showdown with Dimitri Van den Bergh at the Morningside Arena.
Van Duijvenbode dominated the opening exchanges, punishing a lacklustre start from the reigning champion to draw first blood with a sublime 156 checkout.
Clayton’s terrific 130 finish midway through set two shifted the pendulum, and as an increasingly frustrated Dutchman faltered late on with ‘The Ferret’ capitalising to move through to a meeting against Van den Bergh.
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Jonny Clayton admitted he was fortunate to progress through after a late rally saw him defeat Dirk van Duijvenbode
Jonny Clayton admitted he was fortunate to progress through after a late rally saw him defeat Dirk van Duijvenbode
“I’m glad to get through obviously, but Dirk should have won that game,” conceded Clayton, who crushed fellow Welshman Gerwyn Price in last year’s showpiece.
“I just couldn’t get going tonight, but thankfully I managed to scrape through.
“Dimitri is a brilliant player, just like Dirk. Hopefully my game will improve on Wednesday. I’m going to come out of the blocks better than I did tonight.”
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Van den Bergh nailed this brilliant 81 checkout on the bullseye in his win over Dave Chisnall
Van den Bergh nailed this brilliant 81 checkout on the bullseye in his win over Dave Chisnall
Van den Bergh secured only his second victory on the World Grand Prix stage with a deciding-leg win over two-time finalist Dave Chisnall.
World Champion Peter Wright defied a spirited fightback from Kim Huybrechts to begin his bid for a maiden World Grand Prix crown with a 2-0 win in a high-quality affair.
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Adrian Lewis rolled back the years by hitting the Jackpot with this majestic 152 finish
Adrian Lewis rolled back the years by hitting the Jackpot with this majestic 152 finish
And 2010 finalist Adrian Lewis made a winning return in his first World Grand Prix appearance since 2019, converting three ton-plus checkouts to close out an impressive 2-0 win over Jose De Sousa, who becomes the first seed to exit this year’s tournament.
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Chris Dobey sunk two huge ton-plus checkouts as he swept past Luke Humphries
Chris Dobey sunk two huge ton-plus checkouts as he swept past Luke Humphries
‘Jackpot’ will now play ‘Hollywood’ Chris Dobey, who produced a spectacular display of finishing to stun Luke Humphries and secure his first win at this event since reaching the 2019 semi-finals on debut.
Krzysztof Ratajski and Stephen Bunting also progressed with 2-0 victories, beating Callan Rydz and Brendan Dolan respectively.
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Dobey won the opening set with Luke Humphries with this Hollywood ending
Dobey won the opening set with Luke Humphries with this Hollywood ending
Live World Grand Prix Darts
October 4, 2022, 7:00pm
Live on
Tuesday, October 4 – Fixtures (1900 BST)
First Round
Madars Razma
vs
Ryan Searle
Ross Smith
vs
Andrew Gilding
Danny Noppert
vs
Gabriel Clemens
Joe Cullen
vs
Damon Heta
Rob Cross
vs
Daryl Gurney
James Wade
vs
Martin Lukeman
Gerwyn Price
vs
Martin Schindler
Michael Smith
vs
Nathan Aspinall
The first round action draws to a close on Tuesday night, as world No 1 Gerwyn Price begins his bid for a second World Grand Prix crown against German debutant Martin Schindler.
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Two-time winner James Wade faces another newcomer in Martin Lukeman, 2017 champion Daryl Gurney plays eighth seed Rob Cross, while Michael Smith takes on Nathan Aspinall in another tasty tie.
Check out daily Darts news on skysports.com/darts, our app for mobile devices and our Twitter account @skysportsdarts. You can watch the 25th staging of the World Grand Prix ‘Double in, Double out’ set format on Sky Sports all the way through to the final on October 9 in Leicester.
{{ timeAgo(‘2022-10-03 17:23:02 -0500’) }} football Edit
Nick Harris and Cole Patterson
National Recruiting Analysts
National Signing Day is inching closer as the calendar flips to October as we sit just a little more than two months away from the biggest day in recruiting. While most top recruits have already ma…
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All the top stories and transfer rumours from Tuesday’s newspapers…
THE TELEGRAPH
Former Liverpool and Newcastle manager Rafael Benitez is in the frame for the top job at Nottingham Forest as East Midlands derby defeat pushes Steve Cooper to the brink.
THE TIMES
Arsenal have stepped up efforts to tie down William Saliba to a new contact until 2027 after his performances this season.
Image: Willaim Saliba’s current Arsenal contract expires in 2024
Manchester United held a clear-the-air meeting into their shambolic derby day performance at their Carrington training base.
Arsene Wenger thinks the summer departure of “big-game player” Sadio Mane has been the main factor in Liverpool’s slow start to the season.
THE SUN
Chelsea have reportedly joined Dusan Vlahovic’s growing list of suitors.
Liverpool want to sign Youri Tielemans in the next transfer window, according to sources.
Manchester United legend Paul Scholes slammed Jadon Sancho and Antony’s performance in the derby against Manchester City.
DAILY TELEGRAPH
Chelsea hope to sign Josko Gvardiol as well as Christopher Nkunku.
Julen Lopetegui and Bo Svensson have emerged as Wolves’ top targets to replace Bruno Lage.
THE GUARDIAN
Gary O’Neil and Rob Edwards top Middlesbrough’s shortlist after Chris Wilder’s sacking on Monday morning.
DAILY EXPRESS
Chelsea boss Graham Potter has been tipped to make a move for his former player Moises Caicedo, who he managed during his time at Brighton.
Image: Moises Caicedo has also been linked with moves to Liverpool and Man United
SCOTTISH SUN
Merseyside cops say officers will flood the city to make sure Rangers’ Champions League clash with Liverpool “goes ahead smoothly”.
DAILY RECORD
Ange Postecoglou has challenged his Celtic team to begin stamping their Champions League authority after a bright reintroduction to the tournament which has delivered limited rewards.
VAR’s introduction into Scottish football is said to be “imminent” with the technology set to be in place before the World Cup. Two former top referees say that it will be brought in within a matter of weeks to the Scottish Premiership after weeks of trialling.
{{ timeAgo(‘2022-10-03 17:01:34 -0500’) }} football Edit
Adam Gorney
• Rivals.com
National Recruiting Director
Even when Elijah Paige committed to Notre Dame in June, the four-star offensive tackle had some questions and as the recruiting process continued he decided opening things back up was the right thi…
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