• The Ashes: five things England can do to bounce back
    Tim de Lisle
    Enlist Jofra Archer, limit Joe Root’s options and make better use of Jos Buttler’s brain – how England might turn things round

    Jofra Archer

    1 Draw strength from comebacks past
    Joe Root’s England have made a habit of losing one Test in a series. In his collection of home results Root has a 4-1, a 3-1, a 2-1, a 1-1 and now a 0-1. The only visiting team not to get a Test off him are Ireland, who came close. The good news for the England fan, forever fretful, is that each of these home defeats has been followed by a victory.

    England just need to do what they did last year, after losing the first Test of the summer to Pakistan: make three changes, bowl well, bat solidly, win comfortably. Now, as then, the second Test is one they cannot afford to lose. The difference is the extra pressure that comes with the Ashes – but England’s World Cup stars have already played four must-win matches this summer, under immense pressure, and won the lot.

    PHOTO England v South Africa
    Comeback kings: England celebrate their comeback win over South Africa at The Oval in 2017. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian
    2 Pick Archer
    Three months in, Jofra Archer is already having a very interesting international career. He started the World Cup as a novice and ended it as England’s spearhead with 20 wickets. He then became perhaps the first England cricketer ever to be rested from a Test before he had played one. At Edgbaston Root and Trevor Bayliss erred on the side of caution by leaving Archer out when he was considered fit by Jason Gillespie, his coach at Sussex and fellow member of the fast bowlers’ union. Asked to prove his fitness by playing for Sussex 2nds, Archer promptly turned into Superman, taking six wickets and making a hundred in the same day.

    He is now a near-certainty for Lord’s, where he needs to treat the Australians not as he did when he last faced them there (one for 56), but as he did when they met again at Edgbaston in the World Cup semi-final (two for 32). Ideally he will do to them what Steve Harmison famously did at Lord’s in 2005 and leave a few dents in their helmets, not to mention their self-esteem.

    3 Hand Root and Bayliss fewer options
    Ed Smith, England’s chief selector, sees it as his job to give the captain and coach options for the final XI. At Edgbaston he may have given them too many: a squad of 14, containing seven seamers. Root and Bayliss were like children in an ice-cream parlour, spurning all the sharp flavours – Archer’s polished pace, Olly Stone’s raw power, Sam Curran’s left-arm swing – in favour of vanilla, mid-80s right-armers. The seam attack of Jimmy Anderson, Stuart Broad, Chris Woakes and Ben Stokes had lost their previous two home Tests as a unit (against India at Trent Bridge last year and West Indies at Headingley 2017) and duly added a third, though they could not be blamed for Anderson’s injury.

    Smith may well decide to get tough, drop Moeen Ali and Joe Denly, and hand Root and Bayliss a squad of only 12. The first XI almost pick themselves: Burns, Roy, Root, Stokes (bowling less because batting at four), Buttler, Bairstow, Curran, Woakes, Archer, Broad, Leach. With Stone pulling up lame, the spare seamer can be Toby Roland-Jones, who knows the Lord’s slope, made a sparkling start to his Test career in 2017 and is now taking five-fors again after a serious injury.

    PHOTO Joe Root, Trevor Bayliss
    Joe Root and Trevor Bayliss may have been given too many options when handed a squad of 14 for the first Test. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian
    4 Bring back Buttler’s brain

    One minute Jos Buttler was England’s man for all seasons; the next he was demoted to allow Stokes to resume the Test vice-captaincy. This was baffling, as Buttler had done nothing wrong and Stokes, for all his strengths, had unmistakably let the team down with the Bristol incident. If the argument was that Stokes had shown leadership in the World Cup final, well, Buttler had too. Root compounded the error at Edgbaston by shifting Buttler to short-leg, so that England’s best cricket brain, after Eoin Morgan, was no longer part of the conversation in the slips. It surely makes more sense to stick Rory Burns at boot hill and get Buttler back into the engine room.

    For his part Buttler has to make some runs. He managed 5 and 1 in the first Test, joining Bairstow and Moeen in the melancholy club of gifted strokemakers who have yet to reach double figures in a Test this summer. Between them, they’ve batted ten times and made 33 all out. Buttler, since his recall in May 2018, remains second only to Root for Test runs and top of the class for Test fifties (nine, to Root’s six), and he recovered from an equally poor start last year. But if he and Bairstow flop again, one of them will surely give way to Ben Foakes, who brings more glue.
    CONTINUE ON https://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2019/aug/07/the-ashes-five-things-england-bounce-back?utm_term=RWRpdG9yaWFsX1RoZVJlY2FwLTE5MDgwOQ%3D%3D&utm_source=esp&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=TheRecap&CMP=recap_email
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  • Camaraderie has meant more than Rugby World Cup warm-ups for Wales
    Ross Harries’ entertaining new book Behind the Dragon delves into World Cup preparations and the role of team bonding
    Robert Kitson

    PHOTO Wales helped knock England out of the Rugby World Cup in 2015 with a victory against them at Twickenham

    It is about now in a Rugby World Cup cycle, with just over 40 days and nights in the phoney war wilderness still to endure, that the truth starts to emerge. There is only so much iron you can pump in a gym: if anyone hoping to lift the Webb Ellis Cup is not fit by now they never will be. You cannot fake it at a World Cup and expect to have a realistic chance.

    With a slew of warm-up Tests shortly commencing for all the European nations, nevertheless, those seeking clues about the prospects of Wales, England, Scotland, Ireland, France, Italy and others should not focus purely on August’s results. Four years ago, for example, England saw off France and Ireland at Twickenham before hosting the 2015 tournament and still exited in the pool stages. Scotland, conversely, lost against the French and Irish yet came within a midge’s whisker of the semi-finals.

    Warm-up scorelines can also be warped by variables: coaches protecting their star men, conditioning experts trying to ensure everyone peaks in October and early November rather than August. If you really want to know how a team are feeling, studying their off-field body language or quietly consulting the landlords of nearby public houses is probably a better bet.

    Because, as an excellent new book based on the first-hand experiences of former Wales players makes clear, champion rugby teams are built as much on camaraderie and self-belief under pressure as on fat tests and mineral water. Ross Harries, the highly respected Welsh rugby broadcaster, has spoken to myriad ex‑internationals about their memories of representing their country and the result, Behind the Dragon, is a vivid, revealing and often hilarious read.

    The subject of World Cup preparations is the source of particularly rich material. Twenty years ago, for instance, Wales were about to host the entire event. Assisting the management was Steve Black, a central figure in Jonny Wilkinson’s career and a motivational guru like no other. Blackie was universally popular but his habit of staying up all night to write 30 personal letters to each member of the squad sometimes caused him to doze off during the day. Craig Quinnell recalls being asked to do a session on a treadmill without checking how long he should keep running. “Twenty minutes later you’d be blowing out of your arse thinking: ‘When’s he going to stop this bloody thing?’ Then you’d look around and he’d be fast asleep.”
    CONTINUE ON https://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2019/aug/06/wales-rugby-world-cup-ross-harries-jonny-wilkinson?utm_term=RWRpdG9yaWFsX1RoZVJlY2FwLTE5MDgwOQ%3D%3D&utm_source=esp&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=TheRecap&CMP=recap_email
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  • Cycling’s latest tragedy will shake the faith of the keenest enthusiast
    William Fotheringham

    Bjorg Lambrecht’s death on Monday was the eighth of an international rider since 2016. Is the sport really worth it?

    PHOTO Bjorg Lambrecht’s Lotto-Soudal during Tuesday’s stage of the Tour de Pologne, run in tribute to their late colleague

    It is almost 25 years since I stood in the French town of Pau on a July afternoon in 1995 and watched the six members of the Motorola team, including a young Lance Armstrong, ride into the Tour de France stage finish a few hundred metres in front of the peloton. It remains the single most impressive and affecting memory I can summon up in over 30 years of following cycling.

    The men of the Tour had taken eight hours to ride that day’s mountain stage over some of the race’s greatest ascents at the pace of a funeral cortege, in honour of the Italian Olympic champion Fabio Casartelli, who had died the previous afternoon after falling off at high speed on the descent of the Col du Portet d’Aspet; on Tuesday the field of the Tour de Pologne paid an identical tribute to the young Belgian Bjorg Lambrecht.

    The 22-year-old, one of the brightest young prospects in world cycling, had left the road and crashed 48 kilometres into Monday’s stage; he died in hospital during surgery. His teammates rode across Tuesday’s finish line in Kocierz in formation, as Motorola had that day in Pau, with the same black armbands on their shoulders.

    Lambrecht’s death prompted an outpouring of emotion among professional cyclists, amateur racers and those who follow the sport, as did Casartelli’s. Cycling remains a small world, ruled by a few degrees of separation. My son, who is the same age, dug out a photograph from a Belgian amateur race a few years back. That is Bjorg, he said, and there I am, riding next to him.
    CONTINUE ON https://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2019/aug/07/cycling-latest-tragedy-shake-faith-enthusiast?utm_term=RWRpdG9yaWFsX1RoZVJlY2FwLTE5MDgwOQ%3D%3D&utm_source=esp&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=TheRecap&CMP=recap_email
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  • Simone Biles 2.0: Somehow, someway, there's nowhere to go but up
    It’s not always so simple for female athletes to openly acknowledge just how great they are, but the superlative American is finally doing so with a newfound outspokenness

    Dvora Meyers

    Simone Biles

    If you’re the greatest gymnast of all time, you should dress like it.

    When Simone Biles took to the floor for podium training ahead of this weekend’s US national gymnastics championships at Kansas City’s Spirit Center, she was wearing a leotard that more than hinted at her GOAT status. It was grey and white with iridescent flourishes, same as her World Champions Centre teammates, while the back was all Biles. Her surname was embroidered in crystals and underneath was a crystal embroidered head of a goat.

    The GOAT wearing a goat. A bit on the nose but facts are facts. Simone Biles is the greatest gymnast of all-time. We – gymnasts, coaches, fans, the media – have been saying it for years so why shouldn’t she acknowledge it?
    CONTINUE ON https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2019/aug/09/simone-biles-usa-gymn?utm_term=RWRpdG9yaWFsX1RoZVJlY2FwLTE5MDgwOQ%3D%3D&utm_source=esp&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=TheRecap&CMP=recap_email
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  • These sportsmen who have the most fake followers on social networks

    Neymar and Kylian Mbappé. (A. Mounic / The Team)
    The UK Institute for Contemporary Music Performance (ICMP) has analyzed Instagram and Twitter accounts of celebrities, including some from the sports world, to detect fake followers.

    At a time when the number of followers on social networks is a pledge of popularity, the UK institute ICMP (The Institute of Contemporary Music Performance) has been interested in false followers on Instagram and Twitter accounts of many of personalities. While detecting the number of "rays" people engaged through two tools (IG Audit and Sparktoro's fake Twitter followers' tool).

    read also
    Cristiano Ronaldo earns nearly a million dollars through a sponsored post on Instagram

    And in this little game, it is the German player of Real Madrid Toni Kroos who has the most fake followers on his social networks (51%) in front of his teammates Isco and Luka Modric (49% both). Neymar (46%) and Kylian Mbappé (45%) are respectively sixth and eighth in this ranking.

    1. Toni Kroos - 28.8M followers on Instagram and Twitter - 51% fake
    2. Isco - 22.7M followers - 49% fake
    3. Luka Modric - 18.5M followers - 49% fake
    4. Philippe Coutinho - 21.7M followers - 48% fake
    5. David Luiz - 27.8M followers - 46% fake
    6. Neymar - 165M followers - 46% fake
    7. Andres Iniesta 54.8M followers - 46% of fake
    8. Kylian Mbappé - 34M of followers - 45% of fake
    9. Ronaldo - 65,8M of followers - 45% of fake
    10. Virat Kohli- 67M followers - 44% fake
    11. Gareth Bale - 58.3M followers - 44% fake
    12. Marcelo - 50.6M followers - 43% fake
    13. Antoine Griezmann - 31.4M followers - 43 % of fake
    14. Luis Suarez - 49.7M followers - 43% fake
    15. Paulo Dybala - 33M followers - 42% fake
    16. Karim Benzema - 38.4M followers - 42% fake
    17. Cristiano Ronaldo - 252M followers - 42% fake
    18. Mohamed Salah - 39.2M followers - 42% fake
    19. Sergio Ramos- 49.3M followers - 41% fake
    20. Stephen Curry - 39.7M followers - 40% fake
    CONTINUE ON https://www.lequipe.fr/Sport-et-style/People/Actualites/Ces-sportifs-qui-ont-le-plus-de-faux-followers-sur-les-reseaux-sociaux/1047437
    Ces sportifs qui ont le plus de faux followers sur les réseaux sociaux - Tous sports
    L'institut britannique ICMP (The Institute of Contemporary Music Performance) a analysé les comptes Instagram et Twitter des célébrités, dont certaines du monde du sport, pour déceler le taux de faux followers.
    WWW.LEQUIPE.FR
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  • Premier League 2019/20 commercial guide: Every club, every sponsor, all the major TV deals
    As the world’s richest soccer competition returns, SportsPro presents its annual Premier League commercial preview, bringing you all the major off-field developments ahead of the new season.
    Continue on
    http://www.sportspromedia.com/analysis/premier-league-2019-20-guide-club-sponsor-tv-rights-deals?utm_source=ActiveCampaign&utm_medium=email&utm_content=The+Friday+Feature%3A+Premier+League+2019%2F20+commercial+guide+-+every+club%2C+every+sponsor%2C+all+the+major+TV+deals&utm_campaign=SportsPro+Daily+Deal+2019-08-09
    Premier League 2019/20 commercial guide: Every club, every sponsor, all the major TV deals
    As the world’s richest soccer competition returns, SportsPro presents its annual Premier League commercial preview, bringing you all the major off-field developments ahead of the new season.
    WWW.SPORTSPROMEDIA.COM
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  • SEMIFINALS

    Vaduz, Liechtenstein, August 10, 2019 – The Dutch No. 1 seeds Ruben Penninga/Jasper Bouter secured their place in the semi-finals with a very convincing performance as they defeated the Russians Vsevolod Bobrikov/Vladislav Mikhalev 2-0 (21-15, 21-15) in the FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour Vaduz 1-star.

    “It was not an easy game because in every game you have to perform well first,” they said. “We did that very well today but we also reacted well when they took turns in serving against us. First we had to find the rhythm.”

    The Dutchmen will face the Russian team next in the semifinals, as Daniil Kuvichka and Anton Kislytsyn won easier than expected in their quarterfinal encounter against third-seeded Mariusz Prudel/Mikolaj Miszczuk of Poland 2-0 (21-16, 21-11). The Poles had a string of mistakes and their block-defence system was not on point against their rivals that day.

    Austria’s Moritz Fabian Kindl and Mathias Seiser and the Netherlands’ Tom van Steenis/Sven Vismans delivered a well-balanced and high-standing quarterfinal. They thrilled the audience with long rallies, with great attacks and blocks, including fast defensive actions. Austria kept the better end for them in a super three-set match (19-21, 23-21, 15-11).
    Continue on
    https://www.fivb.com/en/about/news/penninga-and-bouter-cruise-to-vaduz-mens?id=87895
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  • NFL preseason Week 1 takeaways: Mecole Hardman adds more speed to Chiefs' offense
    ESPN.com

    Last week's Hall of Fame game was a taste, but this week marks the full return of football, albeit of the preseason variety. The Pittsburgh Steelers might have a pair of new stars in James Washington and Devin Bush, Baker Mayfield and the Cleveland Browns started hot, and so did several other young quarterbacks.

    All that and more in the biggest takeaways and fantasy football nuggets of the preseason's opening week from NFL Nation:
    Jump to a matchup:
    CIN-KC | LAR-OAK | DAL-SF | IND-BUF | NYJ-NYG | WSH-CLE
    NE-DET | ATL-MIA | CAR-CHI | TEN-PHI
    JAX-BAL | HOU-GB | LAC-ARI | DEN-SEA
    TB-PIT | MIN-NO
    Continue on https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/27326177/nfl-preseason-week-1-takeaways-mecole-hardman-adds-more-speed-chiefs-offense
    NFL preseason Week 1 takeaways: Mecole Hardman adds more speed to Chiefs' offense
    Kansas City's top draft pick showed he could add another wrinkle to the Chiefs' potent offense. It was all part of the big takeaways from the opening week of the 2019 NFL preseason.
    WWW.ESPN.COM
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  • STANDINGS
    PHOTO Osmany Juantorena led Italy to a five-set victory against Australia on Saturday

    Lausanne, Switzerland, August 11, 2019 – Men's Tokyo Volleyball Qualification action continues on Sunday after twelve matches per day across six pools were played on Friday and Saturday. The top teams in each pool at the end of the weekend will earn a place at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games.

    Schedule, results and pool standings:

    Pool A (Varna, Bulgaria)

    Matches on Friday (All times local):
    Brazil v Puerto Rico 3-0 (25-23, 25-19, 25-19)
    Bulgaria v Egypt 3-1 (25-11, 33-31, 19-25, 25-19)
    Matches on Saturday:
    Brazil v Egypt 3-0 (25-12, 25-19, 25-14)
    Bulgaria v Puerto Rico 3-0 (25-20, 25-22, 25-12)
    Matches on Sunday:
    Egypt v Puerto Rico at 17.00
    Bulgaria v Brazil at 20.30

    Pool B (Rotterdam, Netherlands)

    Matches on Friday (All times local):
    Netherlands v Korea 3-2 (23-25, 25-27, 26-24, 25-20, 15-12)
    USA v Belgium 3-1 (25-20, 25-19, 17-25, 25-18)
    Matches on Saturday:
    Netherlands v Belgium 3-0 (25-22, 25-21, 25-20)
    USA v Korea 3-0 (25-20, 25-21, 25-16)
    Matches on Sunday:
    Netherlands v USA at 16.00
    Korea v Belgium at 19.00

    Pool C (Bari, Italy)

    Matches on Friday (All times local):
    Serbia v Australia 3-1 (26-28, 25-19, 25-19, 32-30)
    Italy v Cameroon 3-0 (25-18, 25-18, 25-16)
    Matches on Saturday:
    Serbia v Cameroon 3-0 (25-22, 25-19, 25-13)
    Italy v Australia 3-2 (21-25, 25-19, 24-26, 25-17, 15-13)
    Matches on Sunday:
    Cameroon v Australia at 18.00
    Serbia v Italy at 21.15

    Pool D (Gdansk, Poland)

    Matches on Friday (All times local):
    Poland v Tunisia 3-0 (25-15, 25-19, 25-19)
    France v Slovenia 3-0 (26-24, 25-20, 25-23)
    Matches on Saturday:
    Poland v France 3-0 (25-21, 25-19, 25-20)
    Slovenia v Tunisia 3-0 (25-23, 25-16, 26-24)
    Matches on Sunday:
    France v Tunisia at 12.00
    Poland v Slovenia at 15.00

    Pool E (St. Petersburg, Russia)

    Matches on Friday (All times local):
    Iran v Cuba 3-2 (23-25, 26-28, 25-17, 25-16, 15-10)
    Russia v Mexico 3-0 (25-15, 25-11, 25-17)
    Matches on Saturday:
    Iran v Mexico 3-0 (25-18, 25-21, 27-25)
    Russia v Cuba 3-0 (25-18, 26-24, 27-25)
    Matches on Sunday:
    Cuba v Mexico at 16.00
    Russia v Iran at 19.00

    Pool F (Ningbo, China)

    Matches on Friday (All times local):
    China v Finland 3-1 (25-22, 21-25, 25-22, 25-23)
    Argentina v Canada 3-1 (25-23, 22-25, 27-25, 25-23)
    Matches on Saturday:
    Argentina-Finland 3-1 (25-17, 25-18, 21-25, 26-24)
    Canada v China 3-2 (24-26, 25-21, 25-17, 23-25, 17-15)
    Matches on Sunday:
    Canada v Finland at 15.00
    China v Argentina at 19.30

    Continue on
    https://www.fivb.com/en/about/news/tokyo-volleyball-qualification--results-and-standings?id=87783
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