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Appeals Board Upholds Penalty Against Kevin Reed Jr.

Published in Racing
Thursday, 25 April 2019 07:02

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – The National Motorsports Appeals Panel has upheld a penalty against NASCAR K&N Pro Series East crew chief Kevin Reed Jr.

Reed was working as crew chief on the No. 19 Toyota driven by Hailie Deegan at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway on April 6. He became involved in an altercation with a NASCAR officials after being given a directive by NASCAR.

As a result of the confrontation, Reed was fined $2,500, his NASCAR license was revoked and he was indefinitely suspended from NASCAR.

National Motorsports Appeals Panel decided that Reed violated the rules set forth in the penalty notice and upheld the original penalty. The Panel consisted of three people – Chuck Deery, Bill Mullis and Dale Pinilis.

Reed has the right to appeal the decision of the National Motorsports Appeals Panel to the National Motorsports Final Appeals Officer in accordance with Section 15 of the NASCAR Rule Book.

Penalty video-review debate reignited in playoffs

Published in Hockey
Wednesday, 24 April 2019 17:24

NHL players and coaches were split Wednesday on whether changes are needed to video review protocol a day after a major penalty played a dramatic role in San Jose's Game 7 victory over Vegas.

Cody Eakin was assessed a major penalty for cross-checking and injuring Joe Pavelski in the third period, and the Sharks responded by scoring four times on the ensuing five-minute power play to set themselves up to win in overtime. The major was assessed after officials discussed the incident and a bloodied Pavelski was helped off the ice.

The Golden Knights were livid about the call, since Pavelski was not injured by the cross-check. The NHL declined comment Wednesday, but the incident was surely discussed at league headquarters.

The league for five years has debated expanding video review beyond goals. There remains no consensus on potential changes.

"We've been saying that forever," said Carolina coach Rod Brind'Amour, whose team also dealt with a questionable major penalty given to Micheal Ferland in Game 2 against Washington. "The game's too fast. It's hard on refs. I don't know how they do it. I watch it live and sometimes I think the same thing they do, and then I get to sit there and stare at a [tablet] and I can go, 'It's obviously the wrong call.' So, I think they're heading to that. The NHL has got to sit down."

Eakin cross-checked Pavelski off a faceoff, and the Sharks captain bounced off Vegas forward Paul Stastny before his head hit the ice and blood pooled underneath him. Golden Knights coach Gerard Gallant said one of the referees told him it was a cross-check to the face. Series supervisor Don Van Massenhoven afterward said the officials judged it to be a penalty causing a significant injury and deemed it worthy of a major. The Sharks trailed 3-0 at the time and won 5-4 in overtime to advance to the second round.

There have only been two major penalties -- not counting fighting -- so far in the playoffs after 27 in the regular season. They are not subject to video review, which is limited to the puck going in or not on a goal or coach's challenges for goaltender interference or offsides, which have been around the past four seasons.

Vegas' Jonathan Marchessault after the game wondered: "Why don't you have hockey replay or something?" because it drastically altered the game.

The topic was broached as recently as March by league general managers after the missed pass interference in the NFL playoff game between the Saints and Rams prompted changes by the NFL.

Officials are "only allowed to look at coach's challenges," senior executive vice president and director of hockey operations Colin Campbell said at the time. "We asked the managers, 'Should they look at everything?'"

Not everyone is convinced. Capitals defenseman Matt Niskanen said slow-motion replays can distort what happens on the ice at full speed, and teammate Brett Connolly isn't on board with adding to what's already reviewed.

"I think that's kind of the refs' discretion," Connolly said. "I think you've got to let the refs make that call. I don't know. It's tough. You don't want to be reviewing every play."

Caps lament blown chances in first-round exit

Published in Hockey
Thursday, 25 April 2019 00:11

WASHINGTON -- The Capitals never lost to the Carolina Hurricanes in the regular season, and they never faced a series deficit in the team's first-round matchup -- until it was over.

By the time Hurricanes winger Brock McGinn netted the series-clincher in a 4-3 double-overtime victory in Game 7 on Wednesday, the defending Stanley Cup champion Capitals were out of gas and out of answers.

Carolina advanced to the Eastern Conference semifinals on the Caps' home ice, with a win that most people in the building believed the Canes deserved.

For Washington, the deflation was palpable. Speaking barely above a whisper, the Caps' leaders explained in stunned silence what it was like to exit in the first round of the playoffs after holding two separate two-goal leads on home ice and two separate leads in the series.

"It's disappointing," said Alex Ovechkin, who had a series-high nine points but still has never scored a playoff overtime goal. "It's not where we expected to be. But you know, it's a hard-fought series, and they just ended up being in more plays than we did.

"Obviously, I thought the first two periods we dominated. It was a great series. Lots of toughness, lots of hard plays over there. Two teams fighting to win, and in overtime, you see it's not a pretty goal. The stick hit the whatever, and it goes in. We controlled the game [at first]. But if you get a lead, you have to play kind of careful. It doesn't matter who scored."

According to Elias Sports Bureau, this is the first time in the divisional era (since 1967-68) that no division champion won a playoff series. It's also the first time since 2012 that both Stanley Cup finalists from the previous season failed to win a playoff series.

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0:34

Ovechkin: 'Frustrating, especially after last year'

Alex Ovechkin expresses his frustration and disappointment with the Capitals' Game 7 double-overtime loss to the Hurricanes.

Braden Holtby, who finished with 38 saves, credited a Canes team that never stopped putting shots on net.

"They kept coming the whole time," Holtby said. "They play a consistent style of hard work, and in the end, that's what beat us. You gotta give credit where credit's due. On paper, you wouldn't expect them to be the team that they are. That's credit to them and their coaching. They play a team game, and that's why the series was so close.

"It was obviously there to take, but ... we just weren't good enough. I gotta come up with more saves in order to win a series, and that's pretty much the bottom line."

Canes first-year head coach Rod Brindamour kept his shifts short, and it resulted in a team that appeared to have more energy than the Capitals in the two extra periods. Caps center Nicklas Backstrom wasn't going to use it as an excuse.

"I think both teams were [gassed]. Players played a lot of minutes," he said. "It's the same thing for everyone."

The series had quite a few turning points. Between Ovechkin getting into a fight for the first time in a decade, T.J. Oshie suffering an injury that knocked him out of the series and a controversial call that would have ended Game 6 and allowed the Caps to advance, there were a host of reasons the defending champs came up short.

But in Wednesday's matchup, Sebastian Aho's short-handed goal in the second period, which came after the Caps led 2-0, was clearly the boost the Canes needed to keep life.

Evgeny Kuznetsov put Washington up 3-1 a few minutes later, but Carolina went on to score the game's last three goals.

"Looking back at that, we need to find a way to shut them down there. Especially when you've got a 3-1 lead. But we gave it to them," Backstrom said.

Backstrom also bemoaned a lost opportunity in the second overtime, when the Capitals failed to produce a single chance during a power play.

"That's another scenario we need to do a better job there," he said. "I mean, at least get a shot on net."

The Capitals were outshot and outhit, and they drew two fewer penalties while winning more faceoffs. Without Oshie and with defenseman Michal Kempny having been ruled out before the series, they were undermanned and ultimately outworked. Coming off the most exciting season in the history of the franchise, the letdown was obvious.

"When the season is over, you understand that. You fight through 82 games, then Game 7, they score one goal, and it's the kind of situation where you're disappointed," Ovechkin said. "It's frustrating."

The Hurricanes finished behind the Metropolitan division champion Capitals in the regular season, but everyone in the Washington locker room acknowledged that Carolina deserved to move on in this year's run to the Stanley Cup.

"They thrive off hard work, and they kept coming the same way that they've played," Holtby said. "Got to give them credit. They earned it."

Leafs' Hyman expected to miss start of 2019-20

Published in Hockey
Thursday, 25 April 2019 08:30

Toronto Maple Leafs forward Zach Hyman is expected to miss the start of the 2019-20 season following ACL surgery, the team announced Thursday.

The team said Hyman, 26, tore his ACL during the first round against the Boston Bruins, though he appeared in all seven games of the series. Surgery is scheduled for Monday.

He is expected to miss at least six months, which would stretch into the start of next season.

Hyman posted 21 goals and 20 assists during the regular season. He had one goal in the postseason.

As each NHL team is eliminated from the postseason, we'll take a look at why its quest for the Stanley Cup fell short in 2018-19, three keys to its offseason, impact prospects for 2019-20 and a way-too-early prediction for what next season will hold.


What went wrong

All of last summer, we wondered how the Washington Capitals would manage their Stanley Cup hangover. A taxing playoff run (plus some heavy summer celebrating) surely would weigh on this team, which struggled for so many years to get over the hump. That hangover never really set in -- until the first round of the playoffs.

The Capitals brought back nearly everyone from their Cup-winning team, and they made tweaks along the way to get better. Nick Jensen was a solid depth add to the blue line, and perhaps general manager Brian MacLellan's best move was adding Carl Hagelin, who immediately helped a penalty kill often in peril.

Sure, the Capitals had a rough stretch in January, losing seven straight games, but they pulled out of their funk and won their fourth straight Metropolitan Division title. Yet there were cracks in the foundation that revealed themselves against the Carolina Hurricanes -- who, like many underdogs in these playoffs, played with conviction. It was nothing major for the Capitals, but enough little things accumulated to suggest this wasn't going to be the year for another Cup.

Losing top-pairing defenseman Michal Kempny right before the postseason was a blow; Jonas Siegenthaler ended up filling in nicely, but the blue line looked shaky at times, especially the games in Raleigh. Washington was going to have a hard time without T.J. Oshie for a long playoff run; perhaps Devante Smith-Pelly eventually would have added a spark -- both on the ice, where he has a history of playoff heroics, and in the locker room, where he is a popular teammate.

Alex Ovechkin was once again stellar for the Capitals, and so too was Nicklas Backstrom. But Evgeny Kuznetsov (XX points in XX games) appeared off, and that made the second line far less dangerous.

Welcome to Round 2. You'll notice there are no division champions here. That has not happened since the 1967 expansion. It has been that kind of postseason.

Here's what happened in the NHL last night (check out replays of every playoff game on ESPN+) and what to watch for tonight, in today's edition of ESPN Stanley Cup Playoffs Daily:

Jump ahead: Last night's games | Three Stars
Play of the night | Today's games | Social post of the day


About last night ...

Game 7: Carolina Hurricanes 4, Washington Capitals 3 (Hurricanes win series 4-3). What an odd feeling, but perhaps an appropriate one in a postseason this chaotic: the feeling of inevitability as a No. 7 seed takes a No. 2 seed to overtime. The Hurricanes looked determined. They looked fresh. They looked, frankly, dominant. So when Brock McGinn scored 11:05 into the second overtime -- on an assist from Justin "Mr. Game 7" Williams himself -- it felt like the logical conclusion, reputations and regular seasons mattering not.

The Capitals took a 2-0 lead in the first period. Sebastian Aho's short-handed goal in the second cut it to 2-1. It was 3-1 when Teuvo Teravainen snapped a shot past Braden Holtby at 16:37 of the second. Then Jordan Staal tied it at 2:56 of the third. Carolina outshot the Capitals 18-6 in overtime. They earned this win over the defending Stanley Cup champions. And, in turn, they deprived us of the Capitals vs. Barry Trotz matchup we all wanted. What a bunch of jerks ...

Three Stars

1. Brock McGinn, Carolina Hurricanes. McGinn will forever be remembered for his double-overtime goal to end the third-longest Game 7 in NHL history. But it wouldn't have mattered had he not made this diving swipe of his stick when a puck trickled through Petr Mrazek late in the third period. "It's just a reaction there. I saw it kind of squeak through Petr there a bit. I don't know if it had enough steam to cross the line, but I don't think I was taking that chance," McGinn said after the game.

2. Jordan Staal, Carolina Hurricanes. Staal was acquired from the Penguins in June 2012. At the time, he had appeared in 73 playoff games and won the Stanley Cup in 2009. He didn't appear in another postseason game until Game 1 against the Capitals, and boy did he rise to the occasion: His third-period goal tied Game 7 and gave him three goals and three assists in seven games, including the eventual winner in Game 6.

3. Andre Burakovsky, Washington Capitals. Golf clap for the Capitals forward, who made a great move to put them on the scoreboard at 2:13 of the first period, his first postseason goal since Game 7 of the 2018 Eastern Conference final.

Play of the night

What else could it be but McGinn's double-OT series clincher? "What a moment. What a game," McGinn said. "In between periods, we were talking about putting everything on net. In overtime, anything can happen. If you just keep putting it on net, good things will happen."

Dud of the night

Todd Reirden. Yes, the Capitals had the misfortune of losing a key forward (T.J. Oshie) and a key defenseman (Michal Kempny) for this opening-round series. No, Reirden is not the only coach to ever watch his Capitals inexplicably lay an egg on home ice in a Game 7. But the facts are the facts: The defending Stanley Cup champions are out in the first round to a wild-card team, and Barry Trotz swept Sidney Crosby to continue coaching in the playoffs with the New York Islanders. For the Capitals, that's gotta sting.

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0:34

Ovechkin: 'Frustrating, especially after last year'

Alex Ovechkin expresses his frustration and disappointment with the Capitals' Game 7 double-overtime loss to the Hurricanes.

On the schedule

Columbus Blue Jackets at Boston Bruins, Game 1, 7 p.m. ET

This is a case study in momentum. The Blue Jackets had it when they shocked the Tampa Bay Lightning in the first round, winning seven of eight games to qualify for the playoffs before sweeping the Bolts. But they haven't played since April 16, and no scrimmage can replicate playoff hockey. Boston, meanwhile, played Tuesday, closing out Toronto in seven games.

Dallas Stars at St. Louis Blues, Game 1, 9:30 p.m. ET

This could be the goalie duel of the second round, as Vezina Trophy finalist Ben Bishop takes on rookie sensation Jordan Binnington. The Stars beat the Blues three times in four games in the regular season, with two of those wins coming against Binnington.

Social post of the day

The Canes declare, "We ain't done yet, baby!" (and a bunch of other things that were bleeped out by a goal horn).

Quotable

"I don't know how far that we're going to take this, but I know we're going to give everything we can." -- Hurricanes coach Rod Brind'Amour after his team's Game 7 victory.

Holmes reunites with Watson at Zurich Classic

Published in Golf
Wednesday, 24 April 2019 07:06

AVONDALE, La. – Normally, sequels are never better than the originals. But J.B. Holmes and Bubba Watson are looking to buck that trend this week at the Zurich Classic.

Holmes and Watson are reuniting at TPC Louisiana, where they tied for fifth two years ago. Last year, neither player cracked the top 25 at Zurich, with Holmes failing to make the weekend alongside Brandt Snedeker. 

Don't break up a good thing, right?

"It's really comfortable playing with Bubba," said Holmes, who also went 2-1-1 with Watson at the 2015 Presidents Cup. "We have similar games. We're hitting to the same spots. We're not really changing clubs. So it's not as big an adjustment for us compared to some other teams."

Added Watson: "When you think about our games, we're not scared of hitting it in weird places, tough places. If he hits one offline, I'm good out of trouble. He's good out of trouble. We're used to it."

The only thing Holmes isn't used to is playing a yellow golf ball, something he'll have to do in foursomes this week as Watson doesn't play a traditional white ball.

The last time Holmes has done that?

"It's been a while," Holmes said. "I was probably 6."

Henderson among those chasing world No. 1 at LA Open

Published in Golf
Wednesday, 24 April 2019 08:11

Brooke Henderson escalated her climb to a mountaintop that looks reachable to more players than ever before in the women’s game.

With her victory at the Lotte Championship last weekend, Henderson moved up to No. 7 in the Rolex Women’s World Rankings, reinvigorating her climb toward No. 1, a destination she has yet to reach but seems destined to complete as a 21-year-old who has already won eight LPGA titles, including a major.

She’s chasing the current No. 1, Jin Young Ko, who seems equipped to hold on to the top ranking for a while, though that promises to be a challenge with the women’s game appearing as difficult to dominate as it ever has.

“It’s really an honor to get the Rolex Ranking No. 1,” Ko said Wednesday as she prepared for the Hugel-Air Premia LA Open. “But anyone can climb to No. 1.”

Maybe not anyone, but it looks as wide open as ever with so many different players winning week to week.

The No. 1 ranking has switched hands six times in the last 12 months, 10 times in less than two years, with Ko ascending after her victory at the ANA Inspiration three weeks ago. 

Her victory at the ANA made her the ninth different winner in the last nine majors.

“It’s really hard to win,” Jessica Korda said after a birdie putt that would have forced a playoff with Ko at the Bank of Hope Founders Cup stopped just short at the 72nd hole in Phoenix.

Maybe harder than ever.

It doesn’t get any easier this week.

Nine of the top 10 players in the Rolex Women’s World Rankings are in the field, 18 of the top 20. Only No. 5 Nasa Hataoka and No. 18 Jeongeun Lee6 are taking the week off.

Henderson arrives hot off her successful title defense at the Lotte Championship, a course that set up for her aggressive style of play, with the big hitter launching drivers at every opportunity, including twice from the middle of fairways.

She’s looking to show her versatility with a victory at Wilshire Country Club this week, a completely different test that won’t allow her to play as aggressively.

“It's not as much of an attacking course,” Henderson said. “Going to have to lay up a couple times and just play smart and patient. Patience is definitely a huge key around this golf course.

“There are a lot of different slopes and undulations on the greens and things. Not as attacking as maybe I would like, but hopefully I can just have my ball striking working and get myself some good looks . . . You just kind of have to go with what the course gives you. This week will be a little more difficult to do that.”

Henderson has won twice in each of the previous three seasons.

“I would love to keep the streak going since 2016, two wins a season,” she said. “I think it's definitely reachable. A lot of tournaments left this year, a lot of tournaments that I really love going to and look forward to.”

Henderson and Ariya Jutanugarn are the only players to have multiple wins in each of the last three seasons. That makes some folks scratch their heads over Henderson’s ranking and why she isn’t even higher than she is. She has three LPGA victories in the last 53 weeks. Sung Hyun Park is the only player who has won more in that span, with four victories. Henderson’s ranking is partially a function of how much she plays and the divisor that creates. She plays a lot more than most players.

Back in 2016, Henderson found herself on the cusp of No. 1, ranking second behind Lydia Ko for seven consecutive weeks.

For Henderson, though, the focus today is on other numbers.

“Definitely trying to get that second win, if not more,” she said. “I think to do that, scoring average is really my main focus. Last year, it was under 70. It was (69.99). I think if I can get it under 70 again this year, I'll be putting myself in good positions and hopefully in a lot of final groups.”

And in the hunt for world No. 1.

AVONDALE, La. – International Presidents Cup captain Ernie Els and assistant captain Trevor Immelman had dinner with nearly 20 prospective team members Tuesday evening at Arnaud’s, an upscale restaurant in New Orleans’ French Quarter, just steps from iconic Bourbon Street. The night was filled with authentic Creole food, fine wine and stories from an eclectic group that ranged from veteran Adam Scott to 20-year-old Joaquin Niemann of Chile.

“We were sitting around with people from Latin America and Asia,” Els said, “and you talk about what's going on in everybody's lives. That’s how you learn.”

Els is looking to acquire valuable information this week at the Zurich Classic. He’ll tee it up with Immelman in the team event at TPC Louisiana, but his more important task will be watching how his potential Cuppers perform together.

Five of the top eight players on the International points list are in the Zurich field, including Jason Day, who will team with Scott. There are 11 total parings that feature two Cup-eligible players, some of whom have little experience playing team events together – or team events in general.

“A team environment is very difficult for guys who play an individual sport, and to be able to do that in a two-year span and getting new blood in every two years is very difficult to gel those guys together,” Day said. “But this is a good opportunity this week to be able to get that and gel those guys together and see what potential options we have in regard to teams.”

***

Els has been part of every Presidents Cup since 1996. He was a key contributor in the International victory in 1998. He went toe-to-toe with Tiger Woods in a playoff before the Cup was shared in 2003. 

Mostly, though, he’s been on the losing end of what has quickly become a lopsided affair, one that the U.S. leads 10-1-1. The Internationals’ lone victory came more than 20 years ago, in 1998 at Royal Melbourne (site of the 2019 matches), and the past five Cups have been decided by a combined 20 points. In 2017, the U.S. team was a single point away from ending things a day early at Liberty National before winning 19-11.

If Els has noticed anything over the years, it’s that the American teams always seemed to be more comfortable with each other coming into the biennial matches. Surely the U.S. benefits from being able to play a team event every year and the Internationals are faced with blending together a more diverse group, but Els still sees room for the Internationals to improve their team camaraderie.

“Normally what we used to do in the past is try and get together the Sunday or the Monday of the Presidents Cup, and by Friday, Saturday, Sunday, we've really bonded. Every single time I've played a Presidents Cup we were like really a team by the weekend,” Els said. “We want to try and be a team come Sunday night before the event starts.”

With this year’s International squad potentially including as many as nine or 10 different countries, that goal becomes tougher. There’s no scientific formula for bringing different cultures, religions and personalities together.

“But I think we've got to find a way to make that diversity our strength,” Immelman said. “As Ernie touched on, the more time we can get to know each other…”

Which makes weeks like Zurich so important. Scott had never played TPC Louisiana in previous seasons, but the eight-time Presidents Cup player understands the value of this Big Easy bonding opportunity. (The players are also staying in the same hotel this week.)

“I've sat through a lot of Presidents Cup beatdowns over the years, and I've kind of had enough of it, so I'm prepared to do whatever it takes – whatever Ernie thinks it takes – to kind of change the culture in our team,” Scott said. “But it's not just about coming here at Zurich this week and seeing some pairings and getting the team to spend a little bit of extra [time together]. I think it's about starting to grow a culture amongst the international players and showing everyone who's coming up the importance of this tournament … and how much we can all care about this.”

***

Els has invested loads of time and energy into closing the Presidents Cup floodgates for his side. He’s working tirelessly trying to build and prepare his team, but he’s also influenced several important changes to the Cup format that could prove beneficial to the Internationals.

Two Cups after the point total was reduced from 34 to 30, the 2019 Presidents Cup will feature a change in the required number of matches that a player must play before singles from two to just one.

The selection process has also been tweaked, as the points cycle shrinks from two years to one and the number of captain’s picks grows from two to four.

“It's a huge, huge difference for us,” Els said. “Much more beneficial for us as a team.”

With the Presidents Cup more than seven months away, those picks are far from clear. But Els has already started to see some new faces grab his attention. South African Justin Harding, who has played with Els a couple of times, tied for 12th at the Masters. Mexico’s Abraham Ancer has also contended on the biggest stages. And Taiwan’s C.T. Pan picked up his first PGA Tour victory just last week at Harbour Town. 

And there’s a chance someone else steps up this week at TPC Louisiana.

“He’s got some tough decision to make,” Harding said. “It’s probably tougher than trying to figure out a Ryder Cup side. I wouldn’t want to be him because naturally there are going to be some guys who are disappointed.”

Few, if any, will likely be dissatisfied with Els’ effort as captain.

“He’s already taken on a lot in trying to right the ship for the Internationals,” Scott said, “and I think we’re all fully embracing it.”

Added Els, with a smile: “There is something different going on. Let me put it that way.”

Whether that produces a different result come December, though, remains to be seen. If it does, you can bet there will be more team dinners in the future, only with a few more stories to tell and a cup to drink out of.

It's been 10 days since Tiger Woods sank the winning putt on the 18th green at Augusta National, cementing the greatest comeback in golf and one of the greatest in sports history. It was a putt for bogey, but it sent the patrons in a frenzy watching Woods claim his 15th major and fifth green jacket.

Well ... all but one patron, apparently.

The reaction time for Stadler is getting slower and slower, so just give him a minute. He's either as joyful and ecstatic as can be on the inside without showing it on the outside, or the 1982 Masters champion is plotting his unlikely return to the pinnacle of the golf world just as Woods did this year at the Masters.

Either way, it makes for a good laugh.

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