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Sources: Premier League chairman resigns

Published in Soccer
Wednesday, 17 November 2021 01:53

The Premier League's chairman Gary Hoffman has resigned, sources have told ESPN.

Hoffman's resignation comes after a turbulent spell for the top flight, but sources have told ESPN his departure is not expected to impact the daily running of the Premier League. The league has not officially announced Hoffman's departure but is expected to do so in the coming days.

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Hoffman, 61, is chairman of financial group Monzo and has held the role at the Premier League for 18 months.

Sources added his resignation is not solely down to the misgivings expressed by many other clubs over the Premier League's handling of the Newcastle United takeover by the Saudi Arabia sovereign state Public Investment Fund (PIF), but it is a contributing factor.

Hoffman was not forced out by the clubs, but instead decided to leave on his own terms, according to ESPN sources.

The Premier League will not rush a new appointment of chairman -- a non-executive role -- while CEO Richard Masters retains the support of the Premier League clubs, sources have told ESPN.

Newcastle's takeover was mired in controversy due to accusations the club will be run by the Saudi state.

The takeover ended an 18-month deadlock after an agreement had originally been reached in April 2020. However, PIF, the world's largest sovereign wealth fund (state-owned investment), failed to pass the Premier League's owners' and directors' test at the time, creating an impasse which has now been resolved.

Officially, the Premier League indicated they had legally binding assurances the Saudi Arabian government would not have control over Newcastle, but are still monitoring their level of involvement, sources told ESPN.

Information from ESPN correspondent James Olley was used in this report

Sources: Canada loss Mexico's coldest on record

Published in Soccer
Wednesday, 17 November 2021 01:53

Mexico's 2-1 defeat to Canada at Edmonton on Tuesday was the coldest match El Tri have played on record, according to multiple sources.

The hosts scheduled their biggest home game in this qualifying campaign in extreme conditions, giving them an added advantage in the process.

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"Every country uses their terrains as an advantage, and we saw this as an advantage," Canada coach John Herdman said after the game. "[The Canadian players] all grew up in the cold and on plastic pitches."

Home-field advantage was definitely a factor for Canada, who packed in nearly 50,000 fans into Commonwealth Stadium. Though pockets of Mexican fans were often seen on Friday in El Tri's match against the United States at TQL Stadium in Cincinnati, supporters for the CONCACAF giants were few and far between in Edmonton.

Temperatures dipped to 14° Fahrenheit (-10° Celsius) at kick off, with a wind chill of 5° F (15°) making the weather even more hostile as it wore on.

"As is standard practice for all matches, per the laws of the game the referee will determine if the field is playable," CONCACAF spokesman Nicholas Noble wrote in an email to The Associated Press. "This happens as a matter of course."

Referee Mario Escobar allowed the match to play, while Canadian defender Doneil Henry was also permitted to play on after a brutal first-minute challenge on Hirving Lozano that sent the Napoli star to the ground. Lozano would later be substituted as a result of the collision, according to Mexico manager Gerardo Martino.

As the match wore on, most players on both teams seemed to shake off the cold, with Mexico slowing Canada's early attempts to grab hold of proceedings. However, goalkeeper Memo Ochoa looked notoriously slow to a shot outside the box from Alistair Johnson. Ochoa parried right into Cyle Larin's path, who slotted the rebound home for the first of his two goals.

"We played a good first half," said Martino after the game. "We annulled Canada's possibilities. We just lacked depth."

Ochoa capped his nightmare two-game stretch by allowing Larin to score inside the six-yard box off a free kick. The Club America goalkeeper had stoked the ire of fans and players on the US side by declaring that "Mexico is the mirror in which the United States wants to see itself" before Friday's match. After Chelsea star Christian Pulisic scored the game's first goal against Ochoa, he lifted his jersey to reveal he'd written "man in the mirror" on his t-shirt.

Larin kept the pressure on Ochoa, scoring his 21st and 22nd international goals for Canada, after Herdman boldly swapped him in for Jonathan David, the Lille striker who started on Friday against Costa Rica and scored.

"We've got two great strikers in great form, [David] scored a goal one night, and [Larin] scored two in the other," Herdman said.

For Mexico, their second consecutive game in frigid conditions meant back-to-back losses. In Cincinnati, El Tri lost 2-0 to the United States in a match played mostly in the low 40s F. Their next game will be played in Kingston, Jamaica -- where the average monthly temperature in January is a balmy 88° F (31° C).

Paine to head into Ashes without a first-class match

Published in Cricket
Wednesday, 17 November 2021 00:06

Australia captain Tim Paine is set to go into the Ashes series without a first-class fixture under his belt but he is set to play club cricket and second XI cricket for Tasmania over the next week before Australia's intra-squad clash in Brisbane ahead of the Gabba Test.

Paine is recovering from neck surgery he had in September and has not played at all yet this summer. His last competitive game was in April.

He was hopeful of playing up to four full matches, including a Shield game, before the first Ashes Test at the Gabba in December.

Rain last week washed out any hopes of playing for his club side University of Tasmania. He is now set to play on the first day of their clash with South Hobart Sandy Bay on Saturday, but he won't take part in Tasmania's Shield clash against Western Australia, starting on Sunday.

He will instead play in Tasmania's Second XI team in a four-day game against South Australia which is scheduled to begin on Monday. Paine will also have the chance to play in the intra-squad clash in Brisbane starting on December 1.

Australia's chairman of selectors George Bailey was not concerned about Paine's preparation.

"Just get some cricket under his belt, which we're really confident he's going to get back this weekend," Bailey said on Wednesday. "And I think from all reports, surgery has gone really well. He's feeling really, really confident. I think they've actually had to hold him back a little bit in the last couple of weeks to make sure the actual healing process has gone well and now it's just a matter of actually getting some game time under his belt, so he's really confident and really excited to be leading the team come the first day at the Gabba."

Paine will turn 37 on the opening day of the Ashes series and told SEN last week that he has not given any consideration to his future beyond this summer.

Alex Carey and Josh Inglis have both been named in the Australia A squad on Wednesday but Alex Carey is expected to be the second wicketkeeper in the intra-squad match and the Australia A wicketkeeper, and possibly captain, for the England Lions game starting in December. Inglis is set to play as a batter given he was part of the group that was required to do 14-day quarantine on the way back from the T20 World Cup in the UAE and is likely to head back to Perth Scorchers for the start of the BBL.

Alex Malcolm is an Associate Editor at ESPNcricinfo

The top-ten teams on a scheduled cut-off date will qualify directly for the 2027 men's ODI World Cup, and four more teams will be added to the main draw after a global qualifier. This new qualification pathway for the 14th edition of the ODI World Cup has been approved by the ICC Board and will replace the existing points system based on the ODI Super League standings, which will be used for the 2023 World Cup.

For the 2023 edition, which will be a ten-team event, nine qualifiers, excluding hosts India, are going to be determined by the rankings based on the 13-team ODI Super League, featuring 12 Full Members and Netherlands, with each team playing eight ODI series - four home and four away. However, with the expansion to 14 teams from the 2027 edition, the ICC has had to change the qualification process.

Ganguly replaces Kumble as cricket committee head
The ICC Board, which met on Tuesday, also approved the appointment of BCCI president Sourav Ganguly as the new chair of the ICC men's cricket committee. Ganguly will replace his former India team-mate Anil Kumble, who has been at the position for the maximum tenure of three terms - nine years in total - at the influential ICC panel.

"I am delighted to welcome Sourav to the position of Chair of the ICC Men's Cricket Committee," ICC chairman Greg Barclay said in a statement. "His experience as one of the world's best players and latterly as an administrator will help us shape our cricketing decisions moving forward.

"I would also like to thank Anil for his outstanding leadership over the last nine years which has included improving the international game through more regular and consistent application of DRS and a robust process for addressing suspect bowling actions."

While Ganguly, who also sits on the ICC Board, occupying two positions might be perceived as a conflict of interest, the ICC constitution has no clause that prohibits a cricket board chief/member to also be the head of an ICC cricket committee. Ganguly has previously been part of various global committees, even heading the BCCI technical committee while being on the MCC's world cricket committee.

Ensuring that the "umpire's call element of DRS" stays on despite vocal opposition from various quarters was among the key takeaways from the most-recent Kumble-chaired meeting earlier this year. At the time, a provision for teams to opt for like-for-like Covid-19 substitutes was also approved.

Mickey Arthur will join Derbyshire CCC as its head of cricket at the end of Sri Lanka's upcoming two-Test series at home against West Indies, which runs from November 21 to December 3.

His contract with Sri Lanka Cricket was due to expire at the end of the West Indies series anyway. While Arthur had repeatedly expressed a strong desire to extend this stay, SLC is understood to have been largely unresponsive; there has not been a disagreement over pay, and Arthur may have stayed on if SLC had offered him the same package as before.

"This is the start of an exciting project at Derbyshire, with many young players, and I'm really excited to be a part of that and to bring my vision to the Club. It's a new challenge and one which I'm eager to get stuck into and lead this Club to success," Arthur said in a statement issued by the county. "There's a good squad at Derbyshire and I want us to play a positive style of cricket, we won't fear any team and I'm looking forward to seeing what we can achieve for our supporters."

Arthur's exit could be part of a substantial shake-up for Sri Lanka, with several of the coaches attached to the men's national side expected to have to reapply for their roles. Batting coach Grant Flower, bowling coach Chaminda Vaas, and fielding coach Shane McDermott are all understood to be facing uncertain futures.

This also means that SLC has now blown through seven head coach appointments in the space of ten years, with Geoff Marsh, Graham Ford (in two separate stints), Paul Farbrace, Marvan Atapattu, Chandika Hathurusingha and now Arthur having held the role since 2012. Arthur at least served out his contract; Marsh, Farbrace, Ford (in his second stint), Atapattu, and Hathurusingha didn't.

Arthur, a well-travelled coach who has worked with the national men's teams of Australia, South Africa and Pakistan, apart from Sri Lanka, will replace Dave Houghton at Derbyshire, with Houghton, the former Zimbabwe captain, having left the club earlier this year to take up a position as coaching manager with Zimbabwe Cricket.

Derbyshire chairman Ian Morgan said of the new appointment, "Mickey is one of the most highly-regarded coaches in world cricket and this is a key appointment for the Club ahead of an important winter period.

"Throughout this recruitment process, Mickey has understood our heritage as a county, but also matched our ambition with a desire to make a positive impact at Derbyshire.

"We want to move forward from last season. We've got a talented group of players and with a new Head of Cricket bringing a fresh approach, it is an exciting time for our Members and supporters."

Arthur's stint with Sri Lanka was split by the pandemic, during which he remained in Sri Lanka throughout, in order to work with the team when possible. There were mixed results under him, but also a strong focus on youth and regeneration - a tactic that seemed to be bearing fruit over the past few months.

Allrounder Wanindu Hasaranga, in particular, grew into a match-winning limited-overs player over the past two years. There was also the resurgence of fast bowler Dushmantha Chameera, and most recently, the emergence of Charith Asalanka, in limited-overs cricket.

Andrew Fidel Fernando is ESPNcricinfo's Sri Lanka correspondent. @afidelf

Staples Center to get new name in rich rights deal

Published in Hockey
Tuesday, 16 November 2021 23:20

LOS ANGELES -- Staples Center is getting a new name. Starting Christmas Day, it will be Crypto.com Arena.

The downtown Los Angeles home of the NBA's Lakers and Clippers, the NHL's Kings, and the WNBA's Sparks will change its name after 22 years of operation, arena owner AEG announced Tuesday night.

Crypto.com is paying $700 million, according to multiple reports, over 20 years to rename the building. The parties aren't publicly announcing the financial terms of what's believed to be the richest naming rights deal in sports history.

The 20,000-seat arena has been Staples Center since it opened in October 1999, with the naming rights owned by the American office-supplies retail company under a 20-year agreement. The name will change when the Lakers host the Brooklyn Nets in the NBA's annual Christmas showcase.

Crypto.com is a cryptocurrency platform and exchange headquartered in Singapore. Founded in 2016, Crypto.com has been on a spending spree across the global sports landscape over the past year. The platform has inked high-visibility sponsorship deals with Formula One, the UFC, Italy's Serie A, Paris St-Germain and the NHL's Montreal Canadiens, while also purchasing the Philadelphia 76ers' uniform sponsorship patch.

AEG, the sports and entertainment conglomerate that has majority ownership of the Kings and had a stake in the Lakers until last summer, built the arena that quickly became a famous setting for major events in the U.S.' second-largest metropolitan area.

Along with its sports tenants, the arena has hosted 19 Grammy Awards ceremonies, three NBA All-Star Games, two NHL All-Star Games and countless high-profile concerts, performances and important public events, including memorials for Michael Jackson, Nipsey Hussle and Kobe Bryant.

The Lakers have won six NBA championships during their tenure in the cavernous arena, including three straight in its first three years of operation. Banners commemorating the Lakers' 17 NBA titles hang high on the walls above the playing floor, providing what might be the most distinctive interior feature of the building.

The Sparks have won three WNBA titles while at the Staples Center, and the Kings won their first two Stanley Cup championships in 2012 and 2014 there, clinching both on home ice.

The Clippers will be short-timers at Crypto.com Arena. They're scheduled to open owner Steve Ballmer's $1 billion, 18,000-seat Intuit Dome in Inglewood in 2024 when their Staples Center lease expires. The Sparks also could leave downtown then, although nothing has been decided.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Perth Scorchers 3 for 177 (Mooney 78, Devine 61, Coyte 1-27) beat Adelaide Strikers 5 for 165 (Mack 84*, Graham 2-30, Devine 2-30) by 12 runs

The Beth Mooney and Sophie Devine show rolls on as the pair put together their third century stand of the WBBL season to help Perth Scorchers hold off Adelaide Strikers at Karen Rolton Oval in Adelaide.

Mooney continued her outstanding run of form, making her third consecutive half-century, while Devine made 61 and took 2 for 30, as Strikers fell 12 runs short despite Katie Mack's 84 not out, her third unbeaten half-century in four games.

Mooney and Devine set the game up for Scorchers, sharing a 137-run stand of 16.3 overs. It was their sixth century stand in the last two seasons. Devine was a little slower than usual, striking at just 117 with seven fours and one six before she holed out to cover off Megan Schutt. Mooney was her usual fluent self, scoring 10 boundaries in her 78 from 53 balls. She fell with just 10 balls left in the innings. Heather Graham was promoted to No.3 with Chamari Athapaththu absent for the remainder of the tournament due to international duty. Graham struck two sixes in her 22 from 11 balls to help lift Scorchers to 3 for 177.

Strikers were on track in reply despite the early loss of Dane van Niekerk, falling to Marizanne Kapp. Mack and Laura Wolvaardt shared a 90-run stand before Devine made the key breakthrough in the 13th over with Wolvaardt caught brilliantly in the deep by Mathilda Carmichael for 40. It left Strikers needing 79 from 45 balls with eight wickets in hand, but the middle order was unable to support Mack, who was left not out on 84 from 61 balls. Graham and Devine picked up two wickets each.

The ICC Board has set up a working group to observe and review cricket in Afghanistan in general and, more specifically, the Afghanistan Cricket Board after the developments following the Taliban takeover of the country. The group, to be chaired by Imran Khwaja, also includes Ross McCollum, Lawson Naidoo and Ramiz Raja and will report back to the Board over the coming months.

"The ICC Board is committed to continuing to support Afghanistan Cricket to develop both men's and women's cricket moving forward," ICC chairman Greg Barclay said in a media statement. "We believe the most effective way for this to happen will be to support our Member in its efforts to achieve this through its relationship with the new government.

"Cricket is fortunate to be in the position to influence positive change in Afghanistan with the national men's team a source of great pride and unity in a country with a young population that has experienced more upheaval and change than most. We should protect that status and continue to try to influence change through the ACB but will continue to closely monitor the situation and take any decisions accordingly."

Since the Taliban assumed power in Afghanistan, and the group's stance that women would not be allowed to play sport became public, Cricket Australia has postponed a scheduled Test match against Afghanistan, at home in Hobart in November, and there has been speculation that other boards might follow suit.
"Our goal is to see men and women playing cricket in Afghanistan. Our view is that the best way to achieve that is to stay closely connected with the cricket board and try to influence through the cricket board"
Geoff Allardice

Geoff Allardice, the ICC interim chief executive, had told select media during the course of the T20 World Cup recently, "Afghanistan is our member and they are going through some change at the moment. We are just trying to liaise with them ensure that cricket is being governed and the board is governed appropriately and in accordance with their constitution.

"The second is that their cricket is continuing to function. We've supported them and the team has performed at this event. You've seen their players in a number of event now. In terms of how our board will consider the situation in Afghanistan at its meeting next week, they will get a report on how things are travelling. They're going through a lot of change within the country and in terms of the relationship of the cricket board with the new regime."

Answering a question about the future of the men's national team in the event that there was no change in the Taliban's position on women's sport - or cricket specifically - Allardice had said, "Our goal is to see men and women playing cricket in Afghanistan. Our view is that the best way to achieve that is to stay closely connected with the cricket board and try to influence through the cricket board.

"They're on a steady trajectory of development there and we would like to see that continue. How other members react with their bilateral arrangements with Afghanistan is up to them. We will be working through their situation at our board level and with their board as well. They are the agent for developing cricket in their country.

"They [the ACB] have said to us that women's cricket is continuing. They certainly haven't given us an indication that it has stopped. Time will tell, in terms of how that plays out. Yes, we have been in regular communication with them from the time things changed in their country. We are hoping to have some meetings with their representatives around our board meetings."

There has been a few changes at the top at the ACB of late too.

When 33-year-old Afghanistan allrounder Mirwais Ashraf was appointed acting chairman of the board last week, it was the second such update in four months after Azizullah Fazli had been named chairman replacing Farhan Yusufzai, who left the country after the Taliban took over.

No proper reason has been given by the ACB about the latest change, but it has been learnt that Fazli's appointment was always intended to be a temporary one.

As reported by ESPNcricinfo at the time, the Afghan government has plans of revamping the working structure of the board. "The government is trying to bring in more competent people with expertise in technical aspects of the game - commercial, business and marketing," a former director of the ACB told ESPNcricinfo. "If Afghanistan can produce world-class players with this broken system back home, then imagine what they can do with a competent board."

Playoff ranking: No change at the top, but chaos ahead

Published in Breaking News
Tuesday, 16 November 2021 21:56

The top seven teams remained unchanged in the College Football Playoff's third ranking of the season on Tuesday, the fifth time that has happened in CFP history. While there can still be a shake-up in the final three rankings, history tells us what we're seeing might be very close to what we'll get on Selection Day, Dec. 5.

Of the past 28 semifinalists, 21 have been ranked in the top four at this point in the season, and 26 have been ranked in the top six. No team to make the playoff has ever been ranked lower than ninth at this point in the season.

So do No. 8 Notre Dame and No. 9 Oklahoma State really stand a chance?

Here's a look at the biggest questions and most puzzling scenarios remaining for the committee heading into Week 12:

What happens if Oregon and Ohio State both finish with the same record?

Oregon's Sept. 11 win at Ohio State has kept it ahead of the Buckeyes for three straight weeks, but that doesn't mean the head-to-head result will last. Ohio State's remaining strength of schedule, currently No. 7 in the country, isn't significantly better than Oregon's No. 12 slate. The Ducks' toughest remaining game is at Utah on Saturday. If Ohio State finishes as a one-loss Big Ten champion, it will have defeated four straight ranked opponents, including in the league title game.

Oregon will have defeated three CFP Top 25 teams all season -- including Ohio State. The committee has demonstrated, though, that eye test and metrics factored into its decision to rank Michigan ahead of Michigan State in spite of the Spartans winning that game. Ohio State's offensive efficiency is No. 1 in the country, while Oregon is No. 17. Defensively, they are similar (Oregon is No. 30, Ohio State is No. 39).

When two teams are comparable, the committee uses the head-to-head result as one of several tiebreakers. The question is whether the committee would deem them comparable, or if Ohio State's offense and its four straight wins against ranked opponents are enough to simply declare the Buckeyes better.

There's also a possibility -- albeit a more improbable one -- that both Ohio State and Oregon finish as two-loss conference champions.

It's not likely but conceivable that Oregon and Utah can clinch their respective divisions on Saturday while playing each other. If Oregon loses to Utah, and Oregon State loses to Arizona State, it would mean Oregon and Utah have locked in a rematch in the Pac-12 title game.

And the conference is guaranteed to have a champion with at least two losses.

Meanwhile, Ohio State might pick up its second loss of the season against Michigan State. If that happens, the Big Ten East will come down to the final week of the regular season. In that scenario, Michigan would need to beat Ohio State and hope Penn State beats Michigan State. The Buckeyes would need to win and hope for the same.

What if Ohio State gets the miracle it needs -- a win against Michigan and a Penn State win against Michigan State? And Oregon loses to Utah on Saturday but wins the Pac-12?

The committee would have the same conversation about the head-to-head result, but both teams could be looking up at Alabama, Georgia, Cincinnati and Notre Dame -- or the Big 12 champion.


What needs to happen for Notre Dame to reach a semifinal?

The ideal scenario would be for Cincinnati to lose to Houston in the American Athletic Conference championship game, and there's more chaos in the Power 5 title games.

Considering Ohio State, Michigan State and Michigan all still face each other, it's realistic to think Notre Dame will eventually jump at least two of them, assuming it finishes 11-1. That's not enough, though. The Irish need more help than Cincinnati -- because they lost to the Bearcats. If Cincinnati loses in the AAC championship game, it would have a similar record to Notre Dame and neither would have a conference title. Would the committee still honor the head-to-head result?

Selection committee chair Gary Barta on Tuesday said the group hasn't even discussed not honoring it to this point.

"I'm just saying, in the areas in which we're having these conversations, looking at Ohio State and Michigan, Cincinnati sandwiched in between those two right now, there has not yet been any conversation of having Notre Dame ahead of Cincinnati," he said, "but again, next week will be a new week and we'll evaluate who each of them play and go from there."

Notre Dame doesn't have anything left on its schedule to impress the committee, so the group simply would have to think the Irish are better based on what they see in those games against Georgia Tech and Stanford, opponents that are a combined 6-13.

To avoid losing that debate, the Irish need even more help. They need a two-loss Pac-12 champion. They need a two-loss Big Ten champion. Or they need Georgia to beat Alabama so badly it's impossible for the committee to justify a two-loss Tide in the top four.

Most of all, Notre Dame needs to look like a top-four team in its final two games.

When asked on Tuesday night what he could share about the committee's discussions around Notre Dame, Barta credited the Irish's schedule for the second straight week.

"Well, they have great wins -- they won again this week at Virginia," Barta said. "One of the things the committee did note is that Virginia did not have their starting quarterback, but they're 9-1, they have really -- they have a very strong strength of schedule. They have wins against Wisconsin and Purdue. Their loss, obviously, was to Cincinnati. We think very highly of them. They continue to play good football."


Who is the Big 12's best hope?

Based on tonight's ranking, it's No. 9 Oklahoma State. The selection committee has been impressed with the Cowboys' defense, which is No. 3 in the country in defensive efficiency and has helped compensate for an average offense.

"Oklahoma State's defense, the committee thinks very highly of the way they've been playing defense, some of the best defense this year," Barta said. "They beat Baylor, and so that certainly resonates with the committee. And then as of late offensively, Oklahoma State has been playing much better the last several weeks."

The Cowboys are No. 6 in ESPN's Strength of Record metric, and have the 10th most difficult remaining schedule. While they have a loss to unranked Iowa State, it helps the Cowboys that they beat No. 11 Baylor, and No. 13 Oklahoma is still a top-15 CFP team that could continue to boost their résumé.

Oklahoma State is at Texas Tech on Saturday before facing Oklahoma at home in the regular-season finale on Nov. 27. ESPN's Football Power Index gives the Cowboys a 53.9% chance to win Bedlam. Oklahoma State can clinch a spot in the Big 12 title game Saturday with a win at Texas Tech and either an Oklahoma win OR a Baylor loss. Oklahoma can clinch a spot in the Big 12 championship with a win against Iowa State and a Baylor loss at Kansas State.

There's also still a possibility that two-loss Baylor earns a spot in the Big 12 championship. If Oklahoma loses either of its next two games, Baylor would win the tiebreaker with its head-to-head result. While it would be great for the Bears, it would be devastating for the Big 12's playoff hopes to have a two-loss champion.

ESPN's FPI gives Baylor a 45% chance to make it to the conference championship, trailing Oklahoma State (88%) and Oklahoma (65%).


How does Cincinnati finish in the top four? And who could leapfrog the Bearcats?

If Oregon loses at Utah on Saturday, the Bearcats should make history in one week when they become the first Group of 5 team to crack the CFP top four in the fourth ranking of the season. To stay there, they likely would need to finish as undefeated AAC champs.

If they lose, all bets are off.

It would further legitimize the possibility of Alabama and Georgia claiming the top two spots, regardless of what happens in the SEC championship game. It would open the debate with Notre Dame. It would also give the Big 12 champion some hope. As long as the Bearcats continue to win, though, these rankings indicate it would only take one more upset above them to make history.


What happens if Bama loses a close game to Georgia?

Alabama could become the first two-loss team to finish in the top four -- and it could happen at the undefeated Bearcats' expense. According to the Allstate Playoff Predictor, there is a 70% chance a 13-0 Georgia and an 11-2 Alabama would finish in the top four.

It would probably have to be a close game, though -- unless there is chaos elsewhere. For a team to finish in the top four without winning a conference title, the group would have to consider it "unequivocally" one of the four best teams. Would a two-loss Alabama that didn't win its league still usurp a one-loss Big 12 champion? (Based on what we've seen to this point? Probably).

Alabama continues to be helped by the number of SEC teams ranked in the CFP Top 25, as it has wins against No. 12 Ole Miss and now No. 25 Mississippi State.

Alabama's grip on No. 2, though, might not be as solid as it appears.

"I can tell you that 2, 3 and 4 was an area where the conversation was a little bit longer," Barta said. "I mentioned earlier, we didn't learn a lot about Alabama this week but continue to be impressed with the way they play on both sides of the ball, but there was good conversation about where Alabama, Oregon and Ohio State should be placed."

Panthers' Barkov hurt on knee-on-knee collision

Published in Hockey
Tuesday, 16 November 2021 21:06

Florida Panthers center Aleksander Barkov left Tuesday night's game against the New York Islanders with a lower-body injury, marring a 6-1 rout that kept the Panthers unbeaten at home.

Barkov collided knee-on-knee with Islanders defenseman Scott Mayfield with 18 minutes, 13 seconds left in the second period. Barkov remained on the ice for several minutes before leaving the game, putting no weight on his left knee. He did not return to the game.

Panthers interim coach Andrew Brunette says Barkov will be evaluated over the next couple of days but didn't give further updates.

"It's a test again,'' Brunette said. "We've had a lot of tests this year; this is another one. You hate to lose Barky. He means so much to this franchise. Hopefully he's OK."

Mayfield, who appeared to lean into the hit, was assessed a five-minute major and a game misconduct.

"There wasn't a big window as Barkov came laterally between him [Mayfield] and another player,'' Islanders coach Barry Trotz said. "He looked like he was trying to hit him shoulder to shoulder. I know Scott. There's no intent there. It's all in the interpretation."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Website: www.idig.com
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