Posted on

LIV Golf plans 14 events, firmer teams in 2023, says report

sport

LIV Golf teed off its first US event Thursday at Pumpkin Ridge near Portland, Oregon, after staging its debut in England in early June.

In addition to staging four more events than first envisioned, the Saudi-backed series will have 48 players contracted for all 14 events in 2023. Team captains will be able to recruit talent and make trades instead of the teams featuring a rotating cast as it has this season.

The idea would be for the 12 teams to each develop an identity with an eye toward a franchise model and selling of teams.

The quick expansion of 2023 plans is a product of signing several top US PGA players ahead of this week’s event, including Americans Bryson DeChambeau, Patrick Reed, Brooks Koepka and Matthew Wolff and Mexico’s Abraham Ancer.

LIV Golf has settled on 10 venues for 2023, according to the report, and hopes to add more international venues while avoiding areas with US PGA Tour events.

The PGA Tour issued suspensions to 17 members and former members for playing at the LIV Golf event in England and handed down seven more for those who played the first round at Pumpkin Ridge, including Reed, Wolff, Koepka, DeChambeau, Ancer, Pat Perez and joint leader Carlos Ortiz.

Posted on

UEFA-CONMEBOL announce new events for women’s football, futsal and youth teams

Three new events have been announced by UEFA and CONMEBOL following the success of Finalissima ©Getty Images

Keep Olympic News Free

Support insidethegames.biz for as little as £10

For nearly 15 years now, insidethegames.biz has been at the forefront of reporting fearlessly on what happens in the Olympic Movement. As the first website not to be placed behind a paywall, we have made news about the International Olympic Committee, the Olympic and Paralympic Games, the Commonwealth Games and other major events more accessible than ever to everybody. 

insidethegames.biz has established a global reputation for the excellence of its reporting and breadth of its coverage. For many of our readers from more than 200 countries and territories around the world the website is a vital part of their daily lives. The ping of our free daily email alert, sent every morning at 6.30am UK time 365 days a year, landing in their inbox, is as a familiar part of their day as their first cup of coffee.

Even during the worst times of the COVID-19 pandemic, insidethegames.biz maintained its high standard of reporting on all the news from around the globe on a daily basis. We were the first publication in the world to signal the threat that the Olympic Movement faced from the coronavirus and have provided unparalleled coverage of the pandemic since. 

As the world begins to emerge from the COVID crisis, insidethegames.biz would like to invite you to help us on our journey by funding our independent journalism. Your vital support would mean we can continue to report so comprehensively on the Olympic Movement and the events that shape it. It would mean we can keep our website open for everyone. Last year, nearly 25 million people read insidethegames.biz, making us by far the biggest source of independent news on what is happening in world sport. 

Every contribution, however big or small, will help maintain and improve our worldwide coverage in the year ahead. Our small and dedicated team were extremely busy last year covering the re-arranged Olympic and Paralympic Games in Tokyo, an unprecedented logistical challenge that stretched our tight resources to the limit. 

The remainder of 2022 is not going to be any less busy, or less challenging. We had the Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games in Beijing, where we sent a team of four reporters, and coming up are the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, the Summer World University and Asian Games in China, the World Games in Alabama and multiple World Championships. Plus, of course, there is the FIFA World Cup in Qatar.

Unlike many others, insidethegames.biz is available for everyone to read, regardless of what they can afford to pay. We do this because we believe that sport belongs to everybody, and everybody should be able to read information regardless of their financial situation. While others try to benefit financially from information, we are committed to sharing it with as many people as possible. The greater the number of people that can keep up to date with global events, and understand their impact, the more sport will be forced to be transparent.

Support insidethegames.biz for as little as £10 – it only takes a minute. If you can, please consider supporting us with a regular amount each month. Thank you.

Read more

Posted on

Supercars teams question two-day events

Andrew van Leeuwen

Two-day meetings have become common for Supercars since the pandemic with five listed on the schedule for this year, including last weekend’s Winton SuperSprint.

Usually the meetings do run over three days, however the Friday is restricted to support category running before Supercars hit the track on Saturday.

The idea is that Supercars teams can save on accomodation and meals for their crew, while there is also a cost-saving for only having to broadcast two days, with the support running on Friday not televised.

At the recent Perth SuperSprint the Friday wasn’t even open to fans to save money on services required when the gates are open.

The flip side to the cost saving is a hectic schedule, particularly on the Saturday when there is two practice sessions, qualifying and a race.

As well as the pressure that puts on crews, the crammed schedule makes it difficult for teams to have drivers involved in fan activations like signing sessions.

According to Walkinshaw Andretti United team principal Bruce Stewart, the trade-off isn’t worth the cost saving.

“One of the beauties of our sport, which we can never lose sight of, is the connection and engagement with the fans,” he told Motorsport.com.

“In the COVID period the two-day events served a purpose, but I would be a big fan of trying to expand our engagement and reach over a long period for the fans and for the partners.

“I’m an unashamed fan of three day race meetings and enabling a better experience for anyone who takes the time to come to the track.”

Blanchard Racing Team owner Tim Blanchard argued that personnel are generally on site from Thursday onwards anyway.

“There’s pluses and minuses for everything, but for us three-day meetings are better,” he said.

“You can activate your sponsorship base better and involve the fans in what you’re doing a lot more. With a two-day meeting you’re just flat out racing, not doing anything else.

“It does add a little bit of cost for the teams, but a lot of teams are bringing up crew on the Thursday anyway.”

That same view is shared by Team 18 team manager Bruin Beasley, who says places like Benalla, near Winton, often have a three-night minimum booking on Supercars weekends.

“As soon as you make a booking for accomodation on a Supercars date, you have to book three days anyway,” he said. “The only real difference is a night’s meals. The rest of it is marginal.

“I think three days is much better, it takes the stress off everybody.”

Tickford Racing CEO Tim Edwards, meanwhile, argues that there are two sides to the story.

While he admits the two-day schedule puts pressure on crews, he’s of the opinion that the track time is what fans want.

“If I was sitting in the grandstand today, I came here to watch Supercars racing and I saw a lot of it,” he sad of Winton.

“Is it hard on the teams? Absolutely. I get where people are maybe not as comfortable with it.

“My gut feel, we’ll end up with a small number of them. I think they suit a weekend like [Winton]. Invariably on a Friday you hardly get anyone here anyway. So the value for money for the people who come on Saturday and Sunday, you see a lot more Supercars than you would if we practiced on the Friday.

“It’s bloody hard on the teams. [On Saturday] James’ car didn’t roll out of the truck on the money and we were in the back foot. You’re frantically trying to figure out how much fuel to put in the car, let alone looking at squiggly lines to try and make the car faster. On a three-day meeting it’s all very relaxed. The engineers sit in the truck for hours at night delving through everything.

“I think there are two schools of thought. But for the public that were here, they got more bang for their buck.”

The next two-day meeting on the schedule is The Bend SuperSprint on July 30-31.

Posted on

Latvia blocks teams from participating in events in Russia and Belarus

Latvian teams have been banned from competing in events in Russia ©Getty Images

Keep Olympic News Free

Support insidethegames.biz for as little as £10

For nearly 15 years now, insidethegames.biz has been at the forefront of reporting fearlessly on what happens in the Olympic Movement. As the first website not to be placed behind a paywall, we have made news about the International Olympic Committee, the Olympic and Paralympic Games, the Commonwealth Games and other major events more accessible than ever to everybody. 

insidethegames.biz has established a global reputation for the excellence of its reporting and breadth of its coverage. For many of our readers from more than 200 countries and territories around the world the website is a vital part of their daily lives. The ping of our free daily email alert, sent every morning at 6.30am UK time 365 days a year, landing in their inbox, is as a familiar part of their day as their first cup of coffee.

Even during the worst times of the COVID-19 pandemic, insidethegames.biz maintained its high standard of reporting on all the news from around the globe on a daily basis. We were the first publication in the world to signal the threat that the Olympic Movement faced from the coronavirus and have provided unparalleled coverage of the pandemic since. 

As the world begins to emerge from the COVID crisis, insidethegames.biz would like to invite you to help us on our journey by funding our independent journalism. Your vital support would mean we can continue to report so comprehensively on the Olympic Movement and the events that shape it. It would mean we can keep our website open for everyone. Last year, nearly 25 million people read insidethegames.biz, making us by far the biggest source of independent news on what is happening in world sport. 

Every contribution, however big or small, will help maintain and improve our worldwide coverage in the year ahead. Our small and dedicated team were extremely busy last year covering the re-arranged Olympic and Paralympic Games in Tokyo, an unprecedented logistical challenge that stretched our tight resources to the limit. 

The remainder of 2022 is not going to be any less busy, or less challenging. We had the Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games in Beijing, where we sent a team of four reporters, and coming up are the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, the Summer World University and Asian Games in China, the World Games in Alabama and multiple World Championships. Plus, of course, there is the FIFA World Cup in Qatar.

Unlike many others, insidethegames.biz is available for everyone to read, regardless of what they can afford to pay. We do this because we believe that sport belongs to everybody, and everybody should be able to read information regardless of their financial situation. While others try to benefit financially from information, we are committed to sharing it with as many people as possible. The greater the number of people that can keep up to date with global events, and understand their impact, the more sport will be forced to be transparent.

Support insidethegames.biz for as little as £10 – it only takes a minute. If you can, please consider supporting us with a regular amount each month. Thank you.

Read more

Posted on

MEN’S AND WOMEN’S OUTDOOR TRACK AND FIELD TEAMS WIN FOUR EVENTS AND SET THREE PROGRAM RECORDS AT RED DRAGON OPEN – Le Moyne College Athletics

MEN’S AND WOMEN’S OUTDOOR TRACK AND FIELD TEAMS WIN FOUR EVENTS AND SET THREE PROGRAM RECORDS AT RED DRAGON OPEN - Le Moyne College Athletics

Cortland, N.Y. – The Le Moyne College men’s and women’s track teams won four events and broke three program records on Saturday at SUNY Cortland’s Red Dragon Open.
 
“Today was an exciting day of track and field for Le Moyne,” said head coach Robin Wheeless. “It was day one of the decathlon for Nick Hafner. He leads the decathlon after winning three of the five events. The second day will be challenging with a forecasted high of 39 degrees. Kenny Barrett posted an excellent second-place finish in the 800 with a time of 1:58.”

“The Dolphins added some new names to the record books too. Mallory DiFelice tied Bethia Nivens’ 100 meter record while Dominic Abbott broke Jordan Finch’s 100 meter record. Ashley Dobransky broke Meg Hubregsen’s javelin record and Julianna Szczech broke her own pole vault record. I’m excited to see what they can do when it warms up.”

Sophomore Ashley Dobransky (Yorktown Heights, N.Y./Yorktown) won the javelin throw with a toss of 89-feet, 1-inch. The previous record of 88-feet, 7-inches by Meg Hubregsen was set on April 22, 2017 at Cortland. She also placed 10th in the shot put with a mark of 29-feet, 9.25-inches.

Redshirt junior Mallory DiFelice (Webster, N.Y./Webster Schroeder) won the 100-meter dash with a program record-tying time of 12.77 seconds. The time ties the mark set by Bethia Nivens at Brockport on April 14, 2017.

Senior Samantha Pellegrini (Loudonville, N.Y./Colonie) placed second in the 1500-meter run in 5:05.73.

Junior Julianna Szczech (Camillus, N.Y./Marcellus) finished second in the pole vault by clearing the bar at a program-record 9-feet, 6.5-inches, eclipsing her previous record of 2.90 set at the NE10 Championships last May

Freshman Natalie Lavello (Poughkeepsie, N.Y./Arlington) finished third in the 100-meter dash in 12.95 seconds.

Junior Cleo Baker (Painted Post, N.Y./Corning-Painted Post) registered a fourth-place finish in the 400-meter dash in 1:03.90.

Freshman Brianne Rett (Uxbridge, Mass./Marianapolis Preparatory (Conn.)) finished sixth in the shot put with a distance of 33-feet, 1.75-inches

Junior Catherine Durant (Arverne, N.Y./Metropolitan Expeditionary Learning School) placed seventh in the 400-meter dash in 1:06.46.

Freshman Anita Jepchirchir (Eldoret, Kenya) finished ninth in the 1500-meter run in 5:23.15.

Freshman Delaney Manahan (Marcellus, N.Y./Marcellus) posted a time of 1:07.41 to place 10th in the 400-meter dash.

Freshman Hilda Kiprono (Eldoret, Kenya/Kapsabet Girls High School) finished 10th in the 800-meter run in 2:35.46.

The quartet of Baker, DiFelice, Durant and Lavello won the 4×400-meter relay by over one second with a time of 4:25.29.

Junior Nicholas Hafner (Hamburg, N.Y./Hamburg) leads the decathlon through five events with 2959 points. He placed second in the 100-meter dash in 12.10 seconds to earn 631 points. He won the 400-meter dash in 53.68 seconds to collect 653 points. He won the high jump at 5-feet, 8.5-inches for 577 points. He captured the long jump with a leap of 20-feet, 1.5-inches for 615 points. He posted a distance of 32-feet, 7.75-inches in the shot put to place second and earn 483 points.

Senior Kenny Barrett (Lagrangeville, N.Y./Lady of Lourdes) finished second in the 800-meter run in 1:58.29.

Junior Nolan Hillhouse (Beacon, N.Y./Beacon) placed second in the horizontal jumping events. He registered a leap of 19-feet, 10.25 in the long jump and a distance of 41-feet, 7.25-inches in the triple jump.

Junior Christian Carlin-Saracene (North Syracuse, N.Y./Cicero-North Syracuse) posted a time of 2:00.70 to place fourth in the 800-meter dash.

Freshman Dominic Abbott (Fulton, N.Y./G. Ray Bodley) placed fifth in the 100-meter dash in a program-record time of 11.35 seconds. He eclipsed the previous record of 11.75 set by Jordan Finch at the 2016 NE10 Championships.

Freshman Jack Gibson (Ilion, N.Y./Central Valley Academy) recorded a time of 10:40.09 to place sixth in the 3000-meter steeplechase.

Senior William Bilow (Chasm Falls, N.Y./Franklin) tallied a distance of 40-feet, 3.25-inches to place sixth in the triple jump.

Freshman Brandon Scott (Camillus, N.Y./West Genesee) finished eighth in the 400-meter dash in 52.96 seconds.

Sophomore Brandon Laribee (Rome, N.Y./Rome Free Academy) placed ninth in the hammer throw with a distance of 105-feet, 3-inches.

Senior David Ware (North Syracuse, N.Y./Cicero-North Syracuse/St. John Fisher) placed 10th in the 800-meter run in 2:04.82.

The team of Scott, Carlin-Saracene, Abbott and Barrett won the 4×400-meter relay in 3:28.93.

 

Posted on

Weather Journal: Imperfect scales for rating weather events and basketball teams

Weather Journal: Imperfect scales for rating weather events and basketball teams

Many basketball fans have been caught up in power rankings and now NCAA Tournament seedings, scratching their heads at how their favorite team can be rated so low.

I’m similarly perplexed at how this winter ranks so low on an intensity scale that I created.

It all underscores the inherent imperfections and inevitable subjectiveness of multifactor scales, be it for weather or sports or something else entirely.

Back in November, I rated the first 21 winters of the 21st century to date in the Roanoke area according to a formula I developed to assess each season’s severity based on several factors.

A sleigh ride down memory lane, with a new index to rank the 21 Roanoke-area winters of the 21st century.

Those factors included total snowfall in inches, the number of days of measurable snowfall, the lowest temperature of the season subtracted from the freezing mark of 32, and the number of days with highs 60 or above subtracted from the days with lows at or below 20, all based on Roanoke official weather statistics.

Using that scale, which I didn’t publicly name but have toyed with calling RAWSI (Roanoke Area Winter Severity Index), the constantly cold and deeply snowy 2009-10 winter rates as the most severe winter of the 21st century to date with 84 points, quite unsurprisingly, while the very mild 2011-12 winter and minimal-snow 2019-20 winter are tied for last place with two points.

People are also reading…

Based on this formula, the 2021-22 winter ranks 15th most severe of the now 22 winters in the century to date with a score of 26. It rates seven points behind its predecessor in 2020-21.

That strikes me as odd, even illogical. There is no way I would consider last winter to be more severe than this one.

Last winter had lots of borderline wintry precipitation events but nothing really lasting or all that impactful, at least in the immediate Roanoke area. This winter, by contrast, had a thick icy snowpack that lasted two to three weeks for many, 11 straight days officially, Roanoke’s longest lasting snowpack in seven years.

I heard from people who were stuck in their homes for several days by the unrelenting, difficult-to-remove icy snow cover on their driveways and rural roads, resulting from an 8-inch Jan. 16 storm that included about 2 inches of sleet, followed by days of only partial melting and hard re-freezes.

I left the region for an entire week and returned to find the snow cover on my yard looking basically the same as when I left.

The 2021-22 winter edged 2020-21 for more total snow by a 12-10 margin, rounded to the nearest inch, and had a colder lowest temperature of the season, 10 degrees compared to 15.

This winter’s rating took a hit, however, in having 29 days with highs reaching 60 or more, tied for third most on record going back to 1912, compared to only 15 days with a low 20 or below. While the middle part in January was quite wintry, the bookends in December and the latter half of February were mild. The result in my formula is that it lost 14 points for having that many more 60s highs than sub-20 lows.

Also, last winter had 13 days of measurable snow, though most of those had very minor amounts, compared to only six such days this winter.

In basketball terms, you can think of this winter as having had more bad losses, mild days, than it did quality wins, cold and snowy days. (Your personal perception may be the opposite, that mild days are wins and cold and snow are losses, but that’s not the point of the rating scale.)

How more high-profile and important scales for rating weather events fall short in various ways engenders much discussion in weather social media circles, and the arguments can rage as hotly and last far longer than do those for how various teams are seeded in a basketball bracket.

The Enhanced Fujita Scale used for tornadoes is often criticized because it is based solely on damage markers, which means the happenstance of what a tornado hits can be more important than the strength of its winds.

A tornado with 200 mph winds that only flips a portable outhouse and hits nothing else is an EF-0, when it could be an EF-5 if it swept the foundation clean on just one well-constructed home. There is no radar or instrument observation that can raise a tornado rating if there is no observed tornado damage to support that rating.

The Saffir-Simpson Scale for hurricanes is considered lacking by some because it doesn’t include storm surge as a factor.

The inherent problem is that coastal geography plays a major role in storm surges, so hurricanes of similar size and strength could cause widely varying storm surge levels on different coastlines. But there is no doubt about the important role storm surge plays in damage and death toll with landfalling hurricanes, and the scale does seem to be missing something overlooking storm surge.

Three factors I didn’t include in my RAWSI were days of snow cover, the size of the season’s largest snowstorm, and anything related to freezing rain.

Adding just the total days of snow cover, 13 compared to eight a year ago, plus the size of the season’s largest snowfall, 8 inches compared to 5 a year ago, would have been just enough to move this winter ahead of the last one by one point.

I didn’t include days of snow cover for the simple reason that I have hopes of extending this rating system eventually to the entire period of record going back to 1912, and there is a point several decades back where this data becomes spotty or unavailable.

I didn’t include the size of the largest snow mainly because two of the four factors already emphasize snowfall and having more than half of the scale based only on snow statistics seemed a bit much.

Overlooking ice storms in a local winter rating scale is similar to overlooking storm surge in a hurricane scale, but I could find no consistently recorded, readily available data point related to freezing rain to add to this formula.

And, frankly, for what I was trying to accomplish with the article in November, I didn’t want the trouble of tracking down and adding together six or seven factors.

So the 2021-22 winter will have to live with its 15th seed, which would put it in a first-round bracket pairing with the second-seeded 2013-14 winter, that winter’s fans fuming that having the biggest snowstorm of the young century should somehow be weighted more and get it seeded first ahead of the New England-style winter we had in 2009-10.

Weather Journal appears on Wednesdays.

Contact Kevin Myatt at kevin.myatt@roanoke.com. Follow him on Twitter @kevinmyattwx.