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RMCSPORT.BFMTV.COMPSG-Arsenal: ticket offert mais voyage 1.000 euros, l'offre du club anglais ses employs a du mal passerAlors que le PSG a une nouvelle fois invit tous les salaris du club la finale de la Ligue des champions (voyage compris), ceux d'Arsenal vont devoir dbourser prs de 1.000 euros pour se rendre Budapest, d'aprs le Telegraph. Ce qui a du mal passer chez certains d'entre eux.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 84 Visualizações 0 Anterior -
WWW.SMH.COM.AUEddie Jones banned for 'verbal abuse'Australian rugby coach Eddie Jones has been hit with a six-week ban and pay cut for abusing match officials during a tour with Japan's under-23 team last month.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 57 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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TIMESOFINDIA.INDIATIMES.COMIt was truly heartbreaking: Rashid, Nabi visit hospitalised Shapoor ZadranAfghanistan's cricket stars Rashid Khan and Mohammad Nabi visited former teammate Shapoor Zadran in a Greater Noida hospital. Zadran is battling a rare, life-threatening immune disorder. Nabi shared a heartfelt update, expressing his pain at seeing the once-feared bowler hospitalized and praying for his swift recovery and return to loved ones.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 33 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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WWW.FOXSPORTS.COMFOX Super 6 INDYCAR Contest: Bob Pockrass' Indy 500 Qualifying Picks, PredictionsWhat's better than watching INDYCAR? Watching INDYCAR and winning money! You can partake in the best of both worlds while watching Indy 500 qualifying on May 16 and 17 with our free-to-play FOX Super 6 game. How do you play? Enter the Indy 500 qualifying contest by predicting the correct answers to six questions before qualifying starts on Saturday for your shot to win cash prizes. Fans can watch the action across the FOX family of networks (FOX, FS1 and FS2). All you have to do is finish in the top six to win a prize. It really is that simple, and again, it's free. Remember, the quest for the Indianapolis 500 pole is as exciting as many automobile races. Who will win the pole Sunday to lead the field across the yard of bricks on May 24? Who will have to climb their way through the field? Oh, if you want to know how qualifying works, here's some extra insight. And if you need a little help before heading to the app to make your picks, I have you covered this week. Read below for my thoughts on this weekend's exciting Indy 500 qualifying event! 1. Which driver will earn the BEST INDY 500 STARTING POSITION? No. 5 Pato O' Ward, No. 27 Kyle Kirkwood, No. 2 Josef Newgarden, No. 26 Will Power Power is the all-time leader in poles but has just one top-10 starting spot in the 500 in the last six years. Newgarden has one in the last six and Kirkwood has never started better than 11th. OWard has started in the top 10 in each of the last four years. And hes in a Chevrolet, which still looks to be a little bit stronger. Prediction: OWard 2. Rank by avg. 4-lap speed (fastest to slowest) during full field qualifying on Sat 5/16 No. 10 Alex Palou, No. 7 Christian Lundgaard, No. 12 David Malukas, No. 28 Marcus Ericsson Palou is fast everywhere but Malukas is in a Penske Chevrolet, which likely will be stout. Ludngaard struggles a little on ovals. Ericsson has won one Indy 500 and some would argue he should have at least two. Prediction:Palou, Malukas, Lundgaard, Ericsson 3. Which group includes the POLE WINNER for the Indy 500? Palou, Lundgaard, EricssonO'Ward, Malukas, DixonNewgarden, Kirkwood, McLaughlinNone of the above This still very well could be a Team Penske weekend, so Malukas, Newgarden and McLaughlin will be strong. But do you ever bet against Palou anywhere at any time? Why, yes you do. Prediction:Newgarden, Kirkwood, McLaughlin 4. Which team will earn the BEST TWO COMBINED INDY 500 STARTING POSITIONS? Team PenskeArrow McLarenChip Ganassi RacingAndretti Global This whole bit is starting to have a Penske theme to it. But you can never count out Palou and Dixon at Ganassi. Beyond Pato OWard, dont count on McLaren to be so strong that they certainly get more than one car in the final nine. Andretti Global is also possibly a tick behind when it comes to qualifying here. Prediction:Chip Ganassi Racing 5. Predict David Malukass starting position for the Indy 500 1-4, 4-8, 8-12, 12-33 Malukas qualified seventh in a Foyt car last year, so a top-four starting spot surely isnt out of the question. He was 13th and 23rdwhen racing for Coyne. Prediction:1-4 6. Will Alex Palou earn a TOP 3 STARTING POSITION for the Indy 500? Yes or No Palou hasnt started in the top five in the last two years at Indy. But he was on the pole in 2023 and the front row in 2022. Prediction:Yes (but more likely third than first)0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 6 Visualizações 0 Anterior -
Luka Doncic Confirms Brutal Injury Reality After the Los Angeles Lakers Painful Playoff ExitLuka Doncic revealed his hamstring injury was far worse than expected after the Lakers playoff exit, while new reports explained why the Slovenian star never returned during the postseason.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 9 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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WWW.CBSSPORTS.COMWhy Joel Embiid would be 'tricky to trade' for new '76ers management, even if they want a fresh startEmbiid has never played more than 68 games in a season around injuries0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 9 Visualizações 0 Anterior -
SPORTS.YAHOO.COM'We just destroyed ourselves: 17 years later, Gina Carano returns to a sport transformedGina Carano had one key word to describe the difference in MMA training now compared to what she experienced her first time around, back in the mid-2000s, when the sport was still finding its legs.Smarter, Carano told reporters at a recent media event to promote her fight with Ronda Rousey on the MVP MMA event that airs on Netflix this Saturday. That was the word for it.Smarter training, Carano said. Because we used to go into the gym and just beat the living hell out of each other. Now it's smarter, there's recovery. Its just a smarter sport now than when I came up and we just destroyed ourselves.Ask just about anyone who experienced life in a working fight gym back in those early days in MMAs evolution and theyll tell you shes right. There was a time when many people believed that the only way to prepare for an MMA fight was to walk through fire in practice day after day.It was a world of extremes, you might say. Hard sparring sessions that left participants splayed out and unconscious. Conditioning routines that resembled medieval torture techniques. Relentless punishment was the order of the day. If it was painful and deeply unpleasant, the thinking went, then it must be good preparation for the crucible of a cage fight.Guys just used to fight every day, former UFC lightweight Yves Edwards told Uncrowned. I mean, it was an every day thing, just going hard. No working on specifics. Like, trying to work behind the jab to set up the right hand or trying to set up the takedown off combos. None of that. Just straight up, whos the tougher guy? It used to be just fights in the gym, man.This is one topic on which there is great consensus. Talk to almost any fighter from that era and youll find that just about everyone has stories of wild gym wars theyve either witnessed or participated in. Sparring made up such a huge chunk of practice time for many fighters. Taking it easy on each other was a foreign concept.Brian Stann, who made his pro MMA debut in 2006 before retiring into a full-time UFC commentary gig in 2013, said he still has this conversation with former teammates, recalling the crazy things they did in training.Me and [former UFC fighter] Keith Jardine were just talking about this, some of the wars we were in with each other in the gym, and how many years did we potentially shave off our careers? Stann said. I mean, I saw [former UFC light heavyweight champion] Rashad Evans get knocked out in the gym the week before the [Lyoto] Machida fight [a title defense Evans lost via knockout]. That kind of stuff happened. We definitely didnt train smart.Part of the problem, Stann suggested, was that so many fighters thought toughness was the most important quality, and must be proven in the gym every day. The big MMA fight gyms, like the Jackson-Winkeljohn camp where Stann trained, created a shark tank environment that weeded out the weak, but also led to a room full of alpha males who never wanted to back down in front of one another.They needed each other as sparring partners, since few in MMA had the money back then to set up their own training camp focuses solely on the one guy getting ready for a fight. But that super gym approach also came with some drawbacks.Sept. 17, 2008: Gina Carano wraps her hands inside a Los Angeles gym. MMA was in a very different place in those days.Robert Laberge via Getty ImagesIt was a top-of-the-food-chain environment that was really hard to control, Stann said. Even if Greg Jackson or Mike Winkeljohn told us, Hey guys, tone it down, do you really think me, Rashad, Georges St-Pierre and Joey Villasenor are going to want to be the one who backs off? I think now more people are using something like more like a boxing approach. You dont need to be out here sparring with all-stars with different styles. You need someone who can mostly closely mimic the guy youre going to fight.Aaron Riley, who began his career in the late 1990s, said that period of MMA also had a strong copycat element to it. The sport itself was still new and changing rapidly. If one style or strategy brought success, others rushed to emulate it. This also went for training techniques. If some guys worked out in special training masks and then won a few fights, everyone else assumed this must be the thing to do.I mean, Rocky chased chickens and he beat Apollo Creed, Riley said. That means I should chase chickens too, right?Riley observed this phenomenon after training at Miletich Fighting Systems in Iowa, he said. The Miletich gym had multiple champions and top contenders at one point, so people assumed their notoriously hard sparring must be the way to go.I had heard those stories and then when I saw it firsthand it was just like, Damn, you guys really get after it, huh? It was routine to see guys get dropped or knocked out in sparring. And it wasnt just them. I saw that in lots of gyms. That starts to seem kind of normal at a certain point.How many years did we potentially shave off our careers? I mean, I saw Rashad Evans get knocked out in the gym the week before the Machida fight. That kind of stuff happened. We definitely didnt train smart.Former UFC fighter Brian StannOne person who related to Caranos comments about how much MMA training has changed is her former opponent, Julie Kedzie. Kedzie fought Carano at an EliteXC event in 2007, when womens MMA was still being gradually adopted by more and more fight promotions.I think the most succinct way to explain whats changed since then is, we just know so much more know, Kedzie said. MMA hadnt been around all that long. We were still learning how to train for it. But it was also other stuff, like how often did I get the chance to watch film on an opponent? This was back when we still had dial-up internet. I remember watching the Smackgirl tournament that Marloes Coenen won and I ended getting a $400 phone bill for that. Now you could just find it on a streaming service somewhere.It was also a harder time to be a woman in MMA. Suitable sparring partners could be hard to find in some gyms, which left women sparring with whatever male fighter was closest to her in weight.Not that women and men should train different, but if all you have is male sparring partners, thats not the body type youre preparing to fight, Kedzie said. I think for me there was also this element of always wanting to prove I belonged. I might not run as fast or hit as hard, but Im going to prove myself by never quitting and always going hard. It was always this undercurrent of trying to prove that you belonged.The other big difference, Kedzie said, was in recovery and medical care. Back in those days, if you got rocked in sparring, your main job was to get your wobbling body off the mats and stay out of everyone elses way. Beyond an ice pack to put on your head, no one was likely to offer you much to aid your rebound.Gina Carano (right) has not competed in MMA since 2009.MediaNews Group/Los Angeles Daily News via Getty Images via Getty ImagesI think we were always thinking about toughness, Kedzie said. Toughness is useful. It might help you when you get in the fight and think, I know I can survive this because of what I went through in training. But you do need to get those injuries taken care of. We wouldnt tell a soccer player to keep practicing on an injured ankle to improve their toughness.This is the part that still gets to Edwards when he compares his experiences with those of the newer generation. He made his MMA debut in 1997, back when the sport was still dragging itself out of the primordial ooze. By 2003 hed become a regular in the UFC, but that didnt mean he was living or training like a professional athlete. Hardly anyone back then was, he said. With paltry payouts (even by MMA standards), who could afford it?Now we have guys who train in the same facilities as NFL players, NBA players. The money coming in has helped a lot, Edwards said. We didnt have that. The biggest thing we missed out on was recovery. Now theyre doing cryotherapy and [branched-chain amino acids] and all this other stuff. If we were able to get a massage after a really tough training session, that was a luxury.Sometimes, he said, the younger fighters actually seem to want to hear these stories of what it used to be like. Other times they dont. It can be hard for them to understand what it used to be like. Its not like MMA training is known for being easy now, so perhaps they cant relate to the back-in-my-day tales of woe.Its kind of like telling people about black-and-white TV and rotary phones, Edwards said. Thats really what it is. Theyve come up in a world thats so far ahead of where we were. Its like, I was just showing my daughter The Jetsons [TV show]. Shes five. Trying to explain to her, this is what we thought the future would be like, she cant really understand how cool we thought it would be to look at someone on a screen while youre talking to them on the phone. Thats what its like. You kind of had to be there.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 9 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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WWW.ESPN.COMPulisic gives Milan, USMNT positive injury updateUnited States forward Christian Pulisic is likely to recover from a lower back injury in time for AC Milan's penultimate Serie A match this weekend.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 74 Visualizações 0 Anterior -
WWW.CBC.CAIslanders' Matthew Schaefer first unanimous NHL rookie of the year recipient since 1993New York Islanders defenceman Matthew Schaefer has been awarded the Calder Memorial Trophy as the NHL's top rookie.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 82 Visualizações 0 Anterior