
'Fernandomania' lives again at Dodger Stadium with retirement of Valenzuela's jersey
“Fernandomania” has broken out again at Dodger Stadium
2023-08-12 09:19

Red Sox left-hander Chris Sale returns with 4 2/3 perfect innings before allowing solo homer
Boston Red Sox left-hander Chris Sale took a perfect game into the fifth inning against Detroit in his return from the injured list
2023-08-12 08:53

Cameron Smith opens with 66 to lead LIV Golf at Trump Bedminster
Cameron Smith was determined to erase memories of his worst finish of the year last week
2023-08-12 08:22

Storm delays opening kickoff between the Washington Commanders and Cleveland Browns
An approaching severe storm has pushed back the opening kickoff between the Washington Commanders and Cleveland Browns on Friday night
2023-08-12 08:17

Raiders defense forces multiple interceptions from Purdy, other 49ers QBs
The Las Vegas Raiders intercepted multiple passes the past two days, including newcomers Robert Spillane and Marcus Peters
2023-08-12 07:53

Japan exits the Women's World Cup but sees progress in young squad
After the Japanese were eliminated early from the Olympics two years ago on home soil, they rebuilt by hiring a new coach and focusing on youth
2023-08-12 07:46

Lucas Glover with a 64 leads Jordan Spieth by one shot in the PGA Tour playoff opener
Lucas Glover is handling the mud and slop one day and oppressive heat the next
2023-08-12 07:26

A predictable start to the Premier League season sees Erling Haaland pick up where he left off
After a summer bursting with unexpected plot lines, a familiar story. As a host of intriguing new characters are added to the cast list, the main man reasserted his dominance. As the Premier League returned, so did Erling Haaland. Perhaps it was the most crushingly predictable start to a season imaginable. For now, Manchester City are top of the table and Haaland is the top scorer. Fast forward nine months and each statement may remain true. There was, though, something devastatingly awesome amid the sense of the normal. Haaland’s defence of his Golden Boot began within 185 seconds of the opening whistle. He is a fine first-time finisher, but this was a different kind of first touch: his first of the top-flight campaign entered the Burnley net. His second goal arrived before half-time, too, a goal with a devastating blend of power and accuracy. None of which spared him an animated tongue-lashing from Pep Guardiola as they made their way off at half-time but, along with a Rodri goal, it proved too much for Burnley. Champions of the Championship lost to champions of the Premier League and, indeed, Europe. None of which may surprise Vincent Kompany – a man with a statue outside the Etihad Stadium was a regular visitor to the ground last season – or the Turf Moor faithful. There are one-sided rivalries and then there is Burnley against City: Guardiola’s 12th consecutive win against the Clarets took the aggregate score in that time to 43-1. Each has an added dimension: it was Burnley, but not as the Premier League last knew them, with the passing principles Kompany has borrowed from Guardiola, but undone by the Haaland factor. City effected a swift transition from a team who excelled at sharing the goals around to one who were comfortable relying on one potent individual. They were not at their superlative best at Turf Moor: but with a finisher of Haaland’s calibre they did not need to be. His debut campaign in England yielded 52 goals, the best by a top-flight player for almost a century, and 36 in the Premier League, a divisional record. It was exceptional, but perhaps not a one-off. Normal service was soon resumed: Haaland may deem a quiet Community Shield as a lucky omen, given he has now started successive Premier League campaigns with a brace. Turf Moor, even refurbished to add some hints of gleaming modernity, can prove an unpleasant place to visit and a missile was thrown at Rico Lewis, leading to a fan being removed by police, while the substitute Anass Zaroury got an injury-time red card for an ugly lunge at Kyle Walker. Yet its intimidatory powers were diminished when Haaland swept City into an early lead. Kompany started with three centre-backs and Burnley conceded after three minutes. The Norwegian’s longest goal drought in a City shirt had spanned six games in four competitions, three of them finals. It was ended so swiftly and calmly to suggest he had not spent the summer fretting about a rare barren spell. Kevin De Bruyne crossed, Rodri headed the ball back across the box and Haaland slotted in a low shot. It was a reminder that his greatest asset may not be height or pace, even though they give him a physical advantage over most opponents, but the uncanny ability to get the ball in a crowded box. He is, too, much more than just a poacher, as his second goal showed. A left-foot curler, whipped with power, in off the underside of the bar, after Julian Alvarez found him was the sort of goal De Bruyne might have scored, albeit with his other foot. But the City captain had departed by then: much like in his previous start, the Champions League final, the Belgian limped off in the first half. He may miss the European Super Cup but his departure had a more immediate impact, with Guardiola bringing on Mateo Kovacic and shuffling Bernardo Silva, Phil Foden and Alvarez around to restore a little control during Burnley’s best spell of the game. They were muted thereafter, conceding a third when Rodri lashed in after Burnley failed to clear Silva’s free kick. But there had been an enterprising element to Kompany’s team. The Swiss striker Mohamed Zeki Amdouni was a livewire on his debut, indicating he has the verve to trouble plenty of teams. He tested Ederson with one shot, but it remained Burnley’s lone shot on target. It helped that City could bolster its defence with the £77m signing Josko Gvardiol, whose late bow came as a substitute left-back. A previous City defender, Kompany, had shown his boldness. He selected six summer signings in his starting 11, picking a team with an average age of just 23 years and 306 days. It was the youngest Burnley have named in the Premier League and featured a lone survivor, Connor Roberts, from their last game at this level. They have been reinvented during their exile in the Championship. It coincided with Haaland’s arrival and, if he never had the air of a one-season wonder, Burnley got unwanted evidence his second year at City could be just as productive as his first. Read More The Premier League is having an identity crisis – but one thing can save it Pep Guardiola expects Man City’s standards ‘to drop’ this season Premier League 2023/24 predictions: Champions, top four, relegation, best signing, top scorer and more Kevin De Bruyne faces ‘few weeks out’ after suffering another hamstring injury ‘Not my decision’ whether I get time to transform Chelsea – Mauricio Pochettino Erling Haaland at the double as Manchester City kick off new campaign in style
2023-08-12 07:21

Blue Jays send struggling RHP Alek Manoah to minors for the second time this season
The Toronto Blue Jays have optioned right-hander Alek Manoah to Triple-A Buffalo, the second time this season the 2022 AL Cy Young Award finalist has been demoted to the minor leagues
2023-08-12 07:18

Texas Tech track coach Kittley gets new contract, is set to become school's longest-tenured coach
Texas Tech track and field coach Wes Kittley has agreed to a new $3.8 million, seven-year contract
2023-08-12 07:17

McLaren boss tells team IndyCar championship leader Alex Palou has reneged on 2024 contract
IndyCar championship leader Alex Palou has changed his mind again and informed McLaren Racing he will not be joining the team at the end of this season
2023-08-12 06:59

Mariners place SS J.P. Crawford on concussion injured list following collision
The Seattle Mariners have placed shortstop J
2023-08-12 06:54