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Report: No NFL supplemental draft again this year

Report: No NFL supplemental draft again this year

Reuters27-06-2025
June 27 - The NFL will not hold a supplemental draft this summer, The Athletic reported on Friday.
The last supplemental draft was in 2023, when neither of the two players available was selected.
The most recent supplemental draft pick came in 2019 when the Arizona Cardinals took Washington State safety Jalen Thompson in the fifth round.
Typically scheduled in mid-July, the draft is for players whose eligibility issues kept them out of the regular draft.
A total of 46 players have been selected in supplemental drafts since its inception in 1977, including Hall of Fame wide receiver Cris Carter in 1987.
--Field Level Media
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Lionel Messi, Inter Miami add to Galaxy's rough season
Lionel Messi, Inter Miami add to Galaxy's rough season

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timean hour ago

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Lionel Messi, Inter Miami add to Galaxy's rough season

August 17 - Lionel Messi returned from injury Saturday night and finished with a goal and an assist to propel host Inter Miami to a 3-1 victory over the Los Angeles Galaxy in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Luis Suarez and Jordi Alba also scored to help Inter Miami (13-5-6, 45 points) bounce back following a 4-1 loss last Sunday against host Orlando City SC and secure a much-needed three points in the chase for the Supporter's Shield. Messi, who had missed Miami's previous three matches across all competitions with a thigh injury, did not start but entered the game at the start of the second half. With the match knotted 1-1 in the 84th minute, Messi took a ball at the top of the box and delivered one of his signature individual efforts to put Miami ahead for good. Messi juked past the Galaxy's Lucas Sanabria and dribbled past another defender before firing a shot on target from distance past Galaxy goalkeeper Novak Micovic. Five minutes later, another rush upfield ended with Messi delivering a beautiful back heel to Suarez, who knocked another ball home to secure the club's first league win since July 19. It was Suarez's first goal in run of play in his past nine matches across all competitions and sixth in league play this season. A rough campaign following an MLS Cup championship last year continued for the Galaxy (3-16-7, 16 points), who are winless in their past four league matches -- although LA will play Pachuca of Mexico in the Leagues Cup quarterfinals on Wednesday. Despite Messi's presence, the Galaxy gave themselves a chance to secure at least a point when Joseph Paintsil equalized the match in the 59th minute on his own brilliant individual effort. Paintsil dribbled past two defenders and ripped a shot that bounced off Inter Miami goalkeeper Oscar Ustari and into the net. But Messi answered in the clutch with his MLS-leading 19th goal. Despite outshooting LA 28-5 and 8-3 on shots on goal, Inter Miami didn't find the back of the net until Alba scored in the 43rd minute off a great through ball by Sergio Busquets. Suarez hit the post on a strong attempt early in the match, and Miami had a goal by Telasco Segovia disallowed after a review determined he was offside. --Field Level Media

‘Eat, sleep or look at the roof': how top tennis players cope with match delays
‘Eat, sleep or look at the roof': how top tennis players cope with match delays

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

‘Eat, sleep or look at the roof': how top tennis players cope with match delays

The greatest challenge for Carlos Alcaraz in his third-round match at the Cincinnati Open on Friday was simply remaining sane. Before Alcaraz and Hamad Medjedovic, his opponent, took to the court, they had no choice but to wait as Francisco Comesaña and the big-serving Reilly Opelka worked through a tumultuous three-hour, three-set contest replete with manic momentum shifts, medical time-outs and a last-minute rain delay for good measure. Alcaraz and Medjedovic had no idea when their match would begin, yet a large part of their job is making sure they are always ready. A few hours later, after closing out a straightforward victory, Alcaraz chuckled bitterly from a quiet hallway inside centre court as he reflected on his hours of preparation, which turned out to be more stressful than the match itself. 'Well, it sucks,' he said, smiling. 'Having to warm up three, four times, it's horrible. A horrible thing. I thought having Opelka in front of me was going to be a little bit faster. 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For Iga Swiatek, her 2023 French Open semi-final against Beatriz Haddad Maia is seared in her mind by the psychodrama between Karolina Muchova and Aryna Sabalenka immediately before them. 'Aryna had 5-2 and then lost in the third set, so I was warming up like seven times, literally,' Swiatek says. 'It was a rollercoaster of emotions, from being stressed, to really not giving a damn what's going to happen in the match before, and then warming up again, being hyped up, and then being sleepy.' Being stuck behind a dramatic and seemingly endless five-set match at a grand slam tournament is even more aggravating. Madison Keys instantly recalls a difficult situation one year at the US Open. 'I was third on, but I followed two men's matches, they both went five sets and I went on after the night session [had begun]. And it was in that moment that I decided that we should ban five sets,' she says, laughing. Jessica Pegula, the women's world No 4, concurs: 'If you're in a grand slam and you follow a three-out-of-five-set match, and they go five, you're screwed.' Every player aims to start their match with their energy high and adrenaline pumping, but that is not always possible after so many false starts. 'It's tough to wake yourself up again,' says Khachanov. 'Let's say you warmed up, you are full of adrenaline, you are ready to go on court, and then all of a sudden, there's another set. So you are thinking: 'OK, should I eat now? Should I just sleep? Should I watch the phone or I just, I don't know, look at the roof? What do I do? Play cards with my team?' Sometimes you just don't really know what to do.' Sign up to The Recap The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action after newsletter promotion The first truly significant match of Emma Raducanu's career, during her breakout debut run at Wimbledon in 2021, showed exactly what this situation can do to a player. As an 18-year-old Raducanu and Ajla Tomljanovic waited for Alexander Zverev's five-set match against Félix Auger-Aliassime to finish on No 1 Court, the Briton became increasingly anxious. Overwhelmed by her nerves, she took an off-court medical time-out in the second set of her fourth-round match because of breathing difficulties and had an apparent panic attack. She never came back. 'I had a little episode on the court,' she says. 'It was new to me as well. I had no idea what was going on. I think I had way too much coffee before that match as well. That was just an experience. I was so wired from the start of my day.' Raducanu finds it far easier to be scheduled as the first match of the day, so she does not have to worry about the start time. Not everyone agrees, Daniil Medvedev for one. The Russian says: 'I was talking to my team today. I was like: 'When I'm 35, I might just boycott the 11am matches. I'll be like: 'I'm not coming. Walkover.' Like: 'Yeah, I didn't wake up. Sorry, guys.' In my opinion, 11 is so early. You have to wake up at 6.30 in the morning, where, if you play at night, you wake up at 9am. So it changes the perspective of the match. It's crazy mentally.' In player lounges, locker rooms and warm-up areas around the world, each player copes with delayed starts in different ways. Depending on how he is feeling, Alcaraz can be found playing football, cards or napping. Andrey Rublev is always sleeping so he relies on his coach to provide him updates on the match before. And then there is Coco Gauff, who says with a laugh: 'I'm usually just on TikTok.' Others, such as Naomi Osaka and Keys, quickly find themselves immersed in the match before them. The latter says: 'I think we're kind of all just watching the score and just being like: 'Oh, come on!' Because a lot of times, especially if you're not on a main court, you can't actually see the match, so you're just waiting and staring at the score to flip. And you're living and dying [by the live scores]. All of a sudden you're cheering for one person that you've never met … and then cheering for the other person.' There are even times when players find themselves watching a match with their next opponent. One memorable example came at the Australian Open in 2016 when Roger Federer and Grigor Dimitrov sat side-by-side in the warm-up gym and watched Lauren Davis prolong their day by dragging Maria Sharapova into a final set. 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The men's Association of Tennis Professionals and the Women's Tennis Association have since initiated a new policy regarding late matches that, among many things, rules no match should begin after 11pm unless it receives special approval. For the most part, however, this is just an annoying, unique challenge for players to overcome, another reason why this is such a complex and interesting sport. Alcaraz says, shrugging: 'It is what it is. We have to get used to it. If I have to warm up two, three times, I'll do it just to start the match in the best possible shape.' After so many years on the tour, Keys has come to a similar conclusion: 'It's really just about trying to stay focused. It's really hard, but you just have to try to manage your energy, eat as much as you can, warm up 37 times and just [remember] it's happening to the other person, too. That's all that you can do.'

Furious Erasmus hints at change in plans for second test against Australia
Furious Erasmus hints at change in plans for second test against Australia

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Furious Erasmus hints at change in plans for second test against Australia

JOHANNESBURG, Aug 17 (Reuters) - Rassie Erasmus pulled no punches as he laid into his South Africa side following their second half capitulation in the stunning 38-22 loss to Australia in their Rugby Championship opener at Ellis Park on Saturday. The Springboks were cruising as they led 22-0 inside the first quarter, but while Australia grew into the game and began to win the individual contests, the home side wilted in the second half as the visitors scored 38 unanswered points. "I can try to butter it up and bottle it up to sound cool and respectful. The effort was maybe there but the accuracy or precision wasn't," Erasmus told reporters. "It was a bad loss in a bad way. Not against a bad team, we just didn't have fight right until the end, and that's not what we want to give South Africa. "There was a stage where I felt our heads were dropping and shoulders were slumping, and that was part of the disappointment." Australia dominated at the breakdown, an area that has troubled the Springboks this season as they try to move to a more expansive, running style of play, which makes for a looser contest on the floor. "We didn't scrum them and they beat us in the lineouts," Erasmus said. "In the first 25 minutes, I thought we were really good in the breakdown. After that, when Siya (Kolisi) got injured and Marco (van Staden) went for a (head-injury assessment), it slipped away. "They beat us in most departments. We as coaches got it terribly wrong and we must look firstly at ourselves." The two teams meet again in Cape Town on Saturday and Erasmus, who has already announced his side for the match to the players, says there may be a rethink. "We know from now until next Saturday we are going to take a lot of flak. We take the credit when we do well, now we must take the flak when we do badly. "We already picked next week's that will probably change. "We'll have to rethink it. They tactically outsmarted us and physically dominated us."

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