The Washington Post - 14.11.2019

(Barré) #1

D2 EZ SU THE WASHINGTON POST.THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14 , 2019


GOLF
1 p.m. PGA Tour: Mayakoba Classic, first round » Golf Channel
3 a.m. (Fri.) European Tour: Nedbank Golf Challenge, second round » Golf Channel
SOCCER
12 p.m. UEFA Euro 2020, qualifying: Iceland at Turkey » ESPN 2
2 p.m. U-23 Africa Cup of Nations, Group A: Ghana vs. Mali » beIN Sports
2:30 p.m. FIFA U-17 World Cup, quarterfinal: Mexico vs. Netherlands » Fox Sports 2
2:30 p.m. UEFA Euro 2020, qualifying: Kosovo at Czech Republic » ESPN 2
6 p.m. FIFA U-17 World Cup, quarterfinal: France vs. Brazil » Fox Sports 2
COLLEGE MEN’S HOCKEY
6:30 p.m. Michigan State at Michigan » Big Ten Network
COLLEGE WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALL
9 p.m. Wisconsin at Minnesota » Big Ten Network
TENNIS
7 a.m. ATP Finals, doubles round robin » Tennis Channel
9 a.m. ATP Finals, singles round robin » Tennis Channel
1 p.m. ATP Finals, doubles round robin » Tennis Channel
3 p.m. USTA: Men’s Pro Circuit, early rounds » Tennis Channel

TELEVISION AND RADIO
NFL
8:20 p.m. Pittsburgh at Cleveland » WTTG (Ch. 5), WBFF (Ch. 45), NFL Network
NBA
8 p.m. Dallas at New York » TNT
10:30 p.m. Brooklyn at Denver » TNT
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
7 p.m. Buffalo at Kent State » CBS Sports Network
8 p.m. North Carolina at Pittsburgh » ESPN
MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
6:30 p.m. Penn State at Georgetown » Fox Sports 1
7 p.m. Towson at Florida » ESPN 2
7 p.m. Louisiana Monroe at Mississippi State » SEC Network
7 p.m. Vanderbilt at Richmond » NBC Sports Washington
8 p.m. San Jose State at Arizona » Pac-12 Network
8:30 p.m. Michigan State at Seton Hall » Fox Sports 1
10 p.m. Central Connecticut State at Arizona State » Pac-12 Network
WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
6 p.m. Central Michigan at Louisville » ACC Network
8 p.m. Michigan State at Notre Dame » ACC Network

SOCCER


Galaxy, Ibrahimovic


mutually part ways


Zlatan Ibrahimovic and the
LA Galaxy are officially parting
ways after two eventful seasons,
the 38-year-old Swedish
superstar and the club
announced Wednesday.
“I came, I saw, I conquered,”
Ibrahimovic wrote on Twitter.
“Thank you LA Galaxy for making
me feel alive again. To the Galaxy
fans — you wanted Zlatan, I gave
you Zlatan. You are welcome. The
story continues.... Now go back
to watch baseball.”
Ibrahimovic scored 56 goals in
52 MLS games after joining the
Galaxy in March 2018, injecting
his inimitable blend of talent and
swagger into a stagnating club.
This season, he scored a
franchise-record 30 goals — more
than the rest of the Galaxy roster
combined (28)....
Chile’s players declined to play
Peru in a soccer friendly Tuesday
in Lima. Chile has been rocked by
a weeks-long wave of
demonstrations....
On the first day of the final
stage of qualifying for the 2021
Africa Cup of Nations, Senegal


defeated Republic of Congo, 2-0,
and Nigeria edged Benin, 2-1....
Atlanta United dealt
Darlington Nagbe to the state
where he grew up, trading the
midfielder to the Columbus Crew
for $1,425,000 in allocation
money and a 2020 international
roster spot....
FIFA hired former Arsenal
manager Arsene Wenger in a
full-time role leading its global
work developing soccer.

TENNIS
Bob and Mike Bryan said they
will retire after the 2020 U.S.
Open, closing a professional
tennis partnership that includes a
men’s doubles record of 16 Grand
Slam championships.
The 41-year-old American
twins announced their plans at
the season-ending ATP Finals,
which they qualified for but
decided not to enter.
The Bryans have won 118 titles
in all, including 39 at ATP
Masters tournaments....
Rafael Nadal rallied to beat
Daniil Medvedev, 6-7 (7-3), 6-3, 7-
6 (7-4), at the ATP Finals in
London, keeping alive his
chances of advancing from the
group stage.
In the late match, Stefanos

Tsitsipas beat defending
champion Alexander Zverev, 6-3,
6-2, for his second straight win, a
result that guarantees him a place
in the semifinals.

BASEBALL
Hall of Fame catcher Mike
Piazza said he agreed to become
the manager of Italy’s national
baseball team.
The 51-year-old Piazza, who

was born in Norristown, Pa., is of
Italian ancestry. He tweeted he
will manage Italy at a European
tournament in 2020 and at the
2021 World Baseball Classic....
The major league minimum
salary will rise to $563,500 next
season, a hike of $8,500.

COLLEGES
Greg Andrulis, a former MLS
coach of the year who has

overseen the George Mason men’s
soccer team for 15 seasons, will
not return next year.
Andrulis said that he resigned
after a 4-12-2 season, his third
losing campaign in four years.
— Steven Goff

MISC.
Matt Tifft parted ways with
Front Row Motorsports to focus
on his health after suffering a
seizure at the track late last
month....
Raymond Poulidor, the

“eternal runner-up” whose
repeated failure to win the Tour
de France helped him conquer
French hearts and become the
country’s all-time favorite cyclist,
died in his hometown of Saint-
Leonard-de-Noblat, France,
according to town officials. He
was 83.
Over his 17-year career,
Poulidor secured a record eight
podium finishes at the Tour de
France, but he never won.
— From news services
and staff reports

QUOTABLE


“It is going to be a lot of


emotion. Playing at the


Garden is always fun. It


is going to be weird at


the same time.”
KRISTAPS PORZINGIS,
Dallas Mavericks forward, on going
back to Madison Square Garden for
the first time to play his former team,
the New York Knicks, on Thursday.

MEDIA

BY JACOB BOGAGE


When Kelly McBride joined
ESPN as an ombudsman in 2011,
the sports media giant was wres-
tling with what to do about com-
mercial sponsorships for some of
its television personalities, she
said. Of course some of the former
athletes the network employed
were going to get — and take —
sponsorship offers. But some of
ESPN’s reporters had significant
followings. They wanted a piece of
endorsement deals, too.
That presented a problem that
ESPN continues to wrestle with
today, media analysts say. As media
companies consolidate even fur-
ther, disparate properties now may
have at least one thing in common:
corporate ownership.
“This is what’s going to happen
as media companies become larger
and larger,” McBride, a senior vice
president at the Poynter Institute, a
nonprofit journalism organiza-
tion, said in a phone interview.
“We’re in this era where you can’t
just exist as a successful media
company. You have to continue to
grow and get bigger and bigger,
and you see all media companies
doing it.”
The Walt Disney Company,
which owns ESPN, launched sub-
scription streaming platform Dis-
ney Plus on Tuesday. The service,
which costs $6.99 per month, in-
cludes original content from Dis-
ney, Marvel, National Geographic
and Pixar, along with archival pro-
gramming from each.
“It will change lives,” ESPN Se-
nior NFL Insider Adam Schefter
tweeted, along with a promotional
video that did not include any
ESPN content.
“Access to a huge cache of in-
credible content, new and old,”
NFL reporter Ed Werder posted.
That rankled some sports media
analysts, who saw ESPN personali-
ties marketing the service on Twit-
ter.
An ESPN spokesman said in an
emailed statement that the net-
work never told employees to
share promotional material about
Disney Plus but actively told them
about the new streaming service,
which is meant to play a funda-
mental part in Disney’s future.
To Bob Lipsyte, another former
ESPN ombudsman and retired
New York Times sportswriter, that
makes sense. Reporters market
their content all the time, he said,
and consumers can bundle sub-
scriptions to Disney Plus, sports
streaming service ESPN Plus and
Hulu. But ESPN, he said, for all the
talented reporters at the network,
doesn’t behave like a typical news-
paper or news network. And he
wondered about the stakes of the
Disney plugs. The kind of person-
alities who marketed Disney Plus,
though they might have large so-
cial media followings, aren’t cov-
ering Congress or climate change.
“It’s hardly any kind of impor-
tant news that we are so con-
cerned about the high level of in-
tegrity of the purveyor of this
news,” he said.
[email protected]

No subtlety


in ESPN


promoting


Disney Plus


BY MATT BONESTEEL


The NFL used its flex-schedul-
ing powers for the first time this
season Tuesday, moving the Week
12 game between the Packers (8-2)
and 49ers (8-1) into the prime-
time NBC slot Nov. 24. The Sea-
hawks-Eagles game, which tenta-
tively had been scheduled for
“Sunday Night Football,” instead
will air at 1 p.m. on Fox.
It’s probably not the last time
the NFL will alter its prime-time
schedule this season. Here are
other games that could be flexed
in the next four weeks:


Week 13 (Sunday, Dec. 1)


Scheduled Sunday night game:
Patriots at Texans.
Flex possibilities (if not protect-
ed by their networks): 49ers at
Ravens (Fox), Raiders at Chiefs
(CBS).
Chances it gets flexed out: Slim,
especially if Houston beats Balti-
more on Sunday.


Week 14 (Sunday, Dec. 8)


Scheduled Sunday night game:
Seahawks at Rams.
Flex possibilities (if not protect-
ed): 49ers at Saints (Fox), Chiefs at
Patriots (CBS).
Chances it gets flexed out: The
Rams have been disappointing,
but they’re still in the NFC playoff
conversation, and the Seahawks
have MVP candidate Russell Wil-
son.


Week 15 (Sunday, Dec. 15)


Scheduled Sunday night game:
Vikings at Chargers.
Flex possibilities (if not protect-
ed): Seahawks-Panthers (Fox),
Texans-Titans (CBS), Bills-Steel-
ers (CBS), Rams-Cowboys (Fox).
Chances it gets flexed out: Is
anyone truly excited about watch-
ing the 4-6 Chargers in prime
time?


Week 16 (Sunday, Dec. 22)


Scheduled Sunday night game:
Chiefs at Bears.
Flex possibilities (if not protect-
ed): Cowboys-Eagles (Fox), Saints-
Titans (Fox), Panthers-Colts (Fox).
Chances it gets flexed out: It’s
hard to see the NFL wanting to
keep the stumbling Bears in prime
time for the penultimate week of
the regular season.
[email protected]


PRO FOOTBALL


NFL’s flex


in e≠ect for


prime-time


schedule


D.C. SPORTS BOG

DAN DUFFY
Dan Duffy depicted Ryan Zimmerman using the dates, opponents and scores of all 179 Nationals games this year.

BY SCOTT ALLEN


The morning after the Washington
Nationals clinched their first World
Series title in franchise history,
Philadelphia artist Dan Duffy began
work on a piece to commemorate the
occasion. Twelve days later, Duffy
shared the result of his roughly
100 hours of meticulous labor.
From a distance, the print looks like
a standard ink and pencil drawing of
Nationals first baseman Ryan
Zimmerman, arms raised in
celebration — and perhaps some
disbelief — after Washington closer
Daniel Hudson recorded the final out
in Game 7. A closer look reveals the
piece, which is called a calligram,
features the dates, opponents and
scores of all 179 Nationals games from
this championship season, including
the playoffs.
The Nationals’ 12-10 win over the
Marlins on May 24, which marked the
turning point after the team’s 19-31
start, makes up part of Zimmerman’s
black glove. Washington’s 5-4 win over
the Astros in Game 1 of the World
Series, during which Zimmerman, the
team’s original draft pick in 2005, hit
the franchise’s first Fall Classic home
run, flanks the white script of his navy
blue jersey.
“I’m really happy with how this
turned out,” Duffy said in a phone
interview. “It’s not easy to paint a very
handsome gentleman who doesn’t have
too many distinguishing features, like a
beard or something. He’s kind of got a

little baby face, but luckily he had a
little scruff going on. This is the
moment he won, before he was able to
jump into anybody else’s arms and join
his teammates. I love to do that
moment.”
Duffy’s first calligram depicted Brad
Lidge in a similarly joyous pose, after
the reliever closed out the Phillies’
second World Series title in 2008.
Duffy, a Philadelphia sports fan, said he
made the piece to impress his then-
girlfriend, who encouraged him to sell
copies of the print in the Citizens Bank
Park parking lot the following year. A
decade later, Duffy, who would marry
his girlfriend, creates word art for a
living.
Zimmerman represents the
15th piece in Duffy’s “Road to the World
Series” collection, all of which are
available for $49.99 on
ArtOfWords.com. Duffy has created
artwork for most of the World Series
champions since 2008, but he couldn’t
bring himself to commemorate the
Cardinals’ title in 2011. St. Louis
defeated Philadelphia in the National
League Division Series that year, with
Chris Carpenter outdueling Roy
Halladay in an epic 1-0 win in Game 5,
and Duffy never quite got over it.

“That was too painful for me,” he
said. “I’ll have to get back to that one.”
Despite the Nationals’ status as a
division rival of the Phillies, Duffy
didn’t have the same hang-up about
creating his Zimmerman piece. He even
praised Washington’s decision to not
re-sign Bryce Harper last offseason and
suggested Philadelphia will come to
regret the contract it gave the former
MVP sooner rather than later.
“I’ve always been a fan of the
underdog, and the Nats totally were an
underdog this year,” Duffy said. “It was
a race to even get into the playoffs. Also,
to be perfectly honest with you, I just
did a piece for Houston [after the 2017
World Series], so I didn’t want to draw
[José] Altuve again. There’s just a
couple teams that I couldn’t stomach to
ever do, and that would be the [Dallas]
Cowboys and the [Pittsburgh]
Penguins. That’s it.”
Duffy doesn’t only draw baseball-
themed prints. He has done cityscapes
and created an Alex Ovechkin piece to
commemorate the Capitals’ Stanley
Cup triumph in 2018. On Tuesday, he
was busy finishing an illustration of
New York Giants wide receiver David
Tyree’s incredible helmet catch in
Super Bowl XLII to have available at
the Union Square Holiday Market in
New York later this month.
“I look forward — well, not really —
to possibly doing a Redskins piece once
you guys get a real owner,” Duffy, 39,
said with a laugh. “Hopefully I can live
a long time and do one in my 80s.”
[email protected]

Philadelphia artist honors Nats


A Phillies fan commemorates
Zimmerman’s joy at end
of World Series with calligram

washingtonpost.com/sports


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