PFL’s Battle of The Giants in Riyadh delivers inside and outside the cage

PFL’s Battle of The Giants in Riyadh delivers inside and outside the cage
Not only did Battle of The Giants deliver in terms of action, it was also broadcast to more than 160 countries and garnered 4.4 billion impressions online. (Supplied)
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Updated 2 min 29 sec ago
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PFL’s Battle of The Giants in Riyadh delivers inside and outside the cage

PFL’s Battle of The Giants in Riyadh delivers inside and outside the cage
  • The card saw impressive victories from Bellator middleweight champion Johnny Eblen, Paul Hughes and Raufeon Stotts

RIYADH: Last weekend, the Professional Fighters League staged its biggest mixed martial arts event of the year — Battle of The Giants: Brace For Impact — in Riyadh, featuring some of the biggest names in the sport, as well as the highly-anticipated PFL debut of the world’s best heavyweight fighter, Francis “The Predator” Ngannou.

Ngannou, who also boxes professionally, returned to MMA for the first time since 2022 and immediately reminded everyone why he’s considered the baddest man on the planet with a first-round knockout win against 2023 PFL heavyweight champion Renan “Problema” Ferreira. The emotional victory also saw Ngannou crowned PFL Super Fights heavyweight champion.

In the co-main event, two of the finest fighters in the world went head-to-head for five rounds. In the end, it was Cris Cyborg who left The Mayadeen as the PFL Super Fights women’s featherweight champion, having defeated Larissa Pacheco.

The card also saw impressive victories from Bellator middleweight champion Johnny Eblen, Paul Hughes, and Raufeon Stotts.

Not only did Battle of The Giants deliver in terms of action, it was also broadcast to more than 160 countries and garnered 4.4 billion impressions online.

The event’s social media statistics included approximately 326 million video views, 34 million engagements, and hundreds of thousands of posts, replies, and quotes.

Battle of The Giants was also covered by major media outlets across the globe, generating around 1,500 media stories from many leading news outlets.

From its star power to its social media metrics, Battle of The Giants was indeed gigantic.


Lakers rally to beat Suns, Knicks bounce back against Pacers

Lakers rally to beat Suns, Knicks bounce back against Pacers
Updated 17 sec ago
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Lakers rally to beat Suns, Knicks bounce back against Pacers

Lakers rally to beat Suns, Knicks bounce back against Pacers
  • The Bulls spoiled Milwaukee’s first home game of the season on Friday with a 133-122 victory over the Bucks
  • Buddy Hield had another big game in his second contest with Golden State, scoring 27 points off the bench

LOS ANGELES: Anthony Davis scored 35 points and LeBron James added 21 as the Los Angeles Lakers erased a 22-point deficit to beat the Phoenix Suns 123-116 for a second victory to start the NBA season on Friday.

It’s the first time since the 2010-2011 season that the Lakers have started a season 2-0. Davis, who scored 36 points in a season-opening win over Minnesota, was key again.

“I’m just trying to play the game the right way,” said Davis, who added eight rebounds, four assists, a steal and two blocked shots.

Davis said defensive adjustments were the key to turning things around against Kevin Durant and the Suns, who outscored the Lakers 38-23 in the first quarter to take control.

“They made some tough shots, but we were letting them get out in transition, we were turning the ball over early,” Davis said. “They had 14 points in transition in the first seven minutes of the game, that’s not us.”

The Lakers, down by nine at halftime, turned it around in the third quarter, when a 9-0 scoring burst saw them grab an 83-81 lead. They would push the advantage to as many as 12.

Durant led the Suns with 30 points. Devin Booker scored 23, but after connecting on better than 61 percent of their shots in the first half, Phoenix were held to 41.9 percent shooting in the second.

In New York, Karl-Anthony Towns and Mikal Bridges looked right at home at Madison Square Garden, scoring 21 points apiece to help the Knicks to a 123-98 victory over the Indiana Pacers.

Towns, acquired in a three-team trade from Minnesota days before training camp, added 15 rebounds and two blocked shots in his first home game for his new team.

“It definitely hits different to be home,” Towns said of playing his first game at the Garden as a Knick.

Bridges, who arrived in July in a cross-town trade with the Brooklyn Nets, made eight of 12 shot attempts as the Knicks shook off a blowout season-opening loss to the reigning champion Boston Celtics.

Jalen Brunson led the Knicks in scoring with 26 points and Josh Hart added 20 as the Knicks gained a small measure of revenge against a Pacers team that ousted them in seven games in the second round of last season’s playoffs.

Bennedict Mathurin led the Pacers with 20 points off the bench as star guard Tyrese Haliburton — the cornerstone of Indiana’s potent offense — missed all eight of his shot attempts to finish with zero points.

Chicago’s Coby White scored 35 points as the Bulls spoiled Milwaukee’s first home game of the season on Friday with a 133-122 victory over the Bucks.

The Bulls withstood a 38-point, 11-rebound double-double from Milwaukee’s two-time NBA Most Valuable Player Giannis Antetokounmpo, whose big night included a monster dunk over Nikola Vucevic.

Damian Lillard added 28 points and eight assists for the Bucks, but it wasn’t enough in the end.

In a back-and-forth battle featuring 14 lead changes, Chicago seized the lead for good late in the third quarter and were up by seven going into the fourth.

Milwaukee cut the lead to just one point in the first minute of the fourth, but Chicago forward Patrick Williams drained a three-pointer to ignite a 13-1 Bulls run and Chicago closed it out comfortably.

Buddy Hield had another big game in his second contest with Golden State, scoring 27 points off the bench as the Warriors trounced the Utah Jazz 127-86 in Salt Lake City.

Hield connected on 10 of 14 shots, making seven three-pointers. In less than 20 minutes on court he added four rebounds, six assists and a steal.

Stephen Curry added 20 points. Andrew Wiggins had 10 points and 13 rebounds and the Warriors limited the Jazz to 31.5 percent shooting in a dominant defensive display.


Stokes says Pakistan spin duo just too good after series defeat

Stokes says Pakistan spin duo just too good after series defeat
Updated 12 min 49 sec ago
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Stokes says Pakistan spin duo just too good after series defeat

Stokes says Pakistan spin duo just too good after series defeat
  • The hosts sealed a nine-wicket win in the third Test in Rawalpindi with Noman taking 6-42 and Sajid 4-69
  • The pair shared 39 wickets in last two Tests to spur Pakistan’s revival from an innings defeat in the first Test

RAWALPINDI: Captain Ben Stokes admitted that Noman Ali and Sajid Khan were too good for his England team after the spin duo propelled Pakistan to a series victory on Saturday.
The hosts sealed a nine-wicket win in the third Test in Rawalpindi with Noman taking 6-42 and Sajid 4-69 in the second innings as England were bowled out for just 112.
The irrepressible pair shared 39 wickets in the last two Tests to spur Pakistan’s revival from an innings defeat in the first match.
“You’ve got to hold your hands up to say that those two in particular were obviously too good for our batting line-up in those last two games,” Stokes said.
Noman and Sajid both came into the side following Pakistan’s heavy defeat in the first Test in Multan, their inclusion proving pivotal in the hosts’ 2-1 series triumph.
“Credit to Noman and Sajid, the way in which they bowled in the second Test match and in this game, you know it was very good and challenging,” said Stokes.
Stokes said the series defeat was all the more disappointing with England having whitewashed Pakistan 3-0 away two years ago.
“Losing games for England hurts so it’s disappointing,” said Stokes, who missed the first Test in Multan with injury and failed to find form with the bat on his return.
The talismanic Stokes has been central to England’s attacking philosophy, which saw records tumble in the victory in the first Multan Test.
But he said consistency had been an issue since.
“We need to do things for longer,” said Stokes, whose team next tours New Zealand for a three-Test series in late November.
“As I said, we did good things in very small amounts of times at certain points throughout the second game and this game.
“But when you don’t sustain that, you know you’re always going to start falling away.”


Pakistan thrash England to win series after Noman, Sajid heroics

Pakistan thrash England to win series after Noman, Sajid heroics
Updated 26 October 2024
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Pakistan thrash England to win series after Noman, Sajid heroics

Pakistan thrash England to win series after Noman, Sajid heroics
  • Noman and Sajid knocked over all 10 England wickets to dismiss the visitors for 112 before Pakistan raced to victory before lunch on day three of third Test
  • Shan Masood hammered five boundaries in six balls, launching Shoaib Bashir over the ropes to complete a resounding victory, his first series win as captain

RAWALPINDI: Pakistan sealed a memorable Test series win as they thrashed England by nine wickets on Saturday after Noman Ali and Sajid Khan delivered a spin masterclass.
Noman and Sajid knocked over all 10 England wickets to dismiss the visitors for 112 before Pakistan raced to victory in Rawalpindi before lunch on day three of the third Test.
Shan Masood hammered five boundaries in six balls, launching Shoaib Bashir over the ropes to complete a resounding victory, his first series triumph as captain.

Pakistan's Saud Shakeel hugs Shan Masood and Abdullah Shafique after winning the Test series between England and Pakistan at the Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium in Rawalpindi on October 26, 2024. (REUTERS)

Noman finished with figures of 6-42 and Sajid 4-69 after England resumed the day on 24-3 but were dismissed in 37.2 overs for their lowest total in Pakistan.
England won the first Test by an innings and 47 runs while Pakistan took the second by 152 runs, both in Multan.
Pakistan lost opener Saim Ayub for eight but Masood’s six-ball 23 not out ended the match.

England's Zak Crawley with Harry Brook after the match against Pakistan at the Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium in Rawalpindi on October 26, 2024. (REUTERS)

The Pakistan captain had lost his previous two series in charge — 3-0 to Australia and 2-0 to Bangladesh — since being appointed last year.
Noman and Sajid were brought into the line-up after England destroyed the hosts in the first Test in Multan by an innings and 47 runs.
The duo have knocked over 39 wickets between them in the subsequent two Tests, turning what looked like an easy England series victory Pakistan’s way.
Joe Root top-scored with 33 while none of the other England batters could last long enough to stop Pakistan’s charge toward a first home series win since beating South Africa in February 2021.

England's Ben Stokes, second right, and teammates shake hand on the end of third test cricket match against Pakistan, in Rawalpindi on October 26, 2024. (AP)

England’s previous lowest total was 130 in Lahore in 1987.
England’s fate was sealed once Noman dismissed overnight batsman Harry Brook caught behind by Mohammad Rizwan for 26 and skipper Ben Stokes leg-before for three.
Stokes once again fell in bizarre fashion as he offered no stroke to a Noman delivery, expecting it to go down the leg side but it struck him in front of the stumps.

Pakistan's Shan Masood, second right, and Pakistan's Abdullah Shafique, left, are congratulated by teammates after winning the third Test cricket match against England, in Rawalpindi on October 26, 2024. (AP)

England skipper, who missed the first Test with a hamstring injury, managed just 53 runs in four innings.
Sajid made it 6-75, dismissing Jamie Smith who tried to hit him out of the ground only to miss the ball and lose his stumps for three.
Noman completed his sixth five-wicket haul when Root edged a sharp turning delivery to Rizwan, quashing all hopes of an England fightback.
Sajid dismissed Rehan Ahmed for seven while Noman wrapped up the innings with the wicket of Jack Leach, bowled for ten.


Former Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin advances to the WTA tournament final in Tokyo

Former Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin advances to the WTA tournament final in Tokyo
Updated 26 October 2024
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Former Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin advances to the WTA tournament final in Tokyo

Former Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin advances to the WTA tournament final in Tokyo
  • American Sofia Kenin won the Australian Open in 2020 and was a French Open finalist the same year

TOKYO: Former Australian Open champion Sofia Kenin has advanced to the final of the Pan Pacific Open with a 6-4, 6-4 win over ninth-seeded Katie Boulter on Saturday.
Kenin, who won the Australian Open in 2020 and was a French Open finalist the same year, broke the British player’s serve in the seventh game of the second set and the American served out to win the match for her best tournament performance of the season.
Later, No. 1 seed and Paris Olympic gold medalist Zheng Qinwen was scheduled to play Diana Shnaider for a place in Sunday’s final against Kenin.
The 25-year-old Kenin was ranked as high as No. 4 early in 2020, but a series of injuries, including ankle and quadricep ailments, has seen her WTA ranking drop to its current 155.
Boulter, ranked 33rd, had not lost a set during the Tokyo hard-court tournament.
Kenin beat Boulter in the only other time they have played but it was when Boulter retired with an injury in the second set while trailing 4-1 to Kenin after losing the first set in Acapulco in 2019.
Boulter beat 2019 US Open champion Bianca Andreescu on Friday in the quarterfinals.


Freeman hits 1st walk-off slam in World Series history as Dodgers top Yankees 6-3 in classic opener

Freeman hits 1st walk-off slam in World Series history as Dodgers top Yankees 6-3 in classic opener
Updated 26 October 2024
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Freeman hits 1st walk-off slam in World Series history as Dodgers top Yankees 6-3 in classic opener

Freeman hits 1st walk-off slam in World Series history as Dodgers top Yankees 6-3 in classic opener
  • In this star-studded World Series between two of baseball’s most storied and successful franchises, Game 1 certainly delivered
  • It was the third straight Series opener to go extra innings

LOS ANGELES: Freddie Freeman hit the first game-ending grand slam in World Series history with two outs in the 10th inning to give the Los Angeles Dodgers a 6-3 victory over the New York Yankees in a dramatic opener Friday night.

Hobbled by a badly sprained ankle, Freeman homered on the first pitch he saw — an inside fastball from Nestor Cortes — and raised his bat high before beginning his trot as the sellout crowd of 52,394 roared.

“I cannot believe what just happened,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “That’s what makes the Fall Classic a classic, right, because the stars come out and superstars make big plays, get big hits, in the biggest of moments. ... I’m speechless right now.”

It was reminiscent of Kirk Gibson’s game-ending homer that lifted Los Angeles over the Oakland Athletics in Game 1 of the 1988 World Series at Dodger Stadium — one of the most famous swings in baseball lore.

Gibson, sidelined by leg injuries, came off the bench and connected against Hall of Fame closer Dennis Eckersley.

Freeman, who missed three games during the National League playoffs because of the injury to his right ankle, didn’t have an extra-base hit this postseason until legging out a triple earlier on Friday.

“Actually felt pretty good,” Freeman said. “The last six days we treated it really well. I’ve been feeling pretty good. Right when I ran out to give high-fives to my teammates, I felt pretty good, because that was the first time I ran all week. So, ankle’s good.”

After the home run, Freeman ran over to his father.

“I was just screaming in his face. I’m sorry, dad,” Freeman said, laughing. “He’s been there since I was a little boy, throwing batting practice to me every day. So this is a moment, it’s my dad’s moment.”

In this much-hyped, star-studded World Series between two of baseball’s most storied and successful franchises, Game 1 certainly delivered. It was the third straight Series opener to go extra innings.

“We can’t sit here and mope,” Yankees slugger Aaron Judge said. “Learn from it, where we can improve, and try to win the next one.”

In the top of the 10th, Anthony Volpe grounded into a fielder’s choice to shortstop, scoring Jazz Chisholm Jr. from third after he stole two bases, to give the Yankees a 3-2 lead.

The speedy Chisholm singled off Blake Treinen and then stole second. Following an intentional walk to Anthony Rizzo, Chisholm swiped third base uncontested as Treinen was slow to the plate with Max Muncy playing deep at third.

Tommy Edman made a diving stop to his left on Volpe’s grounder, but couldn’t get it out of his glove at first. He tossed to second to get Rizzo out as Chisholm came flying home with the go-ahead run.

But the Dodgers weren’t done.

Gavin Lux walked against Jake Cousins with one out in the bottom of the 10th and went to second on Edman’s infield single to second. Defensive replacement Oswaldo Cabrera knocked down the ball with his glove but it leaked into the outfield.

That brought up star slugger Shohei Ohtani, a left-handed hitter. Yankees manager Aaron Boone went to his bullpen again for Cortes, a lefty starter who hadn’t pitched since Sept. 18 because of an elbow injury.

After missing the AL playoffs, Cortes was added to the World Series roster Friday.

Left fielder Alex Verdugo made a running catch in foul territory to retire Ohtani. Verdugo’s momentum sent him tumbling over the low retaining wall, advancing both runners one base because by rule it became a dead ball when Verdugo wound up in the stands.

With first base open, New York intentionally walked Mookie Betts to load the bases and set up lefty-on-lefty matchup of Cortes against Freeman.

“I was on time for the heater,” Freeman said.

His drive into the right-field pavilion sent Dodgers fans into a frenzy. It was the third walk-off homer in World Series history for a team that was trailing, following Gibson’s shot and Joe Carter’s drive for the Toronto Blue Jays that won the 1993 World Series against Philadelphia.

“That’s stuff, you’re 5 years old in the backyard right there,” Freeman said. “That’s a dream come true, but it’s only one. We’ve got three more.”

It’s the 12th time the Yankees and Dodgers are meeting in the World Series, the most frequent matchup in major league annals, but their previous October clash was 43 years ago.

While the Dodgers are seeking their eighth title and second in five years, the Yankees are in the Fall Classic for the first time since winning No. 27 in 2009.

The first Series with a pair of 50-home run hitters in Judge (58) and Ohtani (54) opened quietly as Gerrit Cole, the 2023 AL Cy Young Award winner, and Jack Flaherty dueled through four scoreless innings. Judge struck out swinging in his first three at-bats before singling off Brusdar Graterol with two outs in the seventh.

Ohtani was 0 for 3 before ripping a double off the right-field wall in the eighth. He raced to third on the play when second baseman Gleyber Torres mishandled Juan Soto’s throw, which became costly when Ohtani scored on a sacrifice fly by Betts that tied it 2-all.

With two outs in the ninth, Torres sent a long drive to left-center. A fan wearing a Dodgers jersey reached over the wall and caught the ball. Umpires ruled fan interference and gave Torres a double, a call confirmed on video replay. The fan immediately left the area.

Blake Treinen came in and intentionally walked Soto to get to Judge. He popped up to end the inning in a 1-for-5 performance that included three strikeouts.

The Dodgers broke through for a 1-0 lead in the fifth when Kiké Hernández tripled past Soto in right field and scored on Will Smith’s sacrifice fly.

The Yankees answered right back in the sixth. Soto singled leading off before Judge struck out swinging for the third time. Giancarlo Stanton followed with a 412-foot shot to left off Flaherty for his 17th career postseason homer. Stanton grew up in the nearby San Fernando Valley, not far from Flaherty’s hometown of Burbank.

Stanton, the American League Championship Series MVP, connected on a knuckle-curve that hung slightly at the bottom of the strike zone. His sixth homer in 11 games this postseason came off his bat at 116.6 mph.

After last weekend’s pennant-clinching win at Cleveland, Stanton said, “This ain’t the trophy I want. I want the next one.”

The Yankees then loaded the bases. Chisholm singled off Anthony Banda and stole second. After Rizzo struck out, Volpe was intentionally walked. Austin Wells reached on an infield single that Edman smothered with a dive to save a run before Verdugo struck out swinging against his former team.

Game 2 is Saturday evening at Dodger Stadium, with Yankees LHP Carlos Rodon pitching against $325 million rookie Yoshinobu Yamamoto.

Rodon is 1-1 with a 4.40 ERA in three starts this postseason, with 22 strikeouts over 14 1/3 innings. Yamamoto is 1-0 in three postseason starts with a 5.11 ERA and 11 strikeouts in 12 1/3 innings.