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One sporting events to watch this week: Don’t miss

2023 Mosconi Cup
Alexandra Palace
Wed, Dec 6, 5:30 PM GMT

About

This event takes place in the Alexandra Palace Great Hall.

The 2023 Mosconi Cup promises to be the biggest to date with the tournament celebrating its 30th anniversary in the same year as Matchroom launches the World Nineball Tour offering unprecedented opportunities for players on both sides of the pond to stake their claim for a spot on either Team Europe or USA.

CLICK TO WATCH MOSCONI CUP 2023 LIVE

Three players from each side will qualify from the special World Nineball Rankings 1-year list with the final two players from each side set to be wild cards.

It’s pool’s biggest party and you need to be there.

Below, we have provided the Mosconi Cup 2023 teams, which will feature Team USA and Team Europe:

Team USA Roster

Jeremy Jones – Captain
Skyler Woodward
Fedor Gorst
Shane Van Boening
Tyler Styer
Shane Wolford

Team Europe Roster

Ralph Eckert – Captain
Francisco Sanchez Ruiz
David Alcaide
Jayson Shaw
Albin Ouschan
Joshua Filler

WORLD NINEBALL TOUR PARTNERS WITH DUELBITS FOR 30TH ANNIVERSARY MOSCONI CUP

The World Nineball Tour is delighted to announce Duelbits, the online sportsbook, casino, and virtual gaming platform, as the title sponsor for the 2023 edition of the Mosconi Cup. The Duelbits Mosconi Cup will be hosted at Alexandra Palace, from December 6-9.

There are limited tickets available, secure yours here

Founded in early 2020, Duelbits has had a string of global success as an online cryptocurrency gaming operator, providing a premium platform designed for daring and passionate cryptocurrency enthusiasts. With an exclusive library of original games, Duelbits redefines the gaming experience through innovation, personalisation, and unparalleled rewards. Duelbits holds a steadfast belief in advanced technologies, AI, and cryptocurrencies, viewing each click as a purposeful stride toward an extraordinary adventure.

Duelbits CEO, Marco Pinnisi, expressed his enthusiasm for partnering with Matchroom Multi Sport for the prestigious 30th anniversary of the Mosconi Cup. Acknowledging the event’s unmatched global significance and its standing within the esteemed World Nineball Tour, Duelbits is eager to showcase their brand to passionate pool enthusiasts worldwide. Commenting on the collaboration, Pinnisi remarked, “We eagerly anticipate this extraordinary spectacle, awaiting an event that not only embodies the spirit of intense competition but also ensures a celebration of unparalleled entertainment.”

Emily Frazer, CEO of Matchroom Multi Sport, said: “I am thrilled to have Duelbits on board for the 30th anniversary of the Mosconi Cup, it’s a truly exciting partnership

“The Mosconi Cup is a highlight of the World Nineball Tour with a huge global audience, and I am delighted Duelbits have recognised this opportunity to showcase their brand to the pool fans worldwide.”

This year Team USA will be looking for revenge after losing the last three tournaments to Team Europe – who lead 15-13 overall. The European team is captained for the first time by Ralph Eckert, whose team is unchanged from last year. It boasts recent Hanoi Open winner Jayson Shaw from Scotland, Joshua Filler from Germany, Austria’s Albin Ouschan, and Spanish duo Francisco Sanchez-Ruiz and David Alcaide.

Jeremy Jones will captain Team USA for the fourth time, and his team is spearheaded by Shane Van Boening, who has won the US Open five times, a joint record with Earl Strickland, and who is considered as one of the best pool players of all time. The team is also boosted by the addition of Fedor Gorst, regarded as currently one of the best players in the world. Gorst played on the winning European team in 2020 but qualifies to play for the USA after being granted residency there. They are joined by Skyler Woodward, Tyler Styer and Shane Wolford.

For the second year running, Jayson Shaw and Skyler Woodward will be the playing vice-captains for Europe and USA respectively.

The official 30th Anniversary Mosconi Cup Press Conference, live at Alexandra Palace on Tuesday 5th December from 12:30PM, will be open to members of the public to attend at Nineball’s most storied venue. Hosted by Matchroom Multi Sport CEO Emily Frazer, Nineball fans will join members of the media in putting questions to teams Captains, Ralph Eckert and Jeremy Jones, as well as each player on Team Europe and Team USA. Nothing is off the table!

The Mosconi Cup is the brainchild of Barry Hearn, who will make a special guest appearance at the Press Conference as Matchroom proudly celebrates three decades of success for this trans-Atlantic spectacle. There will also be an exclusive opportunity to purchase special edition 30th Anniversary Mosconi Cup merchandise before the general public.

The Duelbits Mosconi Cup will be live on Sky Sports in the United Kingdom and Ireland and on DAZN in the United States, Brazil and Spain. It will also be available on Viaplay in the Netherlands, the Baltics, Iceland, Poland and Scandinavia.

Duelbits UK website, duelbits.co.uk, is powered by TGP Europe Ltd who are licensed and regulated in Great Britain by the Gambling Commission. UK regulated online sportsbooks & casinos do not accept Cryptocurrencies of any kind.

LeBron James suffers worst defeat in NBA career as Embiid, 76ers rout Lakers by 44 points

LeBron James never endured a lopsided basketball defeat like the one he suffered with Los Angeles in Philadelphia.

James has lost big before. His Miami Heat once got trounced by 36 points in the NBA Finals. The Indiana Pacers beat James and the Lakers by 42 in 2019.

But this blowout was an all-timer: By the time Joel Embiid clinched a triple-double in the third quarter, the 76ers were on their way to a 138-94 win over the Lakers on Monday night, the 44-point loss now the worst in James’ career that dates to 2003.

“What needs to change in order for that to not happen again? A lot,” James said, without elaboration.

The miserable milestones piled up for the Lakers. It was their worst loss to the 76ers in 290 games in the series.

It was so bad, James didn’t even grab a rebound.

OK, one more: The 76ers beat the Lakers for the seventh straight time.

“That’s my favorite team,” Embiid said, again noting he learned of basketball through Kobe Bryant. “Any time I play against them, you want to get the win. But I do it every night anyways against every other team.”

The box score tells part of the story. The 76ers hit 22 3-pointers to just seven for the Lakers, and even when Embiid sat out the entire fourth quarter, the 76ers still outscored them 40-14.

“We got killed on the 3-point line,” James said. “They made shots. Give them credit.”

The rest? It was just a lethargic effort from a team that seemed resigned early — the 76ers led by 25 in the first half — that was it was a good night to throw in the towel.

“Your competitive spirit has to be at a high level,” Lakers coach Darvin Ham said. “It almost has to be bulletproof to a certain degree. You have to meet force with force. They outhustled us.”

The reigning NBA MVP, Embiid finished with 30 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists for his sixth career triple-double. It was Embiid’s first of the season and his seventh career game with 10-plus assists.

Embiid’s anticipated showdown with James never really materialized. James scored 18 points in 29 minutes but nothing he did could make a dent in the 76ers’ lead. He has now played more minutes than any player in NBA history, with playoff time included.

“That doesn’t mean much to me,” James said.

Tyrese Maxey scored 31 points for the 76ers. Anthony Davis had 17 points and 11 rebounds for the Lakers.

The 76ers opened the game 3-point happy and hit 13, a season high for a half, on 26 shots.

Maxey hit four. The Lakers, though, left any Sixer not named Maxey or Embiid open and paid for it. Patrick Beverley hit three in the half and Marcus Morris Sr. went 3 for 3. Embiid buried one for a 64-39 lead.

The Lakers missed 7 of 10 3s in the half.

With Eagles QB Jalen Hurts watching courtside, Embiid blocked Davis with such authority the smack could be heard rows deep off the court.

Maxey scored 20 at the break as he tries to strengthen his bid for his first All-Star berth. Embiid had 17 as he makes a run at his third straight scoring title.

“You certainly don’t go into a game like this expecting that kind of game to break out,” 76ers coach Nick Nurse said. “When the 3 ball starts going in the way they did early, I think that just energizes everybody.”

The 76ers put their 12th win away early.

They also scored points for trash talk when forward Paul Reed called Davis “a big flopper.”

“You know, he’s gonna be flailing,” Reed said at shootaround.

Both coaches were bemused at why a backup poked Davis.

“Go guard him, I guess. Best of luck, Paul,” Ham said.

No matter. The game was never competitive enough to worry much about fouls and flops.

The 76ers won their second straight after a two-game losing streak and could have Kelly Oubre Jr. back soon. Oubre averaged 16.3 points in eight games before he was injured in an alleged hit-and-run accident. He participated in shootaround and may join the 76ers on their upcoming two-game road trip.

UP NEXT

Lakers: Have back-to-back road games Wednesday at Detroit and Thursday at Oklahoma City.

76ers: Hit the road for games Wednesday at New Orleans and Friday at Boston.

Could rugby provinces look to play derbies at GAA grounds?

Could big BKT URC inter-provincial rugby games potentially be hosted at some of the country’s bigger GAA venues?

That was up for discussion on Monday night’s Against The Head programme.

In October, Ulster played Glasgow Warriors in a friendly at the Kingspan Breffni, the home of Cavan GAA, to allow for the installation of a 3G pitch at their own Kingspan Stadium.

This weekend Connacht face Leinster at a sold-out 8,000-capacity Sportsground, a fixture that undoubtedly could have shifted a lot more tickets.

It led to debate about the possibility of more switches to GAA venues for the big derbies.

“I haven’t actually heard any rumours about it but when you see Munster playing at Páirc Uí Chaoimh [against Super Rugby Pacific champions Crusaders in July], the impact that had, why not?” said Bernard Jackman.

“I think it’d be brilliant. In fairness, when I’ve been to the Sportsground, you meet fans who are big GAA [fans]… so yeah I think if they moved it elsewhere it could tap into a totally new audience.”

Darren Cave concurred, adding: “Ulster have taken the first step with the friendly but I do think, it’s not a big island, there’s not a phenomenal amount of people and the sports are – particularly in the north – very segregated.

“The sooner they start to try and weave them together… I look back on my career, we had a home final in the Pro12 it would’ve been about ten years ago. Kingspan was getting done up so we nominated our home ground as the RDS and went and played Leinster and lost.

“I hope it’s something that Connacht are looking at in the future, particularly [for games against] Leinster.”

Central Statistics chief on GAA’s population shifts: the structures can survive – but at what cost?

The fastest-growing counties are Fingal, Kildare, Meath – all on the eastern side of the country. The slowest growing counties were Donegal, Mayo, Roscommon.”

At the recent GAA Special Congress, a motion was passed establishing new demographics committees across the country. Tyrone delegate Benny Hurl spelt out why that was necessary: “Demographics is the single greatest threat to our Association. The subject needs a dedicated committee with people who have a passion for it,” he declared.

“The challenges that are faced by our clubs are real and are mounting. We need to intervene. The GAA needs to address the issues, we keep talking about it, but we need to do something about it.”

Within the association, Pádraig Dalton wears many hats. He played football for Annacurra, Kilmacud Crokes and Wicklow. He is an analyst for Cork hurling club Midleton. Dalton is also the Director General of the Central Statistics Office.

His work is charting precisely how the country is changing. That change has been enormous.

“The population now is about 5.15 million for the 26 counties,” Dalton said, speaking on the Irish Examiner’s Gaelic football podcast. “For the 32 counties, it has just gone over seven million, which is quite interesting. It is the first time we have gone over five million since 1851. It is a real seminal moment in a sense for Ireland.”

This development is a societal shift. In 1961, 54% of the population lived in rural areas. That figure is now at 36%.

“When you look at population growth between 2016 and 2022, the population grew by eight percent. If you draw a line from north to south down the middle, there is a real east-west thing happening. There is also an urban-rural thing happening. The fastest-growing counties were Fingal, Kildare, Meath. All the fastest-growing counties were on the east. The slowest growing counties were Donegal, Mayo, Roscommon.” The GAA has known it must contend with this for a long time. Over 50 years ago, the McNamee Report highlighted the organisation’s urbanisation issue.

“The GAA is concerned with all the people of Ireland, urban and rural,” it read. “The problem is that the association is weakest where the population is increasing; it is strongest where the population is declining. That problem has always been there but the extent of the adverse trends in recent years has now brought a full realisation of its seriousness for the association.”

What about now? Well, it’s complicated. Of course, it is. This is a nuanced and wide-ranging issue. Since early 2022, the GAA Data Hub has been advancing what was the Geographic Information System, collating all relevant data for GAA clubs from the CSO, the Department of Education and equivalent bodies. Clubs and counties can understand birth-rates, population and age group participation. This information is invaluable.

So how have numbers influenced success? “There are different moving parts to why teams are succeeding and struggling. The numbers do make a difference, but it is not numbers alone. If it was, Dublin should have won hurling and football All-Irelands for the last 30, 40 years because they have the largest population. When you combine population with really good structures and significant funding, you begin to see the benefits.

“I was just looking at the big towns that are over ten thousand and which towns are growing the fastest. A lot of them are in the broader Dublin area, one of them is Naas. It is growing significantly.

“Naas just won a three-in-a-row in football, this year they did a double in hurling and football, really strong at schools. There are other big towns where clearly the population is growing but it hasn’t been an advantage for different reasons. The one that struck me is Tralee, it had three senior clubs. Last year Stacks were relegated. This year O’Rahillys were and they played Na Gaeil in the playoff. That is a big town, but the difference is Naas has one club whereas Tralee has several.”

Generally, rural clubs are struggling to field due to numbers. Urban clubs are struggling to find space for their numbers. There are three major issues for clubs and counties that impact volunteers and facilities. The first is a large increase in participation, particularly underage. Then there is migration and demographics, both eastwards and the shift from rural to urban. Integration is another significant factor.

The data alone suggests some counties will have to eventually split and others will amalgamate. Dalton is keen to stress the full context.

“It will be very hard for the GAA to move away from the 32-county structure. There is so much vested and tradition in playing for your county,” he said.

“Then again, you look at the likes of Kerry. In terms of population growth, Kerry are not growing as quickly as a lot of other counties. Similar rates to Mayo. If you look at the oldest counties by average age, Mayo is the oldest county and Kerry is the second oldest. There is a population thing, but it is not just about population.

“Numbers make a difference if you go below a certain threshold. Once you are above a threshold it is not just about numbers. It is tradition, culture, coaching, club structures, a whole mix of things.”

What does it all mean for the future? Can the structure of the GAA as is can survive? 32 counties fielding hurling and football teams, a rural network of clubs playing in and around county towns.

“I don’t know the answer to that. I think it can survive but at what cost? There might be a lot of young players who won’t get games. There will be county teams training for months who don’t have a chance in hell of making it beyond the initial stages of the championship. Over time we will have to adapt.”