On April 18-19, 1987, at the Capital Centre in Landover, Maryland, the Washington Capitals and New York Islanders played the longest Game 7 in NHL history. From the time the first puck was dropped until the game-winner, a full six hours and 18 minutes passed. The marathon contest was chock full of memorable moments: from the goalie whose broken skate could have prevented it all to the broadcaster who had to be told to put his clothes back on. On April 18-19, 1987, at the Capital Centre in Landover, Maryland, the Washington Capitals and New York Islanders played the longest Game 7 in NHL history. From the time the first puck was dropped until the game-winner, a full six hours and 18 minutes passed. The marathon contest was chock full of memorable moments: from the goalie whose broken skate could have prevented it all to the broadcaster who had to be told to put his clothes back on. On April 18-19, 1987, at the Capital Centre in Landover, Maryland, the Washington Capitals and New York Islanders played the longest Game 7 in NHL history. From the time the first puck was dropped until the game-winner, a full six hours and 18 minutes passed. The marathon contest was chock full of memorable moments: from the goalie whose broken skate could have prevented it all to the broadcaster who had to be told to put his clothes back on.
Day: November 4, 2019
Greatest Games: The Golden Goal – No. 5 International Game
All the NHL stars were aligned in Vancouver for an Olympic showdown between Canada and USA for the gold medal. The Americans rallied from a 2-0 deficit to tie the game in the final minute and force overtime. The next goal would live on forever. All the NHL stars were aligned in Vancouver for an Olympic showdown between Canada and USA for the gold medal. The Americans rallied from a 2-0 deficit to tie the game in the final minute and force overtime. The next goal would live on forever. All the NHL stars were aligned in Vancouver for an Olympic showdown between Canada and USA for the gold medal. The Americans rallied from a 2-0 deficit to tie the game in the final minute and force overtime. The next goal would live on forever. All the NHL stars were aligned in Vancouver for an Olympic showdown between Canada and USA for the gold medal. The Americans rallied from a 2-0 deficit to tie the game in the final minute and force overtime. The next goal would live on forever.
Kedar Jadhav, Shahbaz Nadeem take India B to Deodhar Trophy title
It was the best pitch of the competition, not as bat-first-win-game as the previous fixtures, but a six-and-a-half-over spell early on in India C’s chase of India B’s 283 for 7, in which they lost four wickets, put paid to their chances of winning the Deodhar Trophy 2019-20 final in Ranchi.
That meant Ishan Porel‘s five-for for India C went in vain, and Kedar Jadhav‘s 86 for India B proved to be the defining knock of the match.
India C managed to bat out their overs despite sinking to 77 for 5 in 18 overs – Mayank Agarwal, Virat Singh, Suryakumar Yadav and Dinesh Karthik the batsmen dismissed in that phase – but were always behind the eight-ball, never quite looking like they would pull off an unexpected win with their tail-enders in charge of doing the job with the bat.
Priyam Garg, the 18-year-old batsman, did his bit, seeing out the collapse and batting on till the 30th over for an impressive 74 in 77 balls, with eight fours and a six, but he fell swinging wildly at a Mohammed Siraj delivery that hit leg stump. And then it was over to Axar Patel and Jalaj Saxena, who scored 30s, and Mayank Markande, who played an enterprising innings of 27, to delay the inevitable.
Can disarrayed Pakistan stop Australian juggernaut?
The rains in New South Wales and across the east coast of Australia this week brought so much relief to farmers in the drought-stricken region that there were videos of people dancing and celebrating in the streets. One set of foreigners who might gladly have partaken in such merriment was the visiting Pakistan cricket team in Sydney, staring defeat in the face when the heavens opened, forcing the abandonment of a game that Australia looked to be easing through.
While that means Aaron Finch‘s men don’t go to Canberra with a 1-0 lead, they do enter the contest with significant momentum. Australia are on something of a T20I tear at the moment, having won their last five completed games. They swatted Sri Lanka aside 3-0 just last week, the team that less than a month ago
Meanwhile, Pakistan suddenly find themselves in disarray in their most-favoured format of the last three years. In the first game, they scraped their way to a somewhat respectable total, down almost solely to new captain Babar Azam‘s exquisite half-century. There is the caveat of the rain bringing a somewhat abrupt conclusion to the innings, but it’s hard to argue Pakistan were pacing themselves effectively either; regular loss of wickets combined with watertight discipline from Australia’s bowlers meant any total they put up in the allotted 20 would have ended up being somewhat below par.
The visitors must be careful not to let the second game also become a one-man batting effort. The sample size for the bowling isn’t enough to jump to drastic conclusions, but on the evidence of the two overs Mohammad Irfan bowled, there’s little to explain why the 37-year-old was brought out from the cold to join Pakistan on what has historically been their most challenging tour. On the whole, the visitors looked alarmingly off the pace in the first game, and this is their opportunity to demonstrate that it was something of an aberration.
did the same to Pakistan in Lahore. David Warner finds himself in irresistible form again, as does Finch, who looked imperious in the short time Australia got to bat before the weather intervened. The bowlers, too, Adam Zampa excepted, had solid outings carrying on from the Sri Lanka series.
Sonny Bill Williams mega-million dollar code move could see him switch allegiance at World Cup
Sonny Bill Williams’ rumoured cross-code move from rugby union to rugby league could bring with it a switch of allegiance at the i…
Sonny Bill Williams’ rumoured cross-code move from rugby union to rugby league could bring with it a switch of allegiance at the i… Sonny Bill Williams’ rumoured cross-code move from rugby union to rugby league could bring with it a switch of allegiance at the i… Sonny Bill Williams’ rumoured cross-code move from rugby union to rugby league could bring with it a switch of allegiance at the i… Sonny Bill Williams’ rumoured cross-code move from rugby union to rugby league could bring with it a switch of allegiance at the i… Sonny Bill Williams’ rumoured cross-code move from rugby union to rugby league could bring with it a switch of allegiance at the i… Sonny Bill Williams’ rumoured cross-code move from rugby union to rugby league could bring with it a switch of allegiance at the i… Sonny Bill Williams’ rumoured cross-code move from rugby union to rugby league could bring with it a switch of allegiance at the i… Sonny Bill Williams’ rumoured cross-code move from rugby union to rugby league could bring with it a switch of allegiance at the i…
Micron Launches New Hard Drives to Challenge Intel in Data Centres
Idaho-based memory chipmaker Micron Technology on Thursday challenged rival Intel with a new line of hard drives aimed at data centers, just as the two companies are on the cusp of formally ending a joint venture of more than a decade that developed the technology. Micron and Intel worked together starting in 2006 to bring to market what is called 3D cross-point memory technology. The technology uses three-dimensional features on storage chips to make them faster.
Micron said a year ago that it would buy out Intel’s share of the joint venture, called IM Flash Technologies, for $1.5 billion (roughly Rs. 10,600 crores).
in cash and the assumption of $1 billion (roughly Rs. 7,100 crores) of Intel’s share of the venture’s debt. The deal will close this month, leaving Micron in full control of a factory built in Utah to make the chips.
Hard drives made with the new chips are faster than previous solid-state drives. That has captured the interest of data center owners carrying out computing jobs like deep learning, where artificial intelligence software ingests huge amounts of data to learn new tasks.
Intel released a second generation of its version of the technology earlier this year. Micron is now jumping into the market, testing it with what a handful of customers.
“This is just the very, very beginning,” Micron Chief Executive Sanjay Mehrotra told Reuters at a launch event in San Francisco. “These kinds of technologies do take multiple years before are they broadly deployed.”
Micron launched its Intel competitor Thursday, a device it calls X100. The device itself is a hard drive that can be plugged directly into a server, and Micron claims it is faster than its rival due in part to a piece of technology called a controller that take instructions from the server’s computing brain about which data to read or write on the hard drive.
Micron developed the controllers internally and is hoping they will set its products apart in the memory market, where supply and demand dynamics can produce dramatic shifts in prices.
Mehrotra’s strategy since taking over as chief executive in 2017 has been to increase the number of storage products that include technologies beyond just commodity memory chips. About half of the company’s storage revenue now comes from such products, versus 20 percent when he arrived, he said.
“This is hugely attractive,” Mehrotra said of differentiating features. “We are making strong progress there.”