Stabroek News

Keep Ya Five Alive kicks off tonight

-

The 6th edition of the GT-Beer ‘Keep Ya Five Alive’ knockout championsh­ips will kick-off tonight at the National Gymnasium, Mandela Avenue with five matches.

In the opener at 19:00hrs, Rhythm Stars will match skills with Berbice Guinness of the Streets champion Trafalgar, while the second fixture pits Broad Street against Agricola from 19:45hrs.

In the third clash at 20:30hrs, Kingston will lock horns with Linden unit Swag Entertainm­ent while fellow Linden side NK Ballers matches skill with Sophia at 21:15hrs.

The final fixture of the night will pit Leopold Street against Melanie of East Coast Demerara from 10:00hrs.

The tournament will continue on Saturday at the same venue with another round of group matches.

West Demerara champion Showstoppe­rs will take aim at Buxton Diamond in the opening fixture from 19:00hrs.

In the second clash, East Coast Guinness champion Uprising will lock horns with Guinness of the Streets Linden winner Silver Bullets at 19:45hrs.

The third contest will pit Xtreme Cleaners against Beterverwa­gting from 20:30hrs, with the fourth counter witnessing Ann’s Grove engaging the always dangerous North East La Penitence unit from 21:15hrs.

In the fifth matchup, a rejuvenate­d Tiger Bay outfit will lock horns with California Square at 21:15hrs while Tucville battles arch-rival Sparta Boss in the feature contest from 22:45hrs.

On Tuesday, Future Stars will tackle Alpha Warriors and Back Circle oppose Kitty Hustlers.

In the final two matches, Dave & Celena All Stars of Linden will engage the formidable Bent Street while holders Gold is Money tackles Alexander Village.

The 32-team tournament was reschedule­d from its initial July 7th start due to the organisers having to adhere to a mandate from the Guyana Football Federation (GFF) on the appearance of Elite League players in the tournament.

According to tournament coordinato­r Kevin Adonis, “This recent developmen­t ordered by the GFF ultimately forced me to reschedule the opening night from last Saturday to this Thursday to ensure that teams have the opportunit­y to discuss the directive set by the federation in order to avoid any consequenc­e (s) of their decisions.”

He added it was unfortunat­e that the mandate passed down from the GFF was not part of the initial notificati­on he had received, which would have provided him ample time to initiate discussion­s with the competing teams and avoid the unfortunat­e episode. QUIMPER, France, (Reuters) - World champion Peter Sagan was the stage favourite and he duly delivered yesterday, powering to his second win on this year’s Tour de France with a perfectly-timed effort.

The Slovak, however, benefited from his rivals’ lack of co-ordination in the final climb as Quick-Step Floors rider Julian Alaphilipp­e failed to follow up on team mate Philippe Gilbert’s attack and Sagan finished with a brutal burst of speed.

Bora-Hansgrohe’s Sagan held off Italian Sonny Colbrelli, who was second, with Belgian Gilbert taking third place.

Another Belgian, Greg van Avermaet, gritted his teeth in the finale to retain the overall leader’s yellow jersey. All the overall contenders finished safely with the main bunch.

“It was a really good sprint. Gilbert attacked and I was well placed. He went early and Colbrelli and I launched our sprint at the right moment. Sonny almost beat me but I crushed the pedals harder,” Sagan said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana