Nightshift Sports: U.S. Open, 31 August 2018

Day 5
Embed from Getty Images
Context and Background 
The U.S. Open, which started August 27th and runs through September 9th,  is the last tennis major of the year. There was a week of qualifying (the qualifying started on 21 August) and now the real heavy lifting begins, starting on Monday, the 27th. The U.S. Open and the Australian Open are the two  majors that are played on hard courts (they are also the first and last majors of the year); the French is played on clay and Wimbledon–arguably the most famous tennis tournament in the world–is played on grass. The courts at the U.S. are very quick, perhaps just a shade quicker than the hard courts at the Australian Open. One thing the U.S. Open brings to the game that none of the others offer is competition under the lights(matches can go to very late at night); that is unique to the U.S. Open  as is the often raucous and loud crowd that is a competitive asset (if you’re a crowd favorite) or liability if you’re not. There is no setting in modern tennis that is as loud and combustible as the U.S. Open. It’s one of a kind.
But…..that’s all as it should be; the tournament is staged in Queens in New York City, at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center. New York has never been a “soft city” and the Open and it’s tough crowd represents the city’s persona perfectly. It’s a tough, rambunctious, bruising city and once a year it shows up in Queens to take in a little tennis.   It’s not coincidence that a true child of New York, the sometimes volatile, always brilliant John McEnroe, won four U.S. Open singles titles (his chief rival of that era, Bjorn Borg, won none). McEnroe also won four U.S. Open doubles titles (it has often been said that the “best team in doubles is John McEnroe and whoever he is playing with”). He will be a commentator for television coverage and you would do well to pay close attention to his analysis–especially of the players at this particular tournament.
The Contenders
This is the last major of the year–one last chance to add a major (also called a “Grand Slam”) to the resume, move up the world rankings, get a head start on your next round of endorsement contracts, and vault onto the world stage or reinforce everyone’s expectations about how you should do. Behind the scenes, the tennis industry is using the U.S. Open to introduce new shoes, racquets, accessories, and clothing (we know–we were a part of this process, which occurs at the Grand Slams almost exclusively) so if you want to know what you’ll be wearing this fall, take a close look at what the players are wearing at the Open.
Coming into this year’s U.S. Open, the usual suspects are at the top of the food chain in terms of favorites: Roger Federer (who was knocked out in the semis at Wimbledon), Rafa Nadal, and Novak Djokovic are favorites on the men’s side for the simple reason that they dominate men’s tennis. Djokovic came back to form at Wimbledon, which he won, and Nadal won the French (retire the current trophy…he always wins there); Federer started the year by winning the Australian. Now–add a few new (and wild) ones to the “in the running list”. Alexander Zverez (now coached by Lendl)has yet to win a major but if he can avoid a dip in performance over 14 days, he could be a factor. Kevin Anderson was a finalist at Wimbledon and should be taken seriously. Juan Martin del Poltro is a charismatic crowd favorite who keeps knocking big names out of tournaments; some like Grigor Dimitrov but we at Nightshift Sports think he’s got both mechanical (serve) and competitive psychology issues, despite a a potentially immense game (remember Texas football Darrell Royal’s famous quote: “Potential means you ain’t done it it yet”—and yes, we miss Coach Royal); Dominic Thiem has a marvelous game, but he may be the Phil Mickelson of tennis–going for too much when he doesn’t have to; John Isner is the best American male in the tournament and boy it would be great for Big John to finally break through; Marin Cilic, who has massive physical talent that is not equalled by his mental game, and Nick Kyrgios, the James Dean of tennis– mercurial would be an upgrade–who has the talent to win big but not yet the discipline or mental toughness. We shall see–that’s why they play the game. It’s been exceptionally hot at the U.S. Open and that’s taking a toll; eleven players have retired from competition due to heat related issues.
On the Womens’ side Simona Halep (WTA No. 1) was the No.1 seed but she lost in the first round to Kaia Kanepi; Serena Williams (No. 17 seed), who had a great run at Wimbledon but has won only one match this summer expects to contend and is into the second round, as is Caroline Wozniacki (seeded No.2) who came into the tournament a bit wounded with small injuries after a summer of competition; Petra Kvitova (WTA ranked No. 5, U.S. Open seed No. 5) won; and Angelique Kerber won, she’s the winner of the Women’s Singles Title at Wimbledon and seeded No.4 at the Open–Kerber is streaky but if she gets hot, she can ride it all the way to the finals and a title. Sloan Stephens is always an American favorite; Garbine Muguruza (winner of the French a couple of years ago)has a wonderful game when it shows up; and Madison Keys (another perennial American favorite) is always in the mix if not on the podium.
Results 
Day 5 winners included Nadal, del Poltro (he took out Verdasco, who took out Murray), Anderson, Raonic (beat Wawrinka…not a good year for Stan),  Isner, and Thiem.
The featured match on the Women’s side of the draw was V. Williams vs. S. Williams, and no cat suit was necessary for Serena to beat her sister in straight sets (6-1,6-2); Venus has not looked strong during the tournament, and the loss was not unexpected. Also winning on Day 5: Mertens, Pliskova, Svitolina, Kanepi, Sevastova.
Lots of U.S.Open coverage this weekend, so stay in touch with the  tools to keep you in the game, below, with our exclusive list of links to all that is good, proper, and accurate at the 2018 U.S. Open. Stay tuned, we will update throughout the tournament.
Links
Direct Link to U.S.Open Website
Direct Link to Men’s Draw
Direct Link to Women’s Draw
Direct Link to U.S. Open Draw ( all classes)
U.S.Open Schedule of Play
Players in the 2018 U.S. Open
How to Watch: International
How to Watch: USA
Favorites for 2018
U.S.Open history
The Kyrgios Drama
 
The Fine Print: Image embed courtesy of our friends at GettyImages.com, who have the photographic history of the 20th and 21st century on file. This image has not been altered in any way. All rights reserved by GettyImages.com. We thank them for sharing. Nightshift Sports coverage of the 2018 U.S. Open tennis championship is produced by Perception Engineering and the Media Bunker. Text copyright (c) donald pierce. Follow Nightshift Sports for the entire tournament as we update on a regular (and irregular) basis). Thanks for reading.
 

The Nightshift: World News, 1 September 2018

Press Clippings
Embed from Getty Images
People, places, and events for today
McCain DC Funeral
Sam Patten
Silent Sam
“First Man”
Coca-Cola 
 
Today is National College Colors Day. Fly ’em high. (it’s also National South Carolina Day…so that’s an easy one to celebrate too)
The Nightshift publishes direct links to the world’s greatest English language newspapers to facilitate research and encourage understanding of the world’s events of the day. The links are below. You are strongly encouraged to visit the sites below for news, perspective, and information that is not readily available via mainstream American media. Also, please note that new sites and links are added on a regular basis.
The Front Page Links
The Times (London
Financial Times (UK)
The Irish Times (Dublin, Ireland)
The Wall Street Journal (European edition)
Washington Post (Washington, D.C.)
New York Times (New York)
The Boston Globe (Boston)
The Guardian
The Los Angeles Times (Los Angeles)
Daily News Egypt (Cairo)
South China Morning Post (Hong Kong)
The Moscow Times (Moscow)
Italian Newspapers in English
Le Figaro (Paris)
Bloomberg.com (New York)
The Jerusalem Post (Jerusalem)
The Japanese Times (Tokyo)
The Local (Oslo)
The Local (Italy)
Sputnik (Moscow)
The Buenas Aires Herald (Buenas Aires)
The Sidney Morning Herald (Sidney)
Deadline Hollywood (Hollywood)
FiveThirtyEight (New York City)
Politico (Washington, DC)
Lawfareblog (Washington, DC)
Wired (San Francisco, CA)
The Weather Channel
CNN News Text Site
Ars Technica  
Agence France-Presse
McClatchy DC Bureau
Xinua
UPI
Oil Prices Dot Com
Air Force Times
Straits Times (Singapore)
The Fine Print. Embed courtesy of our friends at GettyImages.com, who have the photographic history of the 20th and 21st century on file. This image has not been altered in anyway. We thank GettyImages.com for sharing.  This post is number 1960 for this site (we’ve been busy overnight). The Nightshift is a continually evolving experiment in news communications and is a production of Perception Engineering and The Media Bunker. It’s rapid iteration within a surprisingly wide bandwidth. Thanks for reading. Now–catch up on the world.
 
 
 
 

The Nightshift: World News 31 August 2018

Press Clippings
Embed from Getty Images
People, places, and events for today
McCain
Colin Kaepernik vs. The NFL
European Auto Tarifff
Aretha
NBC/#metoo
 
Today is National College Colors Day. Fly ’em high. (it’s also National South Carolina Day…so that’s an easy one to celebrate too)
The Nightshift publishes direct links to the world’s greatest English language newspapers to facilitate research and encourage understanding of the world’s events of the day. The links are below. You are strongly encouraged to visit the sites below for news, perspective, and information that is not readily available via mainstream American media. Also, please note that new sites and links are added on a regular basis.
The Front Page Links
The Times (London
Financial Times (UK)
The Irish Times (Dublin, Ireland)
The Wall Street Journal (European edition)
Washington Post (Washington, D.C.)
New York Times (New York)
The Boston Globe (Boston)
The Guardian
The Los Angeles Times (Los Angeles)
Daily News Egypt (Cairo)
South China Morning Post (Hong Kong)
The Moscow Times (Moscow)
Italian Newspapers in English
Le Figaro (Paris)
Bloomberg.com (New York)
The Jerusalem Post (Jerusalem)
The Japanese Times (Tokyo)
The Local (Oslo)
The Local (Italy)
Sputnik (Moscow)
The Buenas Aires Herald (Buenas Aires)
The Sidney Morning Herald (Sidney)
Deadline Hollywood (Hollywood)
FiveThirtyEight (New York City)
Politico (Washington, DC)
Lawfareblog (Washington, DC)
Wired (San Francisco, CA)
The Weather Channel
CNN News Text Site
Ars Technica  
Agence France-Presse
McClatchy DC Bureau
Xinua
UPI
Oil Prices Dot Com
Air Force Times
Straits Times (Singapore)
The Fine Print. Embed courtesy of our friends at GettyImages.com, who have the photographic history of the 20th and 21st century on file. This image has not been altered in anyway. We thank GettyImages.com for sharing.  This post is number 1959 for this site (we’ve been busy overnight). The Nightshift is a continually evolving experiment in news communications and is a production of Perception Engineering and The Media Bunker. It’s rapid iteration within a surprisingly wide bandwidth. Thanks for reading. Now–catch up on the world.
 
 
 
 

Nightshift Sports: US Open 29 August 2018

Day 3
Embed from Getty Images
Context and Background
The U.S. Open, which starts August 27th and runs through September 9th,  is the last tennis major of the year. There was a week of qualifying (the qualifying started on 21 August) and now the real heavy lifting begins, starting on Monday, the 27th. The U.S. Open and the Australian Open are the two  majors that are played on hard courts (they are also the first and last majors of the year); the French is played on clay and Wimbledon–arguably the most famous tennis tournament in the world–is played on grass. The courts at the U.S. are very quick, perhaps just a shade quicker than the hard courts at the Australian Open. One thing the U.S. Open brings to the game that none of the others offer is competition under the lights(matches can go to very late at night); that is unique to the U.S. Open  as is the often raucous and loud crowd that is a competitive asset (if you’re a crowd favorite) or liability if you’re not. There is no setting in modern tennis that is as loud and combustible as the U.S. Open. It’s one of a kind.
But…..that’s all as it should be; the tournament is staged in Queens in New York City, at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center. New York has never been a “soft city” and the Open and it’s tough crowd represents the city’s persona perfectly. It’s a tough, rambunctious, bruising city and once a year it shows up in Queens to take in a little tennis.   It’s not coincidence that a true child of New York, the sometimes volatile, always brilliant John McEnroe, won four U.S. Open singles titles (his chief rival of that era, Bjorn Borg, won none). McEnroe also won four U.S. Open doubles titles (it has often been said that the “best team in doubles is John McEnroe and whoever he is playing with”). He will be a commentator for television coverage and you would do well to pay close attention to his analysis–especially of the players at this particular tournament.
The U.S. Open as we it today was founded in 1968 but was preceded by a series of tournaments that started as far back as 1881. and over the years, the tournament has been held on clay, grass, and finally, hard court. This year, Nightshift Sports will be providing daily updates, how to watch information, some behind the scenes commentary from our exclusive correspondents, and, of course, the best set of links in sports coverage. Scene set, let’s get to the pre-tournament predictions.
The Contenders
This is the last major of the year–one last chance to add a major (also called a “Grand Slam”) to the resume, move up the world rankings, get a head start on your next round of endorsement contracts, and vault onto the world stage or reinforce everyone’s expectations about how you should do. Behind the scenes, the tennis industry is using the U.S. Open to introduce new shoes, racquets, accessories, and clothing (we know–we were a part of this process, which occurs at the Grand Slams almost exclusively) so if you want to know what you’ll be wearing this fall, take a close look at what the players are wearing at the Open.
Coming into this year’s U.S. Open, the usual suspects are at the top of the food chain in terms of favorites: Roger Federer (who was knocked out in the semis at Wimbledon), Rafa Nadal, and Novak Djokovic are favorites on the men’s side for the simple reason that they dominate men’s tennis. Djokovic came back to form at Wimbledon, which he won, and Nadal won the French (retire the current trophy…he always wins there); Federer started the year by winning the Australian. Now–add a few new (and wild) ones to the “in the running list”. Alexander Zverez (no coached by Lendl)has yet to win a major but if he can avoid a dip in performance over 14 days, he could be a factor. Kevin Anderson was a finalist at Wimbledon and should be taken seriously. Juan Martin del Poltro is a charismatic crowd favorite who keeps knocking big names out of tournaments; some like Grigor Dimitrov but we at Nightshift Sports think he’s got both mechanical (serve) and competitive psychology issues, despite a a potentially immense game (remember Texas football Darrell Royal’s famous quote: “Potential means you ain’t done it it yet”—and yes, we miss Coach Royal); Dominic Thiem has a marvelous game, but he may be the Phil Mickelson of tennis–going for too much when he doesn’t have to; John Isner is the best American male in the tournament and boy it would be great for Big John to finally break through; Marin Cilic, who has massive physical talent that is not equalled by his mental game, and Nick Kyrgios, the James Dean of tennis– mercurial would be an upgrade–who has the talent to win big but not yet the discipline or mental toughness. We shall see–that’s why they play the game. Monday’s results: Nadal, del Poltro, Cilic through. Nadal and Cilic won as their opponents retired due to injuries. It’s been exceptionally hot at the U.S. Open and that’s taking a toll.
On the womens’ side Simona Halep (WTA No. 1) was the No.1 seed but she lost in the first round to Kaia Kanepi; Serena Williams (No. 17 seed), who had a great run at Wimbledon but has won only one match this summer expects to contend and is into the second round, as is Caroline Wozniacki (seeded No.2) who came into the tournament a bit wounded with small injuries after a summer of competition; Petra Kvitova (WTA ranked No. 5, U.S. Open seed No. 5) won; and Angelique Kerber won, she’s the winner of the Women’s Singles Title at Wimbledon and seeded No.4 at the Open–Kerber is streaky but if she gets hot, she can ride it all the way to the finals and a title. Sloan Stephens is always an American favorite; Garbine Muguruza (winner of the French a couple of years ago)has a wonderful game when it shows up; and Madison Keys (another perennial American favorite) is always in the mix if not on the podium.
Results
The incident of the day occurred when French player Alize Cornet changed her shirt (it was on backwards) while she was on court, momentarily exposing her to the crowd in an outfit that was the equivalent of a bikini with shorts. For that she was censured by the match referee (code violation); then the women’s reps complained and noted that it was unfair, men were changing shirts all the time on the court. Things will change. Cornet did not advance, but it wasn’t because of the shirt.
Wedneday’s results saw Federer, Nadal, Djokovic, Cilic, Thiem, Del Poltro,  Monfils,  Krygios, Warwrinka, Zverev continue. Jack Sock and Andy Murray(still not fully healthy) lost.
The women’s side  included both Williams sisters winning…that will set up a match between the two of them. Sharapova  Stephens, Keys, Kvitova, Kaneipi, Pliskova  and Bouchard won their matches.
Hopefully you can watch a lot of the U.S.Open over the next two weeks, so–just to make it fun–do your own list of the top 5 and see how it all plays out. In the meantime, we’ve got the tools to keep you in the game, below, with our exclusive list of links to all that is good, proper, and accurate at the 2018 U.S. Open. Stay tuned, we will update throughout the tournament.
 
Links
Direct Link to U.S.Open Website
Direct Link to Men’s Draw
Direct Link to Women’s Draw
Direct Link to U.S. Open Draw ( all classes)
U.S.Open Schedule of Play
Players in the 2018 U.S. Open
How to Watch: International
How to Watch: USA
Favorites for 2018
U.S.Open history
CBS Results
 
The Fine Print: Image embed courtesy of our friends at GettyImages.com, who have the photographic history of the 20th and 21st century on file. This image has not been altered in any way. All rights reserved by GettyImages.com. We thank them for sharing. Nightshift Sports coverage of the 2018 U.S. Open tennis championship is produced by Perception Engineering and the Media Bunker. Text copyright (c) donald pierce. Follow Nightshift Sports for the entire tournament as we update on a regular (and irregular) basis). Thanks for reading.
 

The Nightshift: World News 30 August 2018

Press Clippings
Embed from Getty Images
People, places, and events for today
Donald McGahn
US Open Wardrobe Malfunction
Aaron Rodgers/Green Bay Packers
Seattle
Aston Martin/James Bond
Today is National Grief Awareness Day. Reach out and comfort those who have suffered the loss of a friend or relative.
The Nightshift publishes direct links to the world’s greatest English language newspapers to facilitate research and encourage understanding of the world’s events of the day. The links are below. You are strongly encouraged to visit the sites below for news, perspective, and information that is not readily available via mainstream American media. Also, please note that new sites and links are added on a regular basis.
The Front Page Links
The Times (London
Financial Times (UK)
The Irish Times (Dublin, Ireland)
The Wall Street Journal (European edition)
Washington Post (Washington, D.C.)
New York Times (New York)
The Boston Globe (Boston)
The Guardian
The Los Angeles Times (Los Angeles)
Daily News Egypt (Cairo)
South China Morning Post (Hong Kong)
The Moscow Times (Moscow)
Italian Newspapers in English
Le Figaro (Paris)
Bloomberg.com (New York)
The Jerusalem Post (Jerusalem)
The Japanese Times (Tokyo)
The Local (Oslo)
The Local (Italy)
Sputnik (Moscow)
The Buenas Aires Herald (Buenas Aires)
The Sidney Morning Herald (Sidney)
Deadline Hollywood (Hollywood)
FiveThirtyEight (New York City)
Politico (Washington, DC)
Lawfareblog (Washington, DC)
Wired (San Francisco, CA)
The Weather Channel
CNN News Text Site
Ars Technica  
Agence France-Presse
McClatchy DC Bureau
Xinua
UPI
Oil Prices Dot Com
Air Force Times
Straits Times (Singapore)
The Fine Print. Embed courtesy of our friends at GettyImages.com, who have the photographic history of the 20th and 21st century on file. This image has not been altered in anyway. We thank GettyImages.com for sharing.  This post is number 1957 for this site (we’ve been busy overnight). The Nightshift is a continually evolving experiment in news communications and is a production of Perception Engineering and The Media Bunker. It’s rapid iteration within a surprisingly wide bandwidth. Thanks for reading. Now–catch up on the world.
 
 
 
 

Nightshift Sports: U.S. Open 28 August 2018

Day 2
Embed from Getty Images
Context
The U.S. Open, which starts August 27th and runs through September 9th,  is the last tennis major of the year. There was a week of qualifying (the qualifying started on 21 August) and now the real heavy lifting begins, starting on Monday, the 27th. The U.S. Open and the Australian Open are the two  majors that are played on hard courts (they are also the first and last majors of the year); the French is played on clay and Wimbledon–arguably the most famous tennis tournament in the world–is played on grass. The courts at the U.S. are very quick, perhaps just a shade quicker than the hard courts at the Australian Open. One thing the U.S. Open brings to the game that none of the others offer is competition under the lights(matches can go to very late at night); that is unique to the U.S. Open  as is the often raucous and loud crowd that is a competitive asset (if you’re a crowd favorite) or liability if you’re not. There is no setting in modern tennis that is as loud and combustible as the U.S. Open. It’s one of a kind.
But…..that’s all as it should be; the tournament is staged in Queens in New York City, at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center. New York has never been a “soft city” and the Open and it’s tough crowd represents the city’s persona perfectly. It’s a tough, rambunctious, bruising city and once a year it shows up in Queens to take in a little tennis.   It’s not coincidence that a true child of New York, the sometimes volatile, always brilliant John McEnroe, won four U.S. Open singles titles (his chief rival of that era, Bjorn Borg, won none). McEnroe also won four U.S. Open doubles titles (it has often been said that the “best team in doubles is John McEnroe and whoever he is playing with”). He will be a commentator for television coverage and you would do well to pay close attention to his analysis–especially of the players at this particular tournament.
The U.S. Open as we it today was founded in 1968 but was preceded by a series of tournaments that started as far back as 1881. and over the years, the tournament has been held on clay, grass, and finally, hard court. This year, Nightshift Sports will be providing daily updates, how to watch information, some behind the scenes commentary from our exclusive correspondents, and, of course, the best set of links in sports coverage. Scene set, let’s get to the pre-tournament predictions.
The Contenders
This is the last major of the year–one last chance to add a major (also called a “Grand Slam”) to the resume, move up the world rankings, get a head start on your next round of endorsement contracts, and vault onto the world stage or reinforce everyone’s expectations about how you should do. Behind the scenes, the tennis industry is using the U.S. Open to introduce new shoes, racquets, accessories, and clothing (we know–we were a part of this process, which occurs at the Grand Slams almost exclusively) so if you want to know what you’ll be wearing this fall, take a close look at what the players are wearing at the Open.
Coming into this year’s U.S. Open, the usual suspects are at the top of the food chain in terms of favorites: Roger Federer (who was knocked out in the semis at Wimbledon), Rafa Nadal, and Novak Djokovic are favorites on the men’s side for the simple reason that they dominate men’s tennis. Djokovic came back to form at Wimbledon, which he won, and Nadal won the French (retire the current trophy…he always wins there); Federer started the year by winning the Australian. Now–add a few new (and wild) ones to the “in the running list”. Alexander Zverez (no coached by Lendl)has yet to win a major but if he can avoid a dip in performance over 14 days, he could be a factor. Kevin Anderson was a finalist at Wimbledon and should be taken seriously. Juan Martin del Poltro is a charismatic crowd favorite who keeps knocking big names out of tournaments; some like Grigor Dimitrov but we at Nightshift Sports think he’s got both mechanical (serve) and competitive psychology issues, despite a a potentially immense game (remember Texas football Darrell Royal’s famous quote: “Potential means you ain’t done it it yet”—and yes, we miss Coach Royal); Dominic Thiem has a marvelous game, but he may be the Phil Mickelson of tennis–going for too much when he doesn’t have to; John Isner is the best American male in the tournament and boy it would be great for Big John to finally break through; Marin Cilic, who has massive physical talent that is not equalled by his mental game, and Nick Kyrgios, the James Dean of tennis– mercurial would be an upgrade–who has the talent to win big but not yet the discipline or mental toughness. We shall see–that’s why they play the game. Monday’s results: Nadal, del Poltro, Cilic through. Nadal and Cilic won as their opponents retired due to injuries. It’s been exceptionally hot at the U.S. Open and that’s taking a toll.
On the womens’ side Simona Halep (WTA No. 1) was the No.1 seed but she lost in the first round to Kaia Kanepi; Serena Williams (No. 17 seed), who had a great run at Wimbledon but has won only one match this summer expects to contend and is into the second round, as is Caroline Wozniacki (seeded No.2) who came into the tournament a bit wounded with small injuries after a summer of competition; Petra Kvitova (WTA ranked No. 5, U.S. Open seed No. 5) won; and Angelique Kerber won, she’s the winner of the Women’s Singles Title at Wimbledon and seeded No.4 at the Open–Kerber is streaky but if she gets hot, she can ride it all the way to the finals and a title. Sloan Stephens is always an American favorite; Garbine Muguruza (winner of the French a couple of years ago)has a wonderful game when it shows up; and Madison Keys (another perennial American favorite) is always in the mix if not on the podium. Venus Williams also won….she could meet her sister, Serena, later in the tournament.
Results
It was brutal on the second day at the Open with sizzling, body-and-resolve melting heat affected everyone. The U.S. Open experienced a day like never before–five men retired due to the heat. Djokovic finally won his match in five sets, but had to take an ice bath (along with opponent Marton Fucsovics) to play out the match. The heat difficulties were no doubt amplified by the lack of a defined policy by the USTA for male tennis competitors. The players were offered a 10 minute break (men, after the third set; women, between sets 2 and 3). Djokovic and his opponent made the most creative use of the break but, as one official noted, “they were lucky that retirements were the only thing that happened”….a veiled implication that something much worse–heat stroke–could have occurred.
Tuesday’s results on the men’s side revealed that the “usual suspects” are behaving according to form, i.e. making it to the second round. Federer, Nadal, Djokovic, Sock, Cilic, Thiemm, del Poltro,  Monfils, Murray, Krygios, Warwrinka, Zverev all made it through to Round Two.
The women’s side also played truer to form after the Day 1 shock of Halep being upset. Sharapova (looking very rusty but still one of the very best competitors), Wozniacki, Stephens, Keys, Kvitova, Osaka (new and one to watch), Ostapenk0, and Kerber all made it to round two. American fav Coco Vandeweghe lost.
Hopefully you can watch a lot of the U.S.Open over the next two weeks, so–just to make it fun–do your own list of the top 5 and see how it all plays out. In the meantime, we’ve got the tools to keep you in the game, below, with our exclusive list of links to all that is good, proper, and accurate at the 2018 U.S. Open. Stay tuned, we will update throughout the tournament.
 
Links
Direct Link to U.S.Open Website
Direct Link to Men’s Draw
Direct Link to Women’s Draw
Direct Link to U.S. Open Draw ( all classes)
U.S.Open Schedule of Play
Players in the 2018 U.S. Open
How to Watch: International
How to Watch: USA
Favorites for 2018
U.S.Open history
CBS Results 
 
The Fine Print: Image embed courtesy of our friends at GettyImages.com, who have the photographic history of the 20th and 21st century on file. This image has not been altered in any way. All rights reserved by GettyImages.com. We thank them for sharing. Nightshift Sports coverage of the 2018 U.S. Open tennis championship is produced by Perception Engineering and the Media Bunker. Text copyright (c) donald pierce. Follow Nightshift Sports for the entire tournament as we update on a regular (and irregular) basis). Thanks for reading.
 

The Nightshift: 29 August 2018

Press Clippings
Embed from Getty Images
People, places, and events for today
Andrew Gillum
Google Search Results
Miami’s Water Problem
Hot Courts
Primaries
Today is National Chop Suey Day. Where did you leave those chopsticks?
The Nightshift publishes direct links to the world’s greatest English language newspapers to facilitate research and encourage understanding of the world’s events of the day. The links are below. You are strongly encouraged to visit the sites below for news, perspective, and information that is not readily available via mainstream American media. Also, please note that new sites and links are added on a regular basis.
The Front Page Links
The Times (London
Financial Times (UK)
The Irish Times (Dublin, Ireland)
The Wall Street Journal (European edition)
Washington Post (Washington, D.C.)
New York Times (New York)
The Boston Globe (Boston)
The Guardian
The Los Angeles Times (Los Angeles)
Daily News Egypt (Cairo)
South China Morning Post (Hong Kong)
The Moscow Times (Moscow)
Italian Newspapers in English
Le Figaro (Paris)
Bloomberg.com (New York)
The Jerusalem Post (Jerusalem)
The Japanese Times (Tokyo)
The Local (Oslo)
The Local (Italy)
Sputnik (Moscow)
The Buenas Aires Herald (Buenas Aires)
The Sidney Morning Herald (Sidney)
Deadline Hollywood (Hollywood)
FiveThirtyEight (New York City)
Politico (Washington, DC)
Lawfareblog (Washington, DC)
Wired (San Francisco, CA)
The Weather Channel
CNN News Text Site
Ars Technica  
Agence France-Presse
McClatchy DC Bureau
Xinua
UPI
Oil Prices Dot Com
Air Force Times
Straits Times (Singapore)
The Fine Print. Embed courtesy of our friends at GettyImages.com, who have the photographic history of the 20th and 21st century on file. This image has not been altered in anyway. We thank GettyImages.com for sharing.  This post is number 1954 for this site (we’ve been busy overnight). The Nightshift is a continually evolving experiment in news communications and is a production of Perception Engineering and The Media Bunker. It’s rapid iteration within a surprisingly wide bandwidth. Thanks for reading. Now–catch up on the world.
 
 
 
 

Nightshift Sports: U.S. Open 27 August 2018

It Begins:
Embed from Getty Images
Context
The U.S. Open, which starts August 27th and runs through September 9th,  is the last tennis major of the year. There was a week of qualifying (the qualifying started on 21 August) and now the real heavy lifting begins, starting on Monday, the 27th. The U.S. Open and the Australian Open are the two  majors that are played on hard courts (they are also the first and last majors of the year); the French is played on clay and Wimbledon–arguably the most famous tennis tournament in the world–is played on grass. The courts at the U.S. are very quick, perhaps just a shade quicker than the hard courts at the Australian Open. One thing the U.S. Open brings to the game that none of the others offer is competition under the lights; that is unique to the U.S. Open (play can extend to deep in the night)   as is the often raucous and loud crowd that is a competitive asset (if you’re a crowd favorite) or liability if you’re not. There is no setting in modern tennis that is as loud and combustible as the U.S. Open. It’s one of a kind.
But…..that’s all as it should be; the tournament is staged in Queens in New York City, at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center. New York has never been a “soft city” and the Open and it’s tough crowd represents the city’s persona perfectly. It’s a tough, rambunctious, bruising city and once a year it shows up in Queens to take in a little tennis.   It’s not coincidence that a true child of New York, the sometimes volatile, always brilliant John McEnroe, won four U.S. Open singles titles (his chief rival of that era, Bjorn Borg, won none). McEnroe also won four U.S. Open doubles titles (it has often been said that the “best team in doubles is John McEnroe and whoever he is playing with”). He will be a commentator for television coverage and you would do well to pay close attention to his analysis–especially of the players at this particular tournament.
The U.S. Open as we know it today was founded in 1968 but was preceded by a series of tournaments that started as far back as 1881. and over the years, the tournament has been held on clay, grass, and finally, hard court. This year, Nightshift Sports will be providing daily updates, how to watch information, some behind the scenes commentary from our exclusive correspondents, and, of course, the best set of links in sports coverage. Scene set, let’s get to the pre-tournament predictions.
The Contenders
This is the last major of the year–one last chance to add a major (also called a “Grand Slam”) to the resume, move up the world rankings, get a head start on your next round of endorsement contracts, and vault onto the world stage or reinforce everyone’s expectations about how you should do. Behind the scenes, the tennis industry is using the U.S. Open to introduce new shoes, racquets, accessories, and clothing (we know–we were a part of this process, which occurs at the Grand Slams almost exclusively) so if you want to know what you’ll be wearing this fall, take a close look at what the players are wearing at the Open.
Coming into this year’s U.S. Open, the usual suspects are at the top of the food chain in terms of favorites: Roger Federer (who was knocked out in the semis at Wimbledon), Rafa Nadal, and Novak Djokovic are favorites on the men’s side for the simple reason that they dominate men’s tennis. Djokovic came back to form at Wimbledon, which he won, and Nadal won the French (retire the current trophy…he always wins there); Federer started the year by winning the Australian. Now–add a few new (and wild) ones to the “in the running list”. Alexander Zverez has yet to win a major but if he can avoid a dip in performance over 14 days, he could be a factor. Kevin Anderson was a finalist at Wimbledon and should be taken seriously. Juan Martin del Poltro is a charismatic crowd favorite who keeps knocking big names out of tournaments; some like Grigor Dimitrov but we at Nightshift Sports think he’s got both mechanical (serve) and competitive psychology issues, despite a a potentially immense game (remember Texas football Darrell Royal’s famous quote: “Potential means you ain’t done it it yet”—and yes, we miss Coach Royal); Dominic Thiem has a marvelous game, but he may be the Phil Mickelson of tennis–going for too much when he doesn’t have to; John Isner, best American male in the tournament and boy it would be great for Big John to finally break through; Marin Cilic, who has massive physical talent that is not equalled by his mental game, and Nick Kyrgios, the James Dean of tennis– mercurial would be an upgrade–who has the talent to win big but not yet the discipline or mental toughness. We shall see–that’s why they play the game. Monday’s results: Nadal, del Poltro, Cilic through. Nadal and Cilic won as their opponents retired due to injuries. It’s been exceptionally hot at the U.S. Open and that’s taking a toll.
On the womens’ side Simona Halep (WTA No. 1) was the No.1 seed but she lost to Kaia Kanepi in the first round–a bit of an embarrassment; Serena Williams (No. 17 seed), who had a great run at Wimbledon but has won only one match this summer expects to contend,  won and is into the second round, as is Caroline Wozniacki (seeded No.2) who came into the tournament a bit wounded with small injuries after a summer of competition; Petra Kvitova (WTA ranked No. 5, U.S. Open seed No. 5) won; and Angelique Kerber also got through, she’s the winner of the Women’s Singles Title at Wimbledon and seeded No.4 at the Open–Kerber is streaky but if she gets hot, she can ride it all the way to the finals and a title. Sloan Stephens is always an American favorite and won here last year; Garbine Muguruza (winner of the French a couple of years ago)has a wonderful game when it shows up; and Madison Keys (another perennial American favorite) is always in the mix if not on the podium. Venus Williams also won….she could meet her sister, Serena, later in the tournament.
Hopefully you can watch a lot of the U.S.Open over the next two weeks, so–just to make it fun–do your own list of the top 5 and see how it all plays out. In the meantime, we’ve got the tools to keep you in the game, below, with our exclusive list of links to all that is good, proper, and accurate at the 2018 U.S. Open. Stay tuned, we will update throughout the tournament.
 
Links
Direct Link to U.S.Open Website
Direct Link to Men’s Draw
Direct Link to Women’s Draw
Direct Link to U.S. Open Draw ( all classes)
U.S.Open Schedule of Play
Players in the 2018 U.S. Open
How to Watch: International
How to Watch: USA
Favorites for 2018
U.S.Open history
 
The Fine Print: Image embed courtesy of our friends at GettyImages.com, who have the photographic history of the 20th and 21st century on file. This image has not been altered in any way. All rights reserved by GettyImages.com. We thank them for sharing. Nightshift Sports coverage of the 2018 U.S. Open tennis championship is produced by Perception Engineering and the Media Bunker. Text copyright (c) donald pierce. Follow Nightshift Sports for the entire tournament as we update on a regular (and irregular) basis). Thanks for reading.
 

The Nightshift: World News, 28 August 2018

Press Clippings
Embed from Getty Images
We’ve lost two extraordinary people in the last few days, Senator John McCain and Neil “Doc”Simon, both of whom contributed to the richness and character of America. They will be missed. Today, The Nightshift returns to its standard format.
People, places, and events for today:
John McCain
NAFTA II
E-Sports Shooting
The End of Sears? 
McCain and Trump
U.S. Open
Today is National Bow Tie Day….a a very good occasion to tie one on.
The Nightshift publishes direct links to the world’s greatest English language newspapers to facilitate research and encourage understanding of the world’s events of the day. The links are below. You are strongly encouraged to visit the sites below for news, perspective, and information that is not readily available via mainstream American media. Also, please note that new sites and links are added on a regular basis.
The Front Page Links
The Times (London
Financial Times (UK)
The Irish Times (Dublin, Ireland)
The Wall Street Journal (European edition)
Washington Post (Washington, D.C.)
New York Times (New York)
The Boston Globe (Boston)
The Guardian
The Los Angeles Times (Los Angeles)
Daily News Egypt (Cairo)
South China Morning Post (Hong Kong)
The Moscow Times (Moscow)
Italian Newspapers in English
Le Figaro (Paris)
Bloomberg.com (New York)
The Jerusalem Post (Jerusalem)
The Japanese Times (Tokyo)
The Local (Oslo)
The Local (Italy)
Sputnik (Moscow)
The Buenas Aires Herald (Buenas Aires)
The Sidney Morning Herald (Sidney)
Deadline Hollywood (Hollywood)
FiveThirtyEight (New York City)
Politico (Washington, DC)
Lawfareblog (Washington, DC)
Wired (San Francisco, CA)
The Weather Channel
CNN News Text Site
Ars Technica  
Agence France-Presse
McClatchy DC Bureau
Xinua
UPI
Oil Prices Dot Com
Air Force Times
Straits Times (Singapore)
The Fine Print. Embed courtesy of our friends at GettyImages.com, who have the photographic history of the 20th and 21st century on file. This image has not been altered in anyway. We thank GettyImages.com for sharing.  This post is number 1953 for this site (we’ve been busy overnight). The Nightshift is a continually evolving experiment in news communications and is a production of Perception Engineering and The Media Bunker. It’s rapid iteration within a surprisingly wide bandwidth. Thanks for reading. Now–catch up on the world.
 
 
 
 

The Nightshift: World News 27 August 2018

Press Clippings
Embed from Getty Images
People, places, and events for today:
Neil “Doc” Simon
The Nightshift publishes direct links to the world’s greatest English language newspapers to facilitate research and encourage understanding of the world’s events of the day. The links are below. You are strongly encouraged to visit the sites below for news, perspective, and information that is not readily available via mainstream American media. Also, please note that new sites and links are added on a regular basis.
The Front Page Links
The Times (London
Financial Times (UK)
The Irish Times (Dublin, Ireland)
The Wall Street Journal (European edition)
Washington Post (Washington, D.C.)
New York Times (New York)
The Boston Globe (Boston)
The Guardian
The Los Angeles Times (Los Angeles)
Daily News Egypt (Cairo)
South China Morning Post (Hong Kong)
The Moscow Times (Moscow)
Italian Newspapers in English
Le Figaro (Paris)
Bloomberg.com (New York)
The Jerusalem Post (Jerusalem)
The Japanese Times (Tokyo)
The Local (Oslo)
The Local (Italy)
Sputnik (Moscow)
The Buenas Aires Herald (Buenas Aires)
The Sidney Morning Herald (Sidney)
Deadline Hollywood (Hollywood)
FiveThirtyEight (New York City)
Politico (Washington, DC)
Lawfareblog (Washington, DC)
Wired (San Francisco, CA)
The Weather Channel
CNN News Text Site
Ars Technica  
Agence France-Presse
McClatchy DC Bureau
Xinua
UPI
Oil Prices Dot Com
Air Force Times
Straits Times (Singapore)
The Fine Print. Embed courtesy of our friends at GettyImages.com, who have the photographic history of the 20th and 21st century on file. This image has not been altered in anyway. We thank GettyImages.com for sharing.  This post is number 1952 for this site (we’ve been busy overnight). The Nightshift is a continually evolving experiment in news communications and is a production of Perception Engineering and The Media Bunker. It’s rapid iteration within a surprisingly wide bandwidth. Thanks for reading. Now–catch up on the world.