Mens Co-Runner of the Week: Frankline Tonui, Arkansas **Arkansas Frankline Tonui was runner-up at the Pre-Nationals, second only to three-time national champion Edward Cheserek of Oregon. **Tonui finished in 23:56.10 and was one of only three runners in the field of 268 to post a sub-24 minute performance on the difficult 8K course. **He has been one of Arkansas top two finishers through all three races in which hes competed this season. Tonui led Arkansas to a second place team finish at Pre-Nationals ahead of six other nationally-ranked opponents.Mens Co-Runner of the Week: MJ Erb, Ole Miss **In just his second meet of the season, Ole Miss senior MJ Erb claimed the individual title and set the course record at the Penn State National Open. **Erb finished the 5.2 mile course in 20:49 and was able to beat out many runners who have run the same course many times. **This is Erbs second top-five finish this season, while only running in two races so far. He is ranked as the No. 10 individual runner by FloTrack.org.Womens Runner of the Week: Karrisa Schweizer, Missouri **Missouris Karissa Schweizer finished fourth overall in the 6000m at the Pre-National Invitational in Terre Haute, Ind., on Saturday. **Schweizer crossed the finish line with a personal-record time of 20:14.00, surpassing her previous 6000m best time of 20:23.10, set at the 2015 SEC Championships. **Schweizer, winner of two races earlier this season, has set a PR in each of her three races this season. At the Commodore Classic, Schweizer won the 5000m race with a time of 16:46.7, 13 seconds faster than her previous best. Schweizer then re-set her 5000m PR at the Chile Pepper Festival, crossing the finish line first at 16:09.83.Mens Freshman of the Week: Tyler Jones, Georgia **Georgias Tyler Jones posted the best finish of his career at the Crimson Classic last weekend. **The Bogart, Ga., native completed the 8K in 26:26.60 to help the Bulldogs to a second place finish. **Jones finished among the top-20 freshmen in the race that featured 217 participants.Womens Freshman of the Week: Taylor Werner, Arkansas **Arkansas Taylor Werner was the fourth-best freshman performer at the Pre-National Invitational and second-best finisher for the Razorbacks. **She finished in 20:44.40 and was one of two Arkansas runners to post a sub-21 minute performance in what was her first ever 6K of her collegiate career. **Werner finished among the top-30 best runners of the day in a field of 284 competitors. The race marked her third-consecutive performance among Arkansas top-two best runners. Morgan Schneiderlin Jersey . 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Western was last ranked first in the country in October 2011. Anthony Martial France Jersey .S. -- Nikolaj Ehlers registered a hat trick for the third straight game and Jonathan Drouin had a goal and five assists as the Halifax Mooseheads hammered the host Cape Breton Screaming Eagles 10-1 on Tuesday in Quebec Major Junior Hockey League action. Lady Luck has huge crushes on these two? AFP A new Test batting star emerged for England yesterday, to go with the new one-day batting star and new Twenty20 batting star, who also emerged over the last year. Eoin Morgans highly attractive three-for-the-price-of-one offer has added to the growing competition for places in a Test side that should soon start to impact even on the seemingly undroppable.The calmness, timing and variety of run-scoring capabilities that Morgan displayed in his excellent and stylish performance bode well for his and Englands future, but his innings also illustrated the BruceReidically slender margins that separate the vintage champagne of success from the budget processed grape juice of failure.A better wicketkeeper than Kamran Akmal (any volunteers? - no previous experience required; candidates should ideally possess their own gloves and, preferably, a willingness either to watch the ball all the way into the those gloves, or to move their feet, preferably both; apply to PCB by next Thursday) would probably have been standing in the right place to catch an edge when Morgan, on 5, played away from his body to another good ball by the brilliant Aamer. He later survived what appeared to be a fairly conclusive lbw appeal when missing a sweep off Shoaib Malik on 35.Hawk-Eye suggested the ball would have hit the inside of leg stump, but, to compound the umpiring error, Pakistan had blown their two referrals trying to get rid of Kevin Pietersen, who seemed to be busy trying to get rid of himself anyway, as Kamran expanded the range of known methods of wicketkeeping ineptitude by demanding a referral for a rejected caught-behind appeal after a ball that had barely passed within conversational distance of the bat.Had Morgan been caught on 5, questions would have been asked about his Test-match technique and his footwork against the swinging ball. Had he been given lbw, he would have failed to convert three consecutive 30-plus scores into half-centuries. Instead of proving his Test credentials, he would have raised further questions about them. Instead of delivering under pressure, he would have failed under pressure. Instead of a magical maiden ton. He capitalised brilliantly on his luck, and some low-grade spin bowling, to kickstart his Test career in spectacular style. Pietersen had plenty of good fortune in his innings, but looked like a man who doesnt play much cricket these days, and did not capitalise.Luck has always been and will always be a fundamental, and fascinating, part of sport, particularly in batting, where a batsmans bad luck is final (how many centuries would I have scored in my career if I hadnt been unlucky in 99% of all my innings?), and a batsmans good luck can make the different between an unremarkable failure and a career-defining success.Some examples: Lara, dropped by Durham wicketkeeper Scott on 18, powerdrills his name into the record books by blasting 501 not out. Gooch snicks Prabhakar at Lords in 1990, but Indian keeper More Kamrans the primary-school-level chance, and Gooch goes on to score another 297 runs. Pietersen at The Oval in 2005, on nought, edges Warne - but Gilchrists glove deflects the ball away from the waiting Hayden at slip; then after 15, nervous in one of the most pressurised periods of play in all Test cricket, he edges Lee to slip, where Warne fluffs a relatively simple chance. On each occasion, the batsman was, essentially, provisionally out. They had made their mistakes, and were merely awaiting confirmation of their dismissals. Before being reprieved, and capitalising to achieve cricketing immortality.Pietersens luck was particularly transformative - it probably won the Ashes for England, and he became a cricketing hero over the courrse of one staggering afternoon.dddddddddddd History shows that he played one of the great modern Test innings, one of the most brilliant and important in Englands Test history, an expression of individual cricketing bravery and daring that just about justified a brave and daring hairstyle, and elevated himself to the cricketing A-list. History could have shown that he failed, technically and temperamentally, thus concluding a debut series in which his early promise had faded into a run of costly failures, whilst sporting the most ridiculous haircut in Test history.Similarly, there must be many of one-, two- and three-cap Test players who ended their careers thinking, If only that usually incompetent fielder hadnt pulled off that uncharacteristic one-handed diving catch, or If only that umpire hadnt been certifiably blind. Scorecards do not record luck.Perhaps 1920s batsman Jack MacBryan would have turned out to be a surprise Test-match great. He had an unlucky Test career. In his only Test, in 1924, it rained for much of the first day, then for all of the rest of the match. MacBryan did not bat. And failed, in his 66.5 overs of fielding, to convince the selectors that he had what it takes to succeed at the highest level. Perhaps they spotted some flaw in his technique whilst he was playing pretend shots in the covers in between balls.For Morgan, then, the future looks bright. The cream generally rises to the top. But sometimes, it needs a helping upward shunt from the capricious hand of Lady Luck, a fickle woman whose hand can tenderly stroke or unforgivingly spank.Pakistan have had little luck with umpiring this summer, particularly with lbws, and could have had England in even deeper trouble yesterday. As it was, with Gul and Kaneria off form, only Aamer - fast becoming the worlds new favourite cricketer - and Asif applied pressure, and the fragile confidence of Salman Butts side visibly dissipated. At Headingley against Australia, they seemed to become nervous in the field when it became clear they would have to chase more than one run to win. As it was, Farhat and Azhar nervelessly took them close enough that even a top-quality collective choke could not deprive them of an excellent victory. Their inexperienced top order and dangerously long tail will do well to avoid defeat in this game.(A quick comment on the Umpire Decision Review System. It seems to me to be unfairly weighted in favour of the batting team. Generally, more appeals are given not out than are given out, so statistically the fielding side has more occasions on which it is likely to want to use their referrals, and are thus more likely to run out of referrals. If a not-out lbw decision turns out to have been fractionally out, it remains not out. If an out decision transpires to have been fractionally not out, it becomes not out.Whilst this maintains the traditional balance of doubt in favour of the batsman, there is a double punishment when, as happened to Pakistan yesterday, Pakistan referred a not-out appeal, the technology suggested that it could/should have been given out, but only marginally, so the Umpires Call stood.Thus, Pakistan, despite essentially having correctly referred an appeal that was shown to be out, lost a referral. I suggest that if a team refers and appeal that results in an Umpires Call refusal, it should not lose one of its referrals. I also think the fielding side should have two appeals, but the batting team should only have one.)(And finally, commiserations to all those who had to watch the Colombo Test match. I can only imagine what you have just been through. It sounds awful.) ' ' '