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Najee Harris leaps over tall tacklers in a single bound

Najee Harris hurdles football players the way runners hurdle, well, hurdles.

On Friday, the Alabama running back notched what may be the highlight of the new year when he went up and over Notre Dame cornerback Nick McCloud on the way to the Crimson Tide’s 31-14 victory over Irish. 

Harris, who attended Antioch High School in California, was the most-recruited football player in the class of 2017. Now everyone knows about the athleticism of the 229-pound senior, who stands six feet two.

He’s also been hurdling defensemen for some time. On Saturday, I scrolled videos of Harris running with a football, including this video of him hurdling his way downfield in high school. 

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News

The Davis Cup is getting a makeover

This November, the Davis Cup will feature a face-off among 18 countries that meet in Madrid, marking the first time in 119 years that the tournament will not conclude in a two-team final on the favorite’s home court.

The new look for the top event in men’s team tennis will condense into two singles matches and one doubles match, with the outcome of each match determined by the best-of-three sets. That’s down from four singles and one doubles match, with the winner determined by the team that won three of the five matches.

The change, which the International Tennis Federation announced in August, aims to lure elite players who have tended to pass on competing for their countries thanks to the demands of their schedules. For example, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal have played each other 38 times but never in Davis Cup competition.

“I honestly don’t see it as the end of an era as much as I see it as the end of a chapter of a long book,” David Haggerty, president of the ITF, told the Times.

Some current and former players disagree. “The Davis Cup is dead, and part of the history of our sport is gone for a handful of dollars,” tweeted Nicolas Mahut of France, the third-ranked doubles player in the world

The reformatting comes amid a rivalry in team tennis competition. This January, the men’s tour will launch the ATP Cup in Australia with a 24-team format. The prize money for both cups — $18 million for the Davis Cup and $15 million for the ATP Cup – will be similar. But the ATP Cup also will enable players to compete for points toward their ranking.

In 1900, teams from the U.S and Britain (competing as the British Isles) faced off at the Longwood Cricket Club in Boston in the first Davis Cup.

The Americans won the cup that year and again the next in Brooklyn, setting off a rivalry that reversed when Britain won the title at Longwood in 1903. Fast forward to November, when Croatia, led by Marin Cilic, the seventh-ranked player in the world, clinched the title in a 3-1 victory over France. 

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Sports

Cricket All-Stars, NFL show globalization of sports

At JFK this week I passed a billboard for a financial firm that depicted a ball shaped like an American football but flatter at each end, like a rugby ball, with the pattern of a soccer ball.

The mythical mass served as metaphor for globalization, which two items in the news this week suggest is accelerating when it comes to sports.

First is a cricket match slated for Saturday at Citi Field in New York, the first of three exhibitions to be played in the U.S. this month by teams of retired all-stars. The other is an announcement by the NFL that it will play at least three games in London in each of the next five seasons after three contests there this year.

The moves mark a quickening of activity by two sports that have yet to arrive in the U.S. and U.K., respectively, on a national level. Of course, cricket has billions of fans around the world. Test matches between England and Pakistan, and between India and South Africa, are among the top events this weekend in all of sport.

The matches in the states will feature Sachin Tendulkar, who retired from the Indian national team two years ago after scoring 15,921 runs in 200 test matches, or 2,000 more than his closest rival; and Shane Warne, an Australian who retired in 2013 and ranks second of all time in wickets taken (getting a batter out) in test matches.

Tendulkar, 42, who may be the greatest batsman of all time, and Warne, 46, among the best bowlers ever, will helm opposing teams of former greats from Pakistan, India, England, South Africa, the West Indies, and Sri Lanka. “The vision is to globalize cricket,” Tendulkar told the Times. “Somewhere we need to start.”

That could be America, which in 1844 hosted the first international cricket match, between the U.S. and Canada. Today roughly 35,000 Americans play cricket, according to the United States of America Cricket Association.

The grounds at Citi Field will include a pitch that organizers of the matches have trucked from Indiana, where it was grown for the occasion by Mark Perham, the former groundsman at Eden Park, the largest stadium in New Zealand. The pitcher’s mound, which had a workout in the recently concluded World Series, will be lowered so as not to present a hazard for cricketers.

American football comes to rugby grounds

Separately, the NFL announced on Tuesday it has leased Twickenham Stadium, which normally houses rugby and recently hosted the sport’s world cup, for each of the next three seasons.

That brings to three the number of venues the league will use to host games in London between now and 2020. In addition to Twickenham, which holds 82,000 people, the league will play at least two games a year at Wembley Stadium over the coming five years.

The NFL also is slated to play two games a year at a stadium being built for Tottenham Hotspur when it is completed in 2018.

According to the league, the three games it hosted this season at Wembley averaged 83,777 fans apiece, a crowd roughly equivalent to the capacity of MetLife Stadium.

The push by the NFL to expand internationally will extend south as well. The league is expected to play at least one game in Mexico City in 2016 and says it is exploring matchups in Germany and Brazil.