Andy Sullivan and Chris Wood will represent England at the World Cup of Golf this month.The pair will play after Danny Willetts withdrawal with a back injury last week and Justin Roses decision not to feature as he is still recovering from his own back problem.Roses call to turn down the invite allowed Wood to commit to the event and he selected Sullivan, who made his Ryder Cup debut for Europe this year, as his playing partner, meaning Lee Westwood, who was due to play with Willett, will no longer feature.The tournament takes place at Kingston Heath Golf Club in Melbourne from November 24-27, with 28 two-man teams representing their countries. Will Grier Jersey . Peter Holland and Brad Staubitz were sent to Toronto on Saturday as the Maple Leafs traded defenceman Jesse Blacker and draft picks to the Anaheim Ducks. Luke Kuechly Panthers Jersey . The Cincinnati Reds remain perfect with their speedy rookie outfielder in the starting lineup. http://www.thepanthersofficialstore.com/authentic-dj-moore-panthers-jersey/ . Dusautoir, the former World Player of the Year, sustained a torn bicep playing for Toulouse in the Heineken Cup on Saturday. The flanker, who has played 65 times for France, is expected to be out for up to four months. Brian Burns Panthers Jersey . The defending champion beat Gael Monfils of France 7-6 (6), 6-3, while second-seeded Andy Murray of Britain dispatched Edouard Roger-Vasselin, also of France, 6-3, 6-3. Making his first appearance since injuring his wrist a month ago, Del Potro had difficulty with his service games in the first set. Sam Mills Jersey . -- Canadian Andrew Wiggins got the ball on the wing, made a nifty spin move and then let go with a soft floater from about 10 feet that swished through the net in Allen Fieldhouse. War imagery has always been used to describe sporting contests: battled on, assault, marshall the troops, lay siege to, tracer bullet, shell-shocked. John Buchanan, in fact, is known to have taken more than a page or two out of Sun Tzus The Art of War during his time as coach of Australia.The metaphors of conflict help paint a picture of sorts for us spectators, but they begin to feel hollow when we look back at the number of players who had to leave the cricket fields to fight in real battlegrounds and the number of people who still try to lead lives (and sometimes play cricket) in war-torn areas today.October 1945: World War Two was over but it would take years for Britain to recover from the blitzkrieg bombings. In the picture above, a group of men play cricket in Blackfriars, London, during their lunch hour, with St Pauls Cathedral in the background. According to the BBC, during the 1940 Blitz attacks in London, Winston Churchill asked that St Pauls be protected at all costs to preserve the morale of the people. Bombs rained down on the cathedral. Volunteer firewatchers patrolled its myriad corridors, armed with sandbags and water pumps to douse the flames… an incendiary device lodged on the roof. As it burned, the lead of the iconic dome began to melt. But luck was on the side of the firewatchers. The bomb dislodged, fell to the floor of the Stone Gallery, and was smothered with a sandbag.dddddddddddd St Pauls was saved.Members of the Royal Air Force play cricket in the Kuwait desert, near the Iraq border, in 2003.Len Hutton and Stan Nichols (first and second from left), who played together in Englands last Test before the war, in 1939, on parade at an Army School of Physical Training in 1940. Nichols, 38 during that match, didnt play for England again. Hutton, 22, went on to play 66 Tests after the war.The Oval took on the grim look of a prisoner of war camp in 1944. However, while the ground housed searchlight batteries, it was actually never used as a POW camp for enemy parachutists as planned.Another example of war metaphors in sport - a 1933 Australian cartoon suggesting things might get worse when the secretary of war, Lord Hailsham became the MCC president during the Bodyline series.Smoke from a V-1 flying bomb, also known as the Doodlebug, rises above Lords during a 1944 Army v RAF match featuring Test cricketers Wally Hammond, Les Ames, Maurice Leyland, Bill Edrich and Bob Wyatt. A stark reminder of the violence we have grown accustomed to today: a group of Afghan youngsters play in front of a destroyed helicopter in Kabul in 2006. ' ' '