CSK need to get their balance right with Suresh Raina and Harbhajan Singh missing

The absence of the experienced duo could open up spots for the uncapped Ruturaj Gaikwad and R Sai Kishore

Deivarayan Muthu18-Sep-20204:11

Will Jadeja be the breakthrough player for CSK this year?

Where they finished in 2019: Runners-up, losing to Mumbai Indians by just one run in a nerve-wracking last-ball finish.Potential XI: 1 Shane Watson, 2 Faf du Plessis, 3 Ambati Rayudu, 4 MS Dhoni (capt & wk), 5 Kedar Jadhav, 6 Ravindra Jadeja, 7 Dwayne Bravo, 8 Mitchell Santner/Imran Tahir, 9 Deepak Chahar 10 Piyush Chawla, 11 Shardul ThakurBatting: Suresh Raina’s exit has stripped Super Kings of their most experienced batsman and the left-hand element at the top of their order. While Super Kings have Ambati Rayudu, Ruturaj Gaikwad, the Maharashtra and India A batsman, and M Vijay to help fill that void, all of them are right-handers and oppositions might target them with legspinners. MS Dhoni isn’t big on match-ups, but, perhaps, there’s a case for Super Kings to push Ravindra Jadeja or Sam Curran or Mitchell Santner up the order to provide greater balance to the batting line-up.Super Kings’ batting was rickety throughout the 2019 season, and the slow-moving legs may have gotten slower in late 2020. Watson has retired from professional cricket in Australia and the likes of Rayudu and Dhoni himself haven’t played competitive cricket for a year or thereabouts. To add to their concerns, Jadhav had a lean IPL 2019, managing a mere 162 runs in 12 innings at a strike rate of under 100. If Jadhav can’t quite break out of the funk this season, his state-mate Gaikwad, who is believed to have impressed Dhoni at the Chepauk camp in March earlier this year, could find a place in the middle order. They could also potentially have Deepak Chahar, Piyush Chawla, and Shardul Thakur at Nos. 9, 10, and 11. All three bowlers can bat and have made match-winning cameos in the IPL in the past.Chennai Super Kings full squad•ESPNcricinfo LtdBowling: Dubai will be the Super Kings’ home base – they will play seven of their 14 league fixtures at the Dubai International Stadium – and the tracks there tend to offer more assistance to spinners than the ones in Abu Dhabi and Sharjah do. The heat could challenge all sides, but the conditions, both overhead and underfoot, might not be too different from those in Chennai. However, Super Kings will likely miss Singh, who has also pulled out of the tournament for personal reasons. With him gone, Super Kings don’t have a specialist offspinner in their squad. The only other specialist Indian fingerspinner in the roster is rookie R Sai Kishore, who was a net bowler for them in Chennai last season.Dhoni, though, has three legspin-bowling options at his disposal – Imran Tahir, Piyush Chawla and Karn Sharma. Curran brings in the left-arm variety while Josh Hazlewood and Lungi Ngidi could be compelling with their extra pace and hit-the-deck style on quicker pitches.Young players to watch out for: The 23-year-old Gaikwad has been a prolific performer for India A – both at home and in overseas conditions. A tall batsman, Gaikwad is adept at driving the ball on the up and piercing the gaps. He also has the reverse-sweep in his repertoire, having rolled that out off mystery spinner Akila Dananjaya during his 187 not out in 136 balls in a truncated one-dayer against Sri Lanka A last year. Then, there’s the other 23-year-old, Sai Kishore, who was the powerplay specialist for Tamil Nadu in their run to the final in the most recent Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy. He largely attacks the stumps with drifters and sliders, but can also turn the ball away from right-handers. Singh’s unavailability could open up a place in the XI for Sai Kishore at some point in the tournament.Coaching staff: Stephen Fleming (head coach), Mike Hussey (batting coach), L Balaji (bowling coach), Eric Simmons (bowling consultant), Rajiv Kumar (fielding coach).

Santos se posiciona sobre arbitragem da final do Paulistão contra o Palmeiras

MatériaMais Notícias

O Santos divulgou uma nota oficial na noite desta quinta-feira (4) sobre a escalação do árbitro Raphael Claus para apitar a final contra o Palmeiras, pelo Paulistão. A decisão acontece no domingo (7).

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➡️ Tudo sobre o Peixe agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso novo canal Lance! Santos

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De acordo com o comunicado, o clube acompanhou as repercussões nas redes sociais sobre a escala do juiz. Em 2023, o lateral Rafinha, do São Paulo, foi expulso de um clássico contra o Verdão e deixou o campo dizendo: “O Claus é palmeirense”.

Claus também já foi elogiado publicamente por Abel Ferreira, técnico do Palmeiras que enfrentará o Santos na decisão. Esses dois episódios foram lembrados por usuários na internet.

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Veja abaixo a manifestação do Peixe sobre a situação:

“O Santos está acompanhando a repercussão de multas publicações nas redes sociais de torcedores sobre a arbitragem na segunda partida da final do Campeonato Paulista 2024.

A Comissão de Arbitragem da Federação Paulista de Futebol esclareceu no Conselho
Técnico que a escalação do árbitro Raphael Claus é pelo ranqueamento da entidade, que todos os árbitros se concentrarão para se prepararem adequadamente para atuarem no próximo domingo. O Santos FC cumprimenta por essa iniciativa e respeita a decisão da escala.

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Nesta expectativa de um bom trabalho físico, técnico e emocional dos árbitros nesta semana da grande final, esperamos que Raphael Claus se prepare bem e possa conduzir junto com seus auxiliares um jogo tão importante, sem prejuízo ao espetáculo, que os atletas sejam os verdadeiros protagonistas, que o resultado seja justo e proclamado o legítimo campeão.

O Santos FC está em um processo de reconstrução reconhecendo o trabalho de nosso coirmão, foram os clubes que mais pontuaram na Classificação Geral do campeonato, demonstraram as suas qualidades durante a competição, chegam na decisão por mérito e justiça, não precisam de nenhuma interferência ou benefícios de árbitros para alcançarem os seus objetivos, que vença o melhor nas quatro linhas do campo, honrando a tradição de um dos maiores clássicos do futebol brasileiro.”

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PalmeirasPaulistãoPaulistão 2024Santos

The European Cricket Network is massive. What do you mean you haven't heard of it?

Meet the competition that is taking cricket to the continent in a big way

Cameron Ponsonby09-Aug-2024″Is it true,” I ask Dan Weston, founder of the European Cricket Network, “that for your showpiece event in Malaga this year, you had five million people watching?””Oh,” replies Weston, “much bigger than that. Maybe 75 million.”The European Cricket Network is everywhere. Across 2023 it held events on 330 days of the year with 1700 amateur matches in 16 countries. ECN games are broadcast in every continent in the world on platforms such as Fox Sports, FanCode and Willow TV. Staggeringly, they claim that more than half of the cricket shown on TV across the globe is from ECN.Related

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“Football never ends,” explains Weston. “And I want to live in a world where cricket never ends too.”The goal is simple, if astronomically ambitious. To make cricket in continental Europe professional.”I want to be one of the pioneers, along with a bunch of us, that say, well let’s invest and do this now,” Weston says. “In the hope that French, Italian, Spanish and German cricketers are professional in the next ten to 20 years. So it’s a long-term, very long-term project.”In May of this year, for the first time, the ECN landed in England. And I played.

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The ECN was founded in 2019 but its roots go back another couple of years, when Weston, originally from Australia, who moved to Germany as a 23-year-old, walked off the pitch after playing for the German national team.A Denmark vs Sweden game in the European Cricket Championship in Cartama, Spain, last year•Diana Oros/European Cricket Network”We won against Sweden one night and there was a [player’s] brother there, and he did a Facebook Live, filming us walk off the field,” Weston told ABC News in 2022. “I thought, ‘Oh, that’s really interesting.’ He got a few thousand views of that, and I thought, ‘Who is watching the German cricket team walk off the field?”’The next time Germany played, Weston recorded it and German Cricket TV, a Facebook page posting clips from club cricket and from the national team, was born. Hundreds of thousands of views arrived in the first week as expats across the country realised that the game of their original homelands was also available in their new home. In the space of the next 18 months, according to Weston, Germany’s 60 cricket clubs went from having roughly 90 teams between them to 370.The next leap came when, thanks to the success of German Cricket TV, Weston was asked to help broadcast an ice cricket event held in St Moritz. There he met Roger Feiner, the former head of broadcasting for FIFA, who was looking for a new adventure.”I met a very inspiring and convincing person in Daniel,” Feiner, now CEO of the European Cricket Network, says. The potential for cricket in Europe was, in Feiner’s opinion, clear, and so he roped in two friends, Thomas Klooz and Frank Leenders, both of whom had helped found the UEFA Champions League, and the four haven’t looked back since.The European Cricket Network’s four series

The European Cricket League, in effect designed to be a Champions League-style event, a showpiece in which club teams from across the continent qualify, or are invited, to participate once a year.

European Cricket Internationals, where national teams play each other on weekends throughout the year.

The European Cricket Championship, the “Euros of cricket”, sees national teams come together to play in a tournament.

The European Cricket Series, a set of one-off club tournaments held across the continent, involving sides local to whichever area the event is being held in. The events normally last one or two weeks and are the bedrock of ECN. Of the 1700 matches ECN hosts a year, over 1000 are in the ECS.

While a private enterprise, the ECN fully operates under the ICC and each of their events is sanctioned by the body. “It was just so glaringly obvious to me that to make this work and to make the whole thing actually function well, you have to do everything under the ICC, and you have everything under the host federation,” Weston says.To date, the ECN has paid over €2m in hosting fees to European cricket federations. The ECB will have received a fee for the tournament in England.When nations receive non-ICC funding, they go higher in the official ICC good books and then become eligible for even more ICC funding. “All boats should rise,” Weston says.It is both new age and old at once. New in the use of streaming and its broadcasting of amateur cricket. But old in that it predominantly relies on club cricket as the vehicle of growth, and it operates alongside the existing federations.”I’m a big believer in the club system,” says Weston. “Across Europe, it’s clubs that get access to venues. We want to grow the game in Europe as fast as we can. And that doesn’t happen overnight or by flying mercenaries to play franchise cricket in Spain.”

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The ECN wasn’t meant to come to England. The calendar is planned a year in advance, so Wimbledon CC’s request to host an event after they had participated in the showpiece tournament in Malaga earlier this year (for which they qualified by winning England’s National T20 club competition) was politely turned down. But when Corfu pulled out as a venue and participant because teams couldn’t be raised during the high season of tourism, Wimbledon stepped in.Dan Weston, the guiding force behind the ECN, at the Weston Shield tournament, named after him; the first edition was played in Santarem, Portugal, in April this year•Diana Oros/European Cricket NetworkWeston is courteous if not enthusiastic about what the tournament landing in England means. “It’s great,” he says. But the ECN is about growing cricket across the continent, so the one nation where it is already widely played is a nice-to-have rather than a must-have. “It’s validation that we’re not cowboys,” he says, “but by the same token, we’re [already] working with 35 different countries around Europe.”Corfu’s loss was Raynes Park Sports Ground’s gain. And on a chilly and grey May morning, at 9.45 on the dot, Spencer, my team from south-west London, and Tunbridge Wells CCs walked out to play the first ever European Cricket League match in England.Played in T10 format, matches take roughly an hour and a half each to complete, with five games played in a day. Five clubs – Wimbledon, Hornchurch and Twickenham in addition to the two above – played on the first four days, with the top three qualifying for finals on the Friday, when the NCCA (National Counties Cricket Association, formerly the Minor Counties) side would arrive and compete in the finals.I was available only for the first day, before a flight to Dallas for the T20 World Cup took precedence. Spencer would go on to finish as runners-up. Given we lost both matches I played in on day one, and the third was rained off, Spencer’s upturn in fortunes following my departure is purely coincidental and will not be investigated in this article.First and foremost, playing in the ECN is fun. Weston talks of the power of broadcasting and social media. He says that part of the allure is a kid looking at the TV and seeing their dad having a game, and for that he’s a hero. It doesn’t matter if it’s Kylian Mbappe or a father in their 40s, you want to be what you can see, and ECN’s commitment to broadcasting is part of their dream to inspire a new generation of cricketers on the continent.Drops of golden sun: a European Cricket Series game in Seebarn, Austria, in the spring of 2023•Diana Oros/European Cricket NetworkThe novelty of the event makes for dopamine rushes around every corner. You arrive at the ground and there are beer tents and chairs out for spectators. Realistically, there were never more than a few dozen at any one time. Hornchurch CC brought a strong following but for the most part the weather didn’t play ball.Camera gantries are set up on either side of the ground, and a commentators’ tent. In all, there are five cameras. A manned one at each end to track play, two that are fixed square of the wicket for replays and alternative angles, and a fifth that captures miscellaneous footage. It is a professional operation.Upon arrival in the Player and Match Officials Areas, you hand in your phone and any electronic device that can be used for communication. This event is being broadcast around the world and will be bet on, a lot. For all the fun and growth of the game that European Cricket is responsible for, the scale of betting and the potential for corruption that accompanies every event is a heavy asterisk. We’ve been warned, officially and otherwise, that people may contact us. And they do.But for now, it’s about preparing for game No. 1. As it is being broadcast and bet on, everyone must have a unique squad number. And my 23 (chosen because of my childhood front door, as opposed to any affiliation with Michael Jordan) won’t do because a friend also has 23. And since he arrived at the ground before I did, it’s deemed he gets to keep his and I have to change. Fortunately, with the aid of some gaffer tape, determination and imagination, my 23 is turned into a 28 and we’re away.At an ECS game in Wimbledon earlier this year, tape is cunningly used to make the number on the back of the author’s shirt suitable•Diana Oros/European Cricket NetworkThe organisation and efficiency of the event is remarkable. Captains film the toss 75 minutes before the start of play; you’re counted down, so you know when to take the field; at the loss of a wicket, the next batter has 90 seconds to be ready to face, and the organisers will let them know in no uncertain terms if they’re being too slow. Headshots, both individual and team snaps, are taken for your online profile. Umpires, hired from the local leagues, have talkback with the production tent; they keep the match on schedule and inform the scorers of bowling changes and confirm catch-takers. There is no DRS but there are TV reviews for run-outs, stumpings and boundary checks. The umpires, just like us, are enjoying the novelty of it all. At one point we have a run-out appeal sent upstairs. The umpire says that he thinks it was not out, and when proven correct, allows himself a fist pump.Batting first, we make 126 in our ten overs and have no idea if it’s a good score. It is not. Tunbridge Wells chase it in 8.4 overs without losing a wicket. My sole over goes for 15; my round-the-wicket offspin is cut and reverse-swept for two fours and a six.There has been no healthier checking of the male club cricketing ego than the increase in matches being streamed. Watching myself bowl in HD for the first time confirmed something I had long suspected but had never had proof of until now. That I am terrible.The standard on show is, in fact, varied. The ECN is best known for viral clips of terrible cricket that traffic in moments of comedy, but often the standard of play is more than competent and sometimes very strong. Our XI on Monday is made up of a core of first XI players, along with a batch of guys from the seconds and thirds. Our overseas professional is playing, so too is Wimbledon’s, who ropes in his brother, meaning, when we play each other there are three current first-class cricketers on the pitch. One of Tunbridge Wells’ openers was playing second XI county cricket last year, and the NCCA team is made up exclusively of current minor county players. So there are plenty of moments when genuinely good cricket is being played, but there are also plenty of moments when it’s not.A women’s T20I in Krefeld, Germany in 2021, where the hosts faced off against France. Though nearly all ECB games are T10s, ECN also broadcasts a few lower-level T20Is•Andrew Schou/European Cricket Network”I reckon someone’s going to hit six sixes this week,” said one of our players before a ball of the competition had been bowled. And it turned out to be him.Admittedly the boundaries in the ECN are tiny, measuring 50 metres from the centre of the pitch all the way around. This results in some comically mistimed sixes, but it’s a great leveller that allows weaker players to keep up the scoring rate, which, as a result, keeps matches closer.Even over the course of the day, let alone of the week, the idea that it is merely a hit and giggle, where anyone could win, is wide of the mark. Sure, there’s increased variance and a one-off lottery aspect once a team is in the finals, but the best team is never going to finish bottom of the group stage and the worst team is never going to win it.As a format, it wouldn’t satisfy you if you played just one game. But across a day, or in a multi-day festival format such as this, it’s great. Every over you bowl is important and has a tangible impact on the match – a feeling that is rare across a season of Saturdays but a common occurrence in T10. In our final match of day one, with Twickenham needing 24 off 18 balls to win, but eight wickets down, my over starts with a single and a dot. Twenty-three needed off 16.”Ponsonby, hasn’t he bowled well at the right times?” says commentator No. 1.”Yep, Cameron’s bowled well,” agrees commentator No. 2. “He’s been making the most of that angle across.”Six.What we do in the shadows: an ECS game in Zagreb, Croatia, in 2022•Diana Oros/European Cricket NetworkSeventeen required off 15. And we’d go on to lose. Of the many unique aspects to participating in the European Cricket Series, the ability to relive trauma should be packaged as one of the key selling points of the fact that it is televised. I finish the day with figures of 3-0-36-1.

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Also unique, for an amateur player, is the presence of gambling. Upon walking off after the first match of the day and being reunited with my phone, I opened it to a new Instagram follower and a DM request: “Hello sir, I want to discuss something with you. Can you message back.”Team-mates received other, less discreet, messages. “Hello buddy, are you interested in vip fixed. It’s 100% fixed match. No chance to lose,” said one.”Hello brother, I need some clue about Spencer cricket club, can you help me?” said another.”The three main challenges for European cricket,” explains the head of anti-corruption at ECN, who did not want to be named, “are not too dissimilar to cricket across the world. Regulated betting markets, unregulated betting markets, and fantasy cricket.”Regulated and unregulated markets present similar issues. For one, the presence of “spotters” at grounds. Bookmakers, of the legal or illegal variety, will send someone to an event to report back in real time what is happening so they can set their prices accordingly. On the first day at Raynes Park, three spotters were kicked out. Often easily identifiable, a spotter will usually be talking continuously into a phone or into their jacket, where a communication device is being kept out of sight. Spotters are present all over sport. Only last year, at the women’s ODI between England and Australia in Bristol, two spotters were kicked out.A game in the Weston Shield in Portugal in April 2024•Diana Oros/European Cricket NetworkFantasy cricket presents a different problem. For instance, you pick a fantasy team for the competition in the UK, choosing me as a star allrounder who is expected to open the batting and bowling. In theory you’re getting loads of points as I’m playing loads of cricket. But if I actually bat at six and don’t bowl, you’re not getting any value for your purchase, while the person I tipped off that I’m not playing is quids in, as they didn’t pick me.Dealing with corruption is not new for the ECN. In 2020 a team was suspended for suspicious behaviour, and last September three players were charged with corruption offences. The ECN applies the exact same anti-corruption code as the ICC.”This is a strange moment where the lower level of cricket is being done in a huge promotional way that does attract some bad actors,” Weston explains. “But if you look at what we’re doing internally and externally, I think we’re probably managing our product better than anyone else on earth, apart from the ICC, when it comes to protecting the game.”On the one hand, it is inevitable. There are 1700 matches being played a year and corruption is present in all forms of cricket. But on the other, the league’s nature creates a fertile environment for people to make approaches and for players to be tempted to accept them.Wandsworth’s finest: players from London’s Spencer Cricket Club at an ECS game in the Wimbledon tournament from earlier this summer•Diana Oros/European Cricket NetworkUnder normal circumstances, you have professional players playing in a professional environment, or amateur players playing in an amateur environment. But European cricket is amateur players operating in a professional environment. There are many eyeballs on the matches and therefore there is money. Add in that on the continent, many of the players are immigrants or refugees of South-Asian descent who moved due to difficult socio-economic circumstances, and you have an uncomfortable combination of lots of money being on the line and a vulnerable player base where an easy buck for bowling a wide, or giving a bit of information, seems a victimless crime and an attractive option.”The education of players is getting better,” says the head of anti-corruption. “But we still see incidents of corruption. I take no pleasure in suspending or banning a player who’s been exploited. Because they’ve got a problem, so let’s help fix it. But I have no sympathy for the ones who are greedy.””In the early days it was really gut-wrenching,” Weston says. “Because I never thought that going into this was going to create betting markets and bookmakers. So for a long time I tried to fight it and stop it – and we still do but with higher-qualified methods.”It was like, come on, we’re trying to grow the game in this country and there’s all this betting going on. So what we do is, like any other sports federation, we sell our data to an official partner. Because if you don’t make it official, then it’s unofficial and going to happen anyway. We also put in place participant education and cutting-edge integrity systems both at the venue and digitally away from the venue.” Anti-corruption videos that the ICC uses are sent to participants beforehand. Ahead of the more high-profile events, meetings with players are held and a presentation given.When I tell the ECN’s anti-corruption head about my Instagram message, something I did the next day when interviewing him, he gently reminds me that technically, by not reporting it at the time, I’m in breach of the ICC’s anti-corruption code.Roll up, roll up: ECN claims more than half the cricket telecast on TV worldwide is their games•European Cricket NetworkHe welcomes the scrutiny. He previously worked in law enforcement and also for the ICC in anti-corruption.”I think the work that we do as our integrity unit is really good,” he says. “We go on the offensive, you know, going after players and after the fixes as well. But also the defensive side, as the prevention is better than the cure. I’d rather educate the players.”

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Ultimately, and perhaps somewhat naïvely, I think that the European Cricket Network is fundamentally a force for good.Undoubtedly elements of the competition’s relationship with betting make my skin itch. Namely, the shape of their commercial partnerships with gambling and fantasy sports companies. Fantasy cricket is a source of corruption issues and an avenue for vulnerable players to be exploited. Yet as recently as last year, Dream11, India’s largest fantasy sports platform, was the title partner of the European Cricket Championship.However, my sympathy is at its strongest for ECN in that there is every chance they are the first responders to a problem that could soon impact recreational cricket as a whole. Club cricket across the world is increasingly being streamed by single-camera set-ups. Matches with single-camera streams, the ECN’s anti-corruption head says, used by 99.9% of club games that are recorded, are the most susceptible to manipulation: “If it’s live-streamed, people will be betting on it,” he says simply. So rather than scoff at the ECN as a dodgy league, their having to deal with amateur cricketers, who for the first time in history are being targeted by rogue agents, could turn out to be as much a case for education as for condemnation.Catch as catch can: a rough outfield is no problem for an enthusiastic fielder in a game in Brescia, Italy•Diana Oros/European Cricket NetworkOverall the ECN is harnessing the growth of the game in a way that no one else has and that is a good thing. It is easy to roll your eyes at the idea of making cricket professional in France in 20 years, but where’s the harm in trying? The world changes when people move. And in the present day people are moving by the millions. Great Britain took cricket around the Commonwealth. And now people from former Commonwealth nations are taking it elsewhere. The success of cricket in Europe rests on the oldest method of information transfer and the newest: migration and social media.”I might be in Bulgaria,” Weston concludes, “And I’m in a taxi or go to an Indian restaurant, and you mention cricket and you see their faces light up because they’ve never spoken to anyone about cricket in the ten years they have lived in Bulgaria.”And then you say, well there’s cricket in Bulgaria, and you can show them, and then because of the magic of social media, they end up joining a club or finding a team.”This is really a passion project that has gotten out of hand. Once I realised I would be living in Germany long term, I didn’t want to live in a region where there’s no cricket. Thanks to meeting great, passionate and committed people, we have been able to start promoting the game at scale in the past five years. And in the long term, the current group of European cricketers has a chance to grow the game for this and the next generation, and if we live in a world where cricket exists and it’s professional, then that’s a great legacy for us.”Like, yeah, those guys [who are betting on matches] do add to the pressures of growing cricket for good, but we care hugely about integrity and anti-corruption. But the majority of players who play on the ECN have had the best day of their cricket life. The good outweighs the bad. The positive stuff is actually so much stronger than the negative aspects of what we’re doing.”And on that I agree. European Cricket was great fun. I loved playing in it and I hope it succeeds. And if Corfu can’t host an event again next year, I look forward to heading down to Raynes Park next May to do it all over again.

England finish second with a big win as Devine bids farewell

England 172 for 2 (Jones 86*, Beaumont 40) beat New Zealand 168 (Plimmer 43, Smith 3-30, Sciver-Brunt 2-31, Capsey 2-34) by eight wicketsAn injury to key bowler Sophie Ecclestone proved no barrier for England as Amy Jones overhauled a meagre target to send New Zealand out of the World Cup with a heavy defeat.Ecclestone injured her bowling shoulder while fielding and sent down just four deliveries, including a wicket, before England bundled New Zealand out for 168 inside 39 overs in their final group game.Her fellow left-arm spinner, Linsey Smith, overcame a difficult start to capture three wickets while part-time off-spinner Alice Capsey and seamer Nat Sciver-Brunt took two each before Jones’s unbeaten 86 took England home with ease.Related

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The result meant that England secured the No. 2 spot behind Australia, meaning that in the unlikely event of their semi-final against South Africa being washed out in Guwahati on Wednesday and on the subsequent reserve day, they would progress on the basis of holding a superior position on the table.It also ensured there would be no fairytale farewell for New Zealand captain Sophie Devine, who has played her last ODI in a match where New Zealand’s batters collectively failed convert starts and their bowlers struggled to put dents in England’s top-order.On the face of it, England had an easy ride into their semi-final campaign, but Ecclestone’s injury was cause for concern and they had to overcome a wayward start with the ball and in the field while their re-jigged middle-order went untested.The openers Jones and Tammy Beaumont broke the back of the run chase with a 75-run partnership and Jones combined with Heather Knight for an 83-run stand that took England within 11 runs of victory.England’s top four have all scored runs at this tournament, with Knight and Sciver-Brunt posting centuries and Beaumont and Jones reaching fifty before this game. Down the order they brought in the vastly experienced Danni Wyatt-Hodge for her first match of the tournament, replacing Emma Lamb who has struggled at No. 6.Knight’s dismissal, lbw to Devine for 33, prompted England to send Wyatt-Hodge in at No. 4 ahead of Sciver-Brunt to give her some exposure in the middle ahead of the knockout phase, although it was limited as she faced seven deliveries for 2 not out.Sophie Devine waves farewell after her final ODI•ICC/Getty Images

Beaumont raced to 26 off 20 balls, with four of her five boundaries up to that point coming in one Jess Kerr over. Back-to-back fours off Amelia Kerr put Beaumont in touching distance of 40 but, once she arrived there, she was struck on the pad by a Lea Tahuhu nip-backer right in line with middle stump.Knight carved the next ball expertly through backward point for four and, having overturned an lbw dismissal to New Zealand’s bemusement as Melie Kerr’s delivery was shown to be going over the stumps, Knight advanced down the pitch to power a huge six over long on in her next over.All the while, Jones had been steadily creeping towards her half-century with excellent timing and she brought up the milestone with six off Suzie Bates. Jones upped the tempo and helped herself to three fours in a row off Rosemary Mair before eventually bringing up the winning runs with consecutive boundaries off Devine, who left the field through a guard of honour from both teams.Earlier, Ecclestone took a tumble trying to intercept a boundary from Bates off the second ball of the match and jarred her shoulder after running from mid-off to chase Capsey’s misfield at extra cover.Bates only managed to reach 10 before spooning a waist-high full toss from Smith straight to mid-off where Lamb stood as a substitute for Ecclestone.Struggling to grip the new ball, Smith continued to serve up some wayward lengths and, after Bates had failed to capitalise, Kerr did with four boundaries on the trot as she set about rebuilding through a 68-run partnership alongside Georgia Plimmer.Sophie Ecclestone picked a wicket in the four deliveries she bowled before going off with injury•Getty Images

With Smith pulled from the attack and Ecclestone still off the field having her injury assessed, Capsey entered to make a crucial strike as Kerr sought to go big down the ground and picked out Charlie Dean, who then struck with the first ball of the next over, pinning Plimmer on the pad for 43 as England wrested back control.Ecclestone returned briefly to remove Brooke Halliday, caught by Sophia Dunkley at deep midwicket, but then Dunkley bowled the remaining two balls of the over as Ecclestone, feeling more discomfort in her shoulder, left the field for the remainder of the innings.So it fell to Devine to make one last stand with the bat, even more so when Capsey took an excellent diving catch off her own bowling to remove Maddy Green – although she dropped another off Izzy Gaze next ball – but it wasn’t to be. Devine managed 23 off 35 before she strode forward to a Sciver-Brunt off-cutter which kissed the inside edge before landing in the glove of wicketkeeper Jones.Smith returned in the 29th over and, more comfortable with the worn ball, removed Gaze playing around a slow, full delivery that angled in to hit the top of off stump.Sciver-Brunt grabbed her second wicket by pinning Mair lbw and Jess Kerr was run out by a good throw from Dean at extra cover to Jones to put New Zealand on the brink of being bowled out. Dean finished it with a superb catch over her shoulder while running back at mid-off to remove Tahuhu and give Smith her third.

Real Madrid dealt injury blow as defender Dean Huijsen leaves Spain camp to recover from muscle issue

Real Madrid have suffered another setback as Dean Huijsen has withdrawn from Spain duty due to muscle discomfort, raising concerns of a relapse of the soleus injury he suffered in October. The defender has been sent back to Madrid for tests, joining Kylian Mbappe and Eduardo Camavinga as the latest Los Blancos players to return early from international duty.

Huijsen’s new setback and return to Madrid

Madrid were dealt an unwelcome blow after Spain confirmed that Huijsen had been released from the national team camp due to renewed muscle discomfort. The defender was unavailable for the match against Georgia earlier in the week, and further assessment by La Roja’s medical staff confirmed he was not fit to continue.

He will now return immediately to Valdebebas, where Madrid’s medical department will run full tests to determine whether this is a fresh issue or a recurrence of the soleus injury he suffered in October. Spain face Turkey next, but Huijsen will take no further part in the international break.

Madrid are relieved he was not risked, but the timing raises concern. Only last month he was sent back from Spain duty with the same calf problem, treated in Madrid, and managed to recover just in time to rejoin the squad for El Clasico. The early fear now is that this latest discomfort may be a relapse of that injury.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportHow the injury began and how Madrid coped last time

Huijsen’s current setback traces back to the soleus muscle tear he suffered during Spain’s October camp. The injury occurred in training, forcing him to withdraw before their World Cup qualifiers. Los Blancos confirmed a minor tear that required rest and a tailored recovery plan, keeping him out of the matches against Getafe and Juventus.

During Huijsen’s absence, Madrid relied heavily on Eder Militao and Raul Asencio to stabilise the back line. His recovery was smooth enough for him to rejoin full training ahead of the season’s first El Clasico on October 26, where he made his return without complications.

This month’s relapse comes during a period in which multiple Madrid players have been recalled early from international duty. Mbappe and Camavinga were also withdrawn from France’s squad earlier in the week.

Mbappe and Camavinga also sent back from France duty

France were forced into late changes when Mbappe and Camavinga were both released before the final World Cup qualifier against Azerbaijan. Mbappe continues to manage recurring inflammation in his right ankle, an issue that resurfaced the morning after France’s 4-0 win over Ukraine, where he scored twice and reached 400 career goals.

Although he completed the match, renewed discomfort prompted a joint decision between the French Football Federation (FFF) and Madrid to send him back for further evaluation. The French federation stressed that the decision was precautionary, with no indication of a serious injury, but Madrid preferred immediate testing to avoid aggravation ahead of a heavy schedule.

Camavinga, meanwhile, had not trained all week due to left-hamstring discomfort. With no improvement and Khephren Thuram already brought in as cover, he was deemed unfit for both fixtures and was sent back to Spain. Madrid expect him to recover in time for the La Liga match against Elche on November 23.

Both Mbappe and Camavinga are projected to be available after the break, but their simultaneous withdrawals underline the physical strain Madrid’s core players have been carrying.

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Getty ImagesHow will Xabi Alonso navigates the weeks ahead?

For Xabi Alonso, the coming days will revolve around clarity. Huijsen’s scans at Valdebebas will determine whether he faces a short spell of rest or a longer recovery similar to October. With Mbappé and Camavinga returning early as well, the manager must prepare for three possible absences as Madrid enter a demanding stretch of fixtures.

Madrid resume their season against Elche on November 23, followed by a crucial Champions League match against Olympiacos on November 26 and a top-of-the-table meeting with Girona on November 30. Alonso may turn once again to Militao and Asencio if Huijsen is unavailable, while midfield rotation will depend heavily on Camavinga’s fitness and match readiness.

The next 72 hours of medical evaluations will shape Alonso’s approach, but what is clear is that Madrid enter the post-break period with caution and the need for careful management of their biggest stars.

Labuschagne eyes Test return: I thrive on proving the doubters wrong

Dropped in West Indies, Australia’s long-time No. 3 has switched his focus on what he can do to be playing the Ashes

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Aug-20251:01

Super-sub Labuschagne produced direct hit run-out

Marnus Labuschagne is feeling primed to start his push for a Test recall in time for the Ashes amid the ongoing debate about how Australia’s top three will shape up come Perth in late November.Labuschagne was dropped from the Test side for the first time since 2019 at the start of the recent series in West Indies having averaged 27.82 with one century over the previous two years.There had been some consideration given to him leaving that tour early in order to play either county cricket or for Australia A, but he ended up staying throughout, training extensively with the coaching staff, something he has continued since getting home to Brisbane.Related

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“This [being left out] has given me an opportunity to reflect and not having the pressure of the media saying, ‘Marnus has got to go’,” Labuschagne told in his first interview since losing his spot.”I mean that’s part of the game. There is a tipping point but it’s something I thrive on… proving the doubters wrong and being able to find a way. Missing those West Indies Tests gave me the chance to back and think, ‘This is where I want to be and this is how I’m going to get there’.”After the West Indies Tests, head coach Andrew McDonald said Labuschagne’s absence from the side “wasn’t going to be a huge gap.” He could make a return to Australia colours in the ODI series against South Africa later this month having been retained in that squad then will have three Sheffield Shield matches for Queensland before the Ashes side is named in mid-November.Should he make a compelling case for a recall, there remains the question of where he would return in the order with Cameron Green finishing strongly at No. 3 against West Indies in tough batting conditions although there is a scenario where Green drops back down the order should he be available to bowl.Labuschagne’s last Test before his omission saw him pushed up to open in the World Test Championship final against South Africa where he made 17 and 22 and he would gladly take on the role again should that provide his route back.”I would be happy to do that – I would love to,” he said. “If opener is where I need to bat to be playing in the Test team, that’s fine. If you had asked me where I prefer to bat obviously I have batted at three my whole career, but at this stage you don’t get a choice.”I opened in the World Test Championship final and felt I batted quite well. I got in but did not go on with it.”

Luis Diaz 'clearly' didn't deserve red card for Achraf Hakimi foul as Toni Kroos criticises referee for key decision in Bayern Munich win

Toni Kroos has hit out at the decision to send off Luis Diaz during Bayern Munich’s win over Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League, insisting that "it wasn't a red card”. The German and Real Madrid legend believes referee Maurizio Mariani was influenced by Achraf Hakimi’s injury rather than the tackle itself. Diaz, however later apologised publicly, while Bayern backed their forward.

Kroos weighs in after Diaz red card sparks controversy

Bayern’s statement 2-1 win away at PSG in the Champions League was overshadowed by a highly debated refereeing decision. Colombian international Diaz, who had scored both goals for Bayern in the first half, was shown a straight red card following a VAR intervention for a tackle on PSG full-back Hakimi. Initially given only a yellow, referee Maurizio Mariani changed his decision after reviewing the incident on the monitor, citing excessive force and danger to the opponent.

Hakimi, who left the field in clear pain and in tears, was later diagnosed with a syndesmosis tear and deltoid ligament damage expected to keep him sidelined for around eight weeks. 

The moment dramatically shifted the tone of the match, even as Bayern held on for a crucial away victory to extend their winning run under Vincent Kompany to 16 straight matches across competitions. The incident has since become the primary talking point across European football, with varying opinions from pundits, former officials and players, and one of the most vocal critics has been the German legend Kroos.

Advertisement'It wasn’t a red card' – Real Madrid legend questions referee’s judgement

Speaking on his podcast, Kroos was emphatic in his belief that the referee made the wrong call. “For me, it’s clear: it wasn’t a red card,” Kroos said, insisting that the referee “let Hakimi’s injury have too much of an influence on his assessment of the play.”

The German argued that the challenge itself, while forceful, did not indicate malicious intent from Diaz. “If Hakimi had gotten up after the challenge, nobody would have reviewed the play.”

Kroos also turned his attention toward the role of the VAR team, suggesting that replay slow-motion angles can distort reality, “In situations like these, the referee should judge the action itself, not the consequences.”

His position echoed the sentiment of several Bayern players, including Joshua Kimmich and Josip Stanisic, who suggested that the injury may have influenced the decision. However, Kimmich admitted upon reflection that “seeing the replay and how he catches him, you can understand the referee showing a red card.”

Getty Images SportRegret and support after a night of mixed emotions

Diaz addressed the incident after the match, posting a message on Instagram that said: “Football always reminds us that in 90 minutes, the best and the worst can happen… I wish Hakimi a quick return to the pitch.”

Bayern boss Kompany expressed sympathy for PSG and Hakimi, citing Bayern’s own past injury experiences with Jamal Musiala, while also defending the Colombian winger. 

“I hope Hakimi recovers soon, it’s terrible. We went through the same thing last year with Musiala. I don’t think Diaz meant any harm; it was just an unfortunate incident in a high-intensity match,” said the Belgian coach.

Despite the controversy, Diaz’s performance before the red card reinforced his growing importance under Kompany, decisive, direct, and ruthless in transition. Kroos then moved to tactical commentary, praising Bayern’s bravery in pressing PSG high and suggesting their superiority would likely have produced the same result, regardless of Hakimi or Diaz's presence. 

"Bayern were clearly superior and could have gone into halftime 3-0 or 4-0 up. I don't think PSG would have created any danger with eleven against eleven," he said.

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Getty Images SportBayern maintain momentum while PSG face injury concerns

Bayern sit top of the Champions League table and will turn their attention to domestic action, where they face Union Berlin next, a fixture Kompany warned could become a “trap game” after the emotional and physical intensity of Paris.

For PSG, the focus is now on recovery and rotation, and Hakimi’s absence adds further pressure on coach Luis Enrique, who is already dealing with Ousmane Dembele’s injury, who also left the pitch earlier in the game due to a calf injury. The French champions need solutions on the flanks, especially with decisive Champions League fixtures still ahead.

Spurs star is in danger of being their biggest waste of money since Richarlison

Ange Postecoglou said something curious before Mr Marinakis dismissed him from his short-lived Nottingham Forest post. The former Tottenham Hotspur boss ruefully spoke of Harry Kane, and how he wished to have enjoyed the England captain’s services for at least one year.

Kane left for Bayern Munich in 2023, ending his Spurs career just months after writing his name into the history books as the club’s all-time record scorer.

Tottenham’s All-time Record Scorers

Player

Apps

Goals

Harry Kane

435

280

Jimmy Greaves

376

266

Bobby Smith

316

211

Heung-min Son

454

173

Martin Chivers

350

167

Data via Transfermarkt

Over two years later, it would take a bold argument to claim that the Londoners have effectively replaced their former talisman, with Dominic Solanke plagued by injuries since arriving in 2024 and Richarlison, injury-prone himself, too inconsistent in front of goal.

Richarlison's season in numbers

Thomas Frank is implementing a new playing style at Tottenham, and it’s been a solid start for the former Brentford boss, with his Spurs side trailing second-place Manchester City by just two points in the Premier League.

However, his declaration at the start of the campaign that Richarlison would be his starting number nine didn’t stay true for that long, with the Brazilian having started from the bench on each of Tottenham’s past two league matches.

He might have scored a brace on the opening day of the term, against Burnley, but the 28-year-old has since netted just once across 11 matches in all competitions, with the ever-outspoken Gabby Agbonlahor claiming Spurs have a problem in the dynamic forward, who will enjoy a purple patch and then “give absolutely zero” across the next several weeks.

We know there has been recent curiosity from the Saudi Pro League regarding Richarlison’s signature, and Everton were linked with their old forward this summer too.

He’s never quite lived up to the price tag at Tottenham, and it would hardly come as a shock if he were sold in 2026. For a big price tag and proven success beforehand, it’s not unreasonable that the club might have hoped for more at this stage, and it may even be that the new version has been signed this summer.

Spurs' new version of Richarlison

Tottenham showed their ambition this summer, and the £51m signing of Xavi Simons from RB Leipzig was the showpiece signing.

The 22-year-old had been chased by Chelsea all summer, but Spurs prevailed in August and landed the “superstar” of a talent, which was exactly what journalist Graeme Bailey confirmed the north London bosses felt they had secured.

So far, we haven’t seen that world-class talent, with Simons having assisted one goal and gone without a strike for himself across eight appearances in all competitions.

Bundles of talent, a hefty price tag and concerns about consistency – might Simons be the next version of Richarlison?

When plying his trade for PSV Eindhoven, for example, the Dutchman enjoyed an exceptional performance against Arsenal in the Europa League, and so clearly has the skillset to thrive against the Premier League’s finest.

And, moreover, he shares with Richarlison a willingness to get stuck in and contribute defensively. His physicality could do with some work, sure, but the 5 foot 6 talent has the right profile.

However, he’s yet to showcase his prolific quality under Frank’s wing, and if a certain patchiness on the output front becomes a marker of Simons’ time at Spurs, he could very much end up leaving with a reputation similar to that of Richarlison: talented and tenacious, but lacking consistency.

Having arrived at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium for a big fee and with a weight of expectation, there are parallels between Tottenham’s signing of Simons and that former deal for Richarlison.

There is, of course, plenty of time for Simons to get himself up to speed, but with injured pair James Maddison and Dejan Kulusevski waiting in the wings, there’s little question that he needs to start proving his worth and helping steer Tottenham toward success at the start of this new chapter.

Not just Simons: Spurs flop who lost 100% duels looks like wasted money

Tottenham have much to work on after slipping to defeat against Aston Villa in the Premier League.

ByAngus Sinclair Oct 20, 2025

Major League Baseball 2024: Twins Are Heavy Favorites to Win AL Central

The Minnesota Twins are the odds-on favorites to win the AL Central with a -115 payout:

Minnesota Twins -115
Detroit Tigers +350
Cleveland Guardians +350
Kansas City Royals +850
Chicago White Sox +4000

The AL Central was the only division in 2023 to have just one team finish with a winning record.

Minnesota won the division with a total of 87 wins — the only division winner to tally fewer than 90. The second-place Tigers finished with a .481 win percentage and 78 wins.

The AL Central is expected to remain one of the less competitive divisions in 2024. The Twins should stay in the driver’s seat with strong pitching and a mix of veteran and young talent. If Royce Lewis, Carlos Correa and — stop me if you’ve heard this before — Byron Buxton can remain healthy, the Twins should waltz into the division title once again.

Carlos Correa had 18 home runs and 65 RBIs for the Twins last season :: Adam Hunger/AP

That’s too big of an “if” for me to tie up bankroll, though, so I’ll be fading the Twins for the division title at this payout.

The Tigers and Guardians offer +350 odds.

Cleveland is a speedy team with no power. The Guardians hit the fewest home runs in 2023 (124) while stealing the fifth-most bases (151). Unfortunately, that formula is unlikely to work unless you have an elite starting rotation. That being said, the Guardians have a lot of pitching potential with a staff anchored by Shane Bieber. Cleveland has won the division four of the last eight seasons, with the most recent title coming in 2022.

Detroit will need Spencer Torkelson to take another step forward and a few other players to exceed expectations to be able to nab the title. The last time Detroit won the AL Central was in 2014.

The Royals boast one of the top hitters in the game in Bobby Witt Jr., who is a power threat and a menace on the bases. If Sal Perez can put together another solid season and Vinnie Pasquantino can give us an entire season, Kansas City could surprise. The Royals stole the third-most bases (163) while hitting the fifth-fewest home runs (163) in 2023. Still, that was more stolen bases and nearly 40 more round-trippers than the Guardians. With pitcher Cole Ragans showing the potential to be a verifiable ace, I’m willing to place my bets on the Royals to surprise for a +750 payout.

Finally, the White Sox own +4000 odds after opening as the favorites in both 2022 and ’23. Still boasting Luis Robert, Eloy Jimenez and Dylan Cease, there is enough talent there to pull a lotto ticket if you’re inclined. 

MLB 2024: World Series Odds for All 30 Teams

Kohli snatches the IPL 2025 Orange Cap back from Sai Sudharsan after RCB vs CSK

Orange Cap table

It didn’t take Virat Kohli long. After B Sai Sudharsan, the Gujarat Titans (GT) opener, won it back from Kohli on Friday, Kohli snatched it right back when he scored 62 in 33 balls for RCB against CSK at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium. Not much between them, though, Kohli is on 505 runs from 11 innings, while Sai Sudharsan is one run behind, from one fewer innings.The line-up below them remains unchanged: Suryakumar Yadav (Mumbai Indians, 475 runs), Jos Buttler (GT, 470 runs), Shubman Gill (GT, 465 runs), Yashasvi Jaiswal (Rajasthan Royals, 439 runs) and Nicholas Pooran (Lucknow Super Giants, 404 runs).Now, while Kohli is the top run-getter, RCB’s next most prolific run-scorer is Devdutt Padikkal with just 247 runs, down at No. 26.

Purple Cap table

Josh Hazlewood didn’t play the game against CSK, and that means he remains one wicket behind table-topper Prasidh Krishna of GT. Prasidh has 19 wickets from ten games, while Hazlewood has 18 from ten.Khaleel Ahmed’s wicketless – and very expensive – outing meant he remained at 14 wickets for the season, but his team-mate Noor Ahmad got back on level terms with MI’s Trent Boult at 16 wickets to be joint-third. Krunal Pandya picked up one wicket for RCB against CSK, and that took him to 14, the same as Khaleel as well as GT’s Mohammed Siraj and Delhi Capitals’ Mitchell Starc.You can also take a look at what ESPNcricinfo MVP table looks like at this stage.Here are some other IPL 2025 tables.

  • Highest batting strike rates
  • Best bowling economy rates
  • Most sixes
  • Best bowling figures in a match
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