Crawley considers IPL auction as he eyes white-ball breakthrough

Zak Crawley will consider entering the next IPL auction and is lining up a return to the Big Bash League this winter. Fresh from an Ashes series in which he finished as England’s leading run-scorer, he is plotting a route into their white-ball set-up.Crawley’s opportunities in white-ball cricket have been sporadic since his Test call-up in 2019. His three England ODI caps to date came two years ago, as part of the second-string team that whitewashed Pakistan, and he is yet to make an appearance in T20 internationals.But Crawley is targeting a place on the tour to the Caribbean in December, when England are likely to rest several first-choice players after the ODI World Cup, and hopes that he can earn his spot through performances for London Spirit in the Hundred over the next three weeks.”I’d love to go on that tour,” Crawley told ESPNcricinfo. “We’ll have to see how selection goes but the Caribbean is an awesome place to play – and I haven’t had the chance to go on a white ball tour for England yet, so any opportunity I get would be awesome. If they want me for that tour, I’d absolutely love to go.”After Alex Hales’ recent international retirement, there could be a vacancy alongside Jos Buttler at the top of England’s T20I batting order. “There’s obviously a few guys ahead of me at the moment,” Crawley said. “But if I score some runs then hopefully my name starts getting thrown into the hat.”England do not play another Test until late January, when they begin a five-match series in India. “I’m trying to look at where I can go, which leagues, before the tour of India,” he said. “I went to the Big Bash last year and loved it so if they would want me back then that would certainly be something I’d consider.”Zak Crawley played eight BBL games for Hobart Hurricanes last season•Getty Images

Crawley made a single half-century in his eight appearances for Hobart Hurricanes last year, but was a popular member of the dressing room and could return: “I can’t speak highly enough of him,” said Nathan Ellis, one of his team-mates. “He’s not only one of the most talented batters in the world, he’s one of the nicest guys as well.”And beyond the BBL, Crawley is considering nominating himself for the next IPL auction. “It’s the biggest franchise tournament in the world,” he said. “It’s the only place to see all the best playing against each other. It’s great cricket and to be able to test yourself in that tournament would be awesome.”We’ll see how I go. If I score some runs and it looks like I’ve half a chance then, then potentially I will [put my name forward]. I’m a realistic guy though, so if I feel like there’s no chance then I won’t… If I was good enough one day to play in the IPL and someone wanted me, then I’d absolutely love to go.”Earlier this year, he watched Harry Brook score an unbeaten hundred for Sunrisers Hyderabad in his fourth IPL game. “Obviously I’d love to do that,” Crawley said. “He’s going to do a lot of stuff that I wish I could do throughout his career. I won’t get too cut up on what Harry does otherwise I’d be pretty disappointed my whole career.”Related

  • Brook added to England's ODI squad to set up World Cup shoot-out

  • Crawley expands repertoire in bid to bring Ashes form into Hundred

  • Hales: I would 'do a Will Smeed' if I were 21 again now

  • Crawley keen for chance to test Bazball in India

  • McCullum: Crawley's success validates England's approach

Crawley’s white-ball ambitions meant that, rather than going on holiday after the end of the Ashes, he played for Spirit in Manchester five days after the end of the fifth Test. “I wanted to get straight into it,” he said, speaking at the launch of KP Snacks’ community cricket pitches initiative.”I played a bit of the Hundred last year, but that was stop-start… I probably haven’t played as much white-ball [cricket] as I would have liked. I’m glad that the schedule now has allowed for the full Hundred. That’s why I was very keen to get going and play some white-ball cricket: it looks like it’s going to be the future of the game so you don’t want to be left behind.”KP Snacks are funding 100 new community cricket pitches over the next three years. To find out more and search for a pitch visit: www.everyonein.co.uk/pitchfinder

Arsenal go for Viktor Gyokeres! Gunners lodge €75m opening bid for Sporting CP goal machine as Chelsea transfer fears are revealed

Arsenal have reportedly submitted an opening bid for Sporting CP goal machine Viktor Gyokeres amid fears Chelsea could target the striker.

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Arsenal submit opening bid for GyokeresGunners fear Chelsea can outbid them in the transfer raceArsenal want to sign a new striker in the summerFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

After going trophyless in yet another disappointing campaign this year, Arsenal are in desperate need of a new centre-forward ahead of the 2025-26 season. According to , the Gunners have submitted an offer worth €75 million (£63m/$84m) for Sporting talisman Gyokeres. However, the report adds that the Portuguese side's president Frederico Varandas sees this as an opening bid as he aims to get more money for the prolific hitman.

AdvertisementGettyTHE BIGGER PICTURE

While the north London club are desperate to win the transfer battle for the Swedish striker, they are fearful of fellow Premier League side Chelsea as they believe the Blues could place an offer close to the player's release clause of €100m (£85m/$112m).

DID YOU KNOW?

Mikel Arteta's side are on the verge of completing their first signing of the new season as they have reportedly agreed personal terms with Real Sociedad midfielder Martin Zubimendi.

(C)Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT FOR ARSENAL?

Arsenal will play their penultimate match of the season on Sunday as they visit Anfield to take on newly-crowned English champions Liverpool. They will hope their potential reinforcements can help them close the gap in 2025-26.

Jordan Cox in line for Test debut in New Zealand as Jamie Smith's paternity cover

Essex batter has leapfrogged Lawrence and looks set for opportunity in December

Matt Roller19-Oct-2024Jordan Cox is set to make his Test debut as England’s wicketkeeper during their upcoming tour to New Zealand, with Jamie Smith due to miss part of the series on paternity leave. Cox, who turns 24 on Monday, has been England’s spare batter for their last five Tests and will get his chance to impress in December.Smith and his partner are expecting their first child in mid-December, with the birth likely to clash with either England’s second or third Test in New Zealand. “Being at the birth of my son is not something I want to miss,” he told the recently. “It will be a memory that I cherish more than any in cricket anyway, so if I lost my place because of it, so be it.”Cox made his international debut in England’s T20I series against Australia last month, and will soon be added to the squads for their upcoming white-ball tour to the Caribbean. He was unable to keep wicket for Essex this summer after a horrific broken finger sustained in the Hundred last year, but has been working on his keeping with Brendon McCullum in Pakistan.”It’s life, right?” McCullum said of Smith’s absence. “People have kids and we wish them all the best, to be there and support their partners. At this stage, it looks like Jamie will probably play the first [Test in New Zealand] and may miss the next two. We’re not totally sure – it’s up to Mother Nature a little – but we know we’ve got Jordan Cox in the squad here.”It will not concern England that Cox has hardly kept in the last year, as shown with Smith’s own selection earlier this summer despite being second-choice behind Ben Foakes at Surrey. McCullum believes from his own experience that New Zealand is “a comfortable place” to keep wicket, and wants to see how Cox – whose glovework he describes as “solid” – fares at Test level.Cox is a self-assured character who, by his own admission, would get “bored” once he had reached 40 while playing for a struggling Kent side last year. He moved to Essex after feeling like he “needed a change” that would help him “reignite” his passion for four-day cricket, and scored four hundreds while averaging 65.57 in his first County Championship season for them.Related

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Ben Stokes apologises for frustration after lapses cost England dear

He filled the No. 4 spot at Essex vacated by Dan Lawrence’s move to Surrey, and Lawrence’s own recent experiences highlight the problem with being England’s spare batter. After making a decent impression in the Caribbean in March 2022, Lawrence spent more than two years waiting for another opportunity in the middle order, only to be thrown in as an opener with predictable results. Now, he has slipped below Cox in the pecking order.Unless England lose a batter to injury or illness before Thursday’s third Test in Rawalpindi, Cox will be added to their white-ball squads and travel to the Caribbean, most likely along with Rehan Ahmed. Marcus Trescothick, who is interim white-ball coach for the three ODIs and five T20Is against West Indies, has already left Pakistan ahead of that tour.Cox should make his ODI debut in that series and will have a chance to stake a late claim for a spot in England’s squad for next year’s Champions Trophy. But it is the prospect of a Test debut later this year that could satisfy his restlessness, and provide vindication for the air miles he will rack up in the first half of the English winter.”He’s annoyingly good at everything he does – particularly on the golf course,” McCullum said. “He’s one of those guys that you look at and say he’s got a high ceiling in terms of talent, particularly with bat in hand. There’s a fair chance that he’ll get the opportunity in New Zealand, if Jamie does return home, to bat down the order and take the gloves.”

Calvert-Lewin upgrade: Everton advancing in talks to sign £34m striker

da betcris: Everton striker Dominic Calvert-Lewin announced his departure from the club last week upon the expiration of his contract.

da brdice: “After nine remarkable years at this club, I’ve made the incredibly difficult decision – together with my family – to begin a new chapter in my career,” said the Englishman on social media, confirming the news.

The previous few seasons haven’t quite gone to plan, as he scored just 11 goals since the start of the 2023/24 campaign.

David Moyes now faces the challenge of bringing in another attacker who can replace the former Sheffield United man. Might a move be close for someone linked recently?

Everton ramping up talks to sign La Liga centre-forward

While Calvert-Lewin was reduced to a bit part figure at Goodison Park last season, he still needs replacing, and Beto still needs some competition up top.

Well, the Toffees may well have found their man already.

Everton's DominicCalvert-Lewincelebrates scoring their first goal

Indeed, according to TEAMtalk, Everton are currently in talks to sign Villarreal striker Thierno Barry and are ramping up their efforts to bring him to the Premier League now knowing that Calvert-Lewin is departing.

The La Liga side are desperate to keep their prized asset, and unless a club matches his €40m (£34m) release clause, the Frenchman won’t be going anywhere.

“We want the player, and if he were to leave, it would have to be, if not for the release clause, something very close to it. If not, he won’t leave.” commented Villarreal Sporting Director Fernando Roig Nogueroles.

With Calvert-Lewin’s £120k-per-week wage now off the bill, Moyes will have some flexibility regarding potential incomings.

Not only would Barry be an excellent signing, but the youngster would also be an upgrade on the former Toffees frontman.

Why Everton must sign Thierno Barry

Calvert-Lewin has really struggled for form over the previous two seasons. Last term, he managed to score just three times in the Premier League, recording two assists.

In comparison, Barry netted 19 times while assisting four times across all competitions, instantly suggesting he would be a big upgrade on the Englishman.

Villarreal's Thierno Barry

Furthermore, Barry also registered more shots on goal per game (2.1 vs 1.9) than Calvert-Lewin, along with scoring more frequently (a goal every 211 minutes vs every 543 minutes), created more big chances (seven vs one) and finished the season with a better goal conversion percentage (15% vs 6%) in their respective leagues.

By coming out on top across all of these metrics, Barry could give Everton some much-needed firepower next season under Moyes.

He was hailed by U23 scout Antonio Mango in May this year, who spoke glowingly of his 6 foot frame, noting that his “strong physique makes him menacing in the box.”

Thierno Barry’s 24/25 La Liga stats

Apps

35

Starts

25

Goals

11

xG

12.41

Total shots per game

2.1

Big chances missed

15

Chance conversion

15%

Assists

4

Big chances created

7

His hulking frame means Barry is excellent in the air. Indeed, when compared to his peers across Europe’s top five leagues, he ranks in the top 14% for aerials won (3.84) per 90.

This ability in the air will be music to Moyes’ ears, who can ask his wingers to deliver crosses into the box on a regular basis.

For a fee of just £34m, the Merseyside outfit can sign a player with proven ability in a top-five European league.

Not only that, Barry would be an instant upgrade to Calvert-Lewin.

Everton considering shock move to sign £40k-p/w ace likened to Messi

The Toffees could cause a shock…

BySean Markus Clifford Jun 29, 2025

Palmeiras bate São Paulo e conquista o bicampeonato do Brasileiro Sub-17

MatériaMais Notícias

da leao: O Palmeiras conquistou o bicampeonato no Brasileirão Sub-17 ao vencer o São Paulo por 3 a 0, neste sábado (21), na Arena Barueri (São Paulo). Os gols da final foram marcados por Estevão, camisa 10 do Verdão.

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasPalmeirasGabriel Menino fratura o tornozelo e só deve voltar ao Palmeiras em 2024Palmeiras21/10/2023PalmeirasLeila Pereira viaja pra Cali para acompanhar o Palmeiras na final da Libertadores FemininaPalmeiras21/10/2023PalmeirasPalmeiras liga alerta na reta final do Brasileirão em busca de vaga na LibertadoresPalmeiras21/10/2023

da imperador bet: As “Crias da Academia” levantaram o troféu da competição pelo segundo ano consecutivo. Em 2022, o Palestra conquistou o título pela primeira vez, derrotando o Grêmio por 2 a 1 na decisão, em Porto Alegre (RS), com gols de Gabriel Vareta e Luis Guilherme.

Nesta edição do torneio, o Palmeiras disputou 14 partidas, sendo nove pela primeira fase, com 11 vitórias, dois empates e uma derrota, somando 40 gols marcados e 22 sofridos. O artilheiro da equipe em 2023 foi o atacante Estêvão, que balançou as redes adversárias sete vezes.

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The time is right for a women's IPL (but does the BCCI agree?)

Rising interest in the women’s game, Indian players making a splash in overseas leagues, and a shifting cultural landscape – the stars have never aligned better

Annesha Ghosh27-Nov-2021What might the India careers of Harmanpreet Kaur, Jemimah Rodrigues and Poonam Yadav look like in the near future had the Hundred and the Women’s Big Bash League (WBBL) not been around?Beset by flagging form and stiff competition from emerging talent, Rodrigues and Poonam were out of India’s starting XI for the best part of the season, and questions were raised over an injury-besieged Harmanpreet’s place in the side. But the two overseas franchise leagues have given these players a chance to regain form.That raises the question: what is preventing the BCCI, which controls the biggest economy in world cricket, from launching a Women’s IPL (WIPL)?”Sometimes, you just have to take an idea and run with it,” Venky Mysore, the CEO of the IPL franchise Kolkata Knight Riders, says. “I’ve personally, on several occasions, mooted this idea with the BCCI.” The Indian board, he says, ought to have been the first to roll out a marquee women’s franchise competition fashioned after the IPL. Instead, England and Australia stole a march with the WBBL, the Kia Super League (KSL), and the women’s Hundred, with unprecedented success.”It’s high time we do this because – leave aside all other aspects, like business, viability, the commercial side of it – really, with just the kind of talent and following, it [WIPL] needs to be wholeheartedly supported.”India were runners-up at the 2017 ODI World Cup and the 2020 T20 World Cup, but the BCCI still explains its reluctance to launch a WIPL by saying there is a “lack of depth” at the domestic level, and there are others on the IPL circuit who agree.”The way [India Women] performed during the last World Cup, and in the subsequent series [against England and Australia earlier this year] has been very encouraging,” says a top official at Chennai Super Kings. “I still feel it [the women’s game] has to evolve… and in the T20 format. It will take at least two to three years for them to come to a stage where we can think of an IPL for women.”A 13,000-strong crowd showed up for the 2019 WT20 Challenge final, with some fans holding placards that read “Our girls are no less than the boys”•BCCIThe Women’s T20 Challenge (WT20C) began as a one-off exhibition match in 2018 and became a three-team, four-match event with official T20 status in the two years following. Many expected it to graduate into a full-fledged tournament of its own, but in its current configuration it probably fits the bill for what the board considers an adequate showcase for women’s T20 in India.”I think BCCI has come to the conclusion that they’ll have the three-team or four-team women’s event every year during the IPL,” the CSK official says. “And over a period of time, when the standard [improves] and the public starts to watch the game more frequently, I think that will be the time when they will introduce the Women’s IPL. At this point in time I don’t think it will be possible to have an eight-team women’s IPL, because you should have enough quality players for the tournament to be competitive.”Mysore, on the other hand, thinks there’s enough talent going around the world at the moment to launch a WIPL “perhaps even with eight or ten teams, depending on how you structure and open it up”.If the player numbers for an inaugural WIPL were to be drawn up on a middle ground between these two views, a six-team competition would seem realistic. If each of the six squads requires about 25 players, as with the men’s IPL, that would mean a total of 150 players in the league.Four overseas players in every starting XI, like in the men’s IPL, with an additional two locked in as reserves in each squad, means 36 of the 150 players would be accounted for from the overseas pool. So you would need a total of 114 Indians – capped and otherwise.There were 32 players in India’s squads this year – for the home series against South Africa and the tours to England and Australia. Let’s say this bunch of capped players and India hopefuls, deemed good enough to represent the country against international opposition, contributes 30 players to the 114-player requirement.Then there’s the group of out-of-favour India internationals and India A players, many of whom have performed well in recent domestic seasons but were not picked in any recent India squads, which were limited to 25 or fewer. Pick ten from this pool and the number of domestic players without any India or India A experience that you need to gather shrinks to 74.Does India have a player pool big enough for a six-team WIPL?

Registered players for senior cricket in India: 1100 approx

Actual pool for WIPL to pick from: 660

Local players needed in WIPL: 114

Capped and India-ready players available: 40

Uncapped players needed: 74

In a full women’s domestic season in India, with limited-overs competitions in the senior, Under-19 and U-23 categories, there are at least 1100 registered players. According to data obtained from the BCCI, there were 1021 players registered for the 2020-21 senior women’s one-day and T20 competitions across 37 state associations. This season there were 982 players registered for the 50-over competition alone (the T20 tournament is scheduled for February-March 2022) and 1053 for the 36-team U-19 one-day tournament.You could argue that players from the ten new teams – six from the north east (Assam, Manipur, Mizoram, Sikkim, Meghalaya and Arunachal Pradesh) along with Puducherry, Bihar, Uttarakhand, and Chandigarh – that first took part in a BCCI domestic competition in the 2018-19 season or later cannot be considered on par with those from the top domestic sides or those in the India or India A mix. The overlap of Under-19 players also featuring in the U-23 and senior tournaments is more pronounced among these fledgling teams than in established sides like Railways, Mumbai, Bengal, Delhi and Karnataka.Uttarakhand and Chandigarh make a case to be considered exceptions here. The majority of players from Uttarakhand, the current U-19 one-day champions, were part of the Uttar Pradesh Cricket Association pool because their domiciles of origin lie in the state of Uttar Pradesh. Similarly, the bulk of Chandigarh’s players have represented the Punjab Cricket Association before.In the view of coaches of four north-eastern senior sides ESPNcricinfo spoke to, and Shweta Mishra, a former Madhya Pradesh allrounder who has been coaching the Puducherry sides since 2018-19, about 45-50 “selectable” players make up each of the eight fledgling state’s pool (leaving Uttarakhand and Chandigarh out) from which all of their U-19, U-23 and senior squads are picked for a season.Even if all 50 players from each of these eight sides are excluded from the overall pool of 1100 registered players in any given domestic season, that would reduce the count of available players to about 700. Remove the 40 players in and around the Indian team and the number drops to 660.Can the BCCI not find 74 players from a pool about nine times as large?The make-up of the current India teams offers perspective on the skill of up-and-coming young players and the measure of talent at the domestic level. Rodrigues, Pooja Vastrakar, Shafali Verma, Yastika Bhatia, Richa Ghosh and Radha Yadav are among 18 cricketers to have made their India debuts since 2018, on the back of impressive performances in domestic tournaments. Not only have they been match-winners for India on several occasions, in varied conditions, several have also made a splash at the Hundred and the WBBL.There have been signs of gradual improvement in domestic standards too. In this year’s Senior Women’s One-Day Trophy, for example, there were 27 centuries (only four of those came against developing sides like Manipur, Assam, Puducherry and Mizoram). Several of those hundreds were by players aged 21 or under. By contrast, 22 hundreds were made in the 2020-21 season, 11 in 2019-20, 23 in 2018-19, and three in 2017-18. The increase in the number of teams and an overall improvement in the quality of pitches have been factors in the rise in the number of centuries, but Suman Sharma, the Delhi senior coach who was formerly on the India support staff, says it would be harsh to suggest that it means bowling standards have not kept up.”It’s the change of mindset that’s been the main difference, plus fitness consciousness, IPL’s standard of cricket, and broadcast of more women’s matches by the BCCI,” she says. “The bowlers haven’t dropped in quality suddenly. It’s just that until five-six years ago, ‘crease ‘ [you have to stay at the crease] used to be the main objective among batters. Now the approach is to score boundaries, rotate strike, and post at least 200. This mindset is pronounced especially among the younger girls.”Ripples of Harmanpreet’s epochal 171 from the 2017 ODI World Cup semi-final still continue to be felt. “It changed the narrative around power-hitting and strike rate,” says Lalita Sharma, a former India international who plays for Delhi. “There is a belief among the girls that if she can do it, others can too.”

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According to Mysore, Knight Riders is putting its weight behind the WIPL because of what has been seen of women’s cricket, and particularly Indian women’s cricket, so far: “the style of play, the kind of talent you see, the energy – it’s exciting to see that”. These determine whether a cricket league is “attractive, novel and [can] generate interest.”And the IPL, Mysore says, has given its existing franchises hands-on experience of selling such a product, built from scratch and developed over 14 years. It also offers a native audience for a WIPL to benefit from.”When we play at the Eden Gardens, we fill up the stadium; not a single seat is available,” Mysore says. “Within the group [of spectators], a significant portion is women and children. That’s a segment who will also support a Women’s IPL in a big way. So it’s up to us now to take that, figure out how we can position that, and market it.””The BCCI has a talent pool of around 600 Indian players to draw from when it comes to picking for a WIPL•BCCIData on women’s cricket consumption trends among Indians bears Mysore’s optimism out.An ICC report said that India’s success in the 2020 Women’s T20 World Cup boosted audience interest in the event, whose global viewing hours increased from 55.9m in the 2018 edition to 113.5m in 2020, making it the most watched ICC women’s T20 event in history.More than 13,000 fans attended the 2019 WT20 Challenge in Jaipur, though minimal signage outside the stadium premises betrayed a lack of marketing for the event. The four matches of the competition had a total reach of 71 million viewers; 105 million tuned in to the 2020 edition, according to data from the Broadcast Audience Research Council India (BARC) and Star India, the media-rights holders of the BCCI.Social media platforms and other companies have come on board too. On the eve of the 2020 WT20 Challenge, Twitter rolled out seven custom emojis for the competition, including for the three captains. This was only the second time the platform had launched emojis modelled on women cricketers. The previous instance, “a global first for women’s sport on Twitter”, was for the 2017 World Cup.In 2020, sponsors signed with the BCCI exclusively for the WT20 Challenge for the first time in the tournament’s three-year history. Telecom giant Jio, owned by Reliance Industries, which owns the Mumbai Indians franchise, came on board as title sponsors. Tata Motors, Unacademy, Paytm, Dream 11, and CEAT, all of whom regularly spend money on men’s cricket, signed on as official sponsors.With superstars like Harmanpreet Kaur, Jhulan Goswami, Mithali Raj [in the competition, it was a] “fairly straightforward decision” to invest in the event, says Vivek Srivatsa, who heads marketing for the passenger vehicles business unit at Tata Motors. Also, it aligned with the company’s commitment of fostering diversity and inclusivity, he says.”Movies or advertising is a strong reflection of the mood point of where society or the world is,” Amit Wadhwa, CEO, Dentsu Creative brands, says. “The world is moving more and more towards equality, gender equality being one key part of it. And when you start seeing that in sports, you know this isn’t just talk.”

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There have been other markers of increased advertising interest in women’s cricket, notably since the lead-up to India’s tour of Australia in September 2021. In a campaign for the health drink brand Boost, a young female fast bowler is seen wowing former India men’s captain MS Dhoni with her stamina and skills. An iconic Cadbury commercial from 1993 was updated for 2021 with genders flipped, featuring a female batter as the protagonist. An ad film for a personal finance platform went a step ahead, showing a left-hand batter (not very subtly) named Smriti Shinde, fulfilling her father’s dream of representing India as a professional cricketer.The increased visibility of women cricketers in brand communications hasn’t gone unnoticed among media agencies and marketing solutions companies.”For years this [Indian advertising space] was dominated by men and [men’s] cricket. Now, with the success that our sportswomen are seeing, they are becoming role models for society and inspiration for younger generations,” says Navin Khemka, CEO South Asia, MediaCom.

****

In a BCCI media release on the 2020 WT20 Challenge’s sponsor partnerships, board treasurer Arun Dhumal described the competition as “financially independent”; president Sourav Ganguly hoped the development would “give parents the confidence that playing cricket is a great career opportunity for their daughters”; and secretary Jay Shah underlined the board’s desire to “create concrete ways to grow the pipeline of women talent in cricket”.However, the board hasn’t taken any steps since to indicate the WT20 Challenge will progress beyond being a sideshow to the IPL. The competition, traditionally staged during the playoffs week of the IPL, wasn’t held this year, even though theoretically it had two windows since this year’s IPL was played in two instalments.At the domestic level, calls for the resumption of the U-16 women’s tournament – a vital element in the pathway for any successful international cricket team – and the senior multi-day competition have fallen on deaf ears. The season’s U-23 tournament is all but cancelled, a casualty of what has been explained as a “packed schedule”, associations say.The national team themselves suffered 364 days of inactivity after playing their maiden T20 World Cup final last March. When they returned to the field this year, a South Africa side without several key players battered them at home.India’s next two assignments, multi-format tours of England and Australia, surprisingly featured a Test each, though they hadn’t had any game time in the longest format between 2014 and 2020. India aced both games – to the extent that it made the draws look like jailbreaks for their more seasoned opponents. These feats could go some way towards inspiring them to making a serious impression at the 2022 ODI World Cup, and maybe even a podium finish later in the year at the Commonwealth Games, which will be hosting its first women’s cricket event. Suffice to say, this team’s propensity for thriving in the face of adversity may well be one of the factors contributing to the growing interest around this team.Whether all of this is enough for the BCCI to launch a marquee women’s franchise league soon enough remains a subject of conjecture. Maybe a trail will be blazed in Pakistan first.

Samson and Pandey excluded from Vijay Hazare Trophy squads

Samson’s exclusion comes after KCA decided to include players from the camp

Shashank Kishore18-Dec-2024Sanju Samson has been left out of Kerala’s squad for the Vijay Hazare Trophy beginning December 21. The move comes on the back of an internal decision to include only those players who participated in a preparatory camp in the lead-up to the tournament.Samson had led Kerala in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy (SMAT) 2024-25, where they narrowly missed out on qualifying for the knockouts, winning four out of their six matches. Samson, who had originally been named in the 30-member probable list, now finds himself out of the 19-member long list.ESPNcricinfo understands Samson had written to the association stating his unavailability for the camp, but the KCA has decided to stick to its original decision. With senior batter Sachin Baby also unavailable due to injury he picked up during SMAT, batter Salman Nizar has been named captain for the 50-over competition.Related

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  • Prithvi Shaw dropped from Mumbai squad for Vijay Hazare Trophy

Samson, fresh off two T20I centuries on the tour of South Africa, played in five of Kerala’s six games at SMAT, scoring 135 runs including one half-century.Kerala squad: Salman Nizar (capt), Rohan Kunnummal, Shoun Roger, Mohammed Azharuddeen (wk), Anand Krishnan, Krishna Prasad, Jalaj Saxena, Aditya Sarwate, Sijomon Joseph, Basil Thampi, Basil NP, Nidheesh MD, Eden Apple Tom, Sharafuddeen, Akhil Scaria, Vishweshwar Suresh, Vaishak Chandran, Ajnas M (wk)

Karnataka ‘move on’ from Manish Pandey

Meanwhile, there’s churn elsewhere with Karnataka seemingly having “moved on” – as per KSCA selection committee chair J Abhiram – from a number of senior players in a bid to reset. Among those not considered is senior batter Manish Pandey.The KSCA believes Pandey’s exit at this point is purely on form and the possibility of a comeback seems “tough.” Pandey managed just 117 runs in five innings as Karnataka failed to make the SMAT knockouts; they finished fourth in the eight-team pool, losing out to Baroda and Saurashtra.The last of Karnataka’s white-ball trophies – Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy in 2018-19 and 2019-20 – came under Manish Pandey’s captaincy•MPCA

The association has also gone to the extent of saying Pandey, who was vice-captain to Mayank Agarwal for the first half of Ranji Trophy 2024-25, won’t be considered for the back end of the competition that will resume in January. Pandey managed a solitary half-century in six innings, with Karnataka needing a miracle to qualify for the knockouts.”We as an association have realised that we need to move on from the players of old and bring in new blood,” Abhiram said. “We cannot live in past glory.”If Pandey has indeed played his last game, it marks the end of a glorious career in which he was part of two Ranji Trophy-winning squads [2013-14 and 2014-15], apart from winning a number of white-ball championships. Interestingly, Karnataka won their most-recent silverware under his leadership – the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy back-to-back in 2018-19 and 2019-20.Pandey has 7973 runs in 118 first-class matches at an average of 50.78, with 25 centuries. Overall, he also has over 13,000 runs across the white-ball formats. He played the most-recent of his 68 white-ball games for India in 2021. Last month, he was re-signed by reigning IPL champions Kolkata Knight Riders ahead of the 2025 season.Pandey’s ouster from Karnataka comes hot on the heels of a number of high-profile exits. K Gowtham, the allrounder, hasn’t been considered across formats since the end of the 2022-23 season despite compelling performances in club cricket as well as the state-run Maharaja T20 Trophy.R Samarth, the opener, has moved to Uttarakhand to play across formats, something he wasn’t able to at Karnataka with the selectors considering him as a red-ball specialist. Shreyas Gopal, the legspinner, left for Kerala for a season but has since returned to the Karnataka fold.It appears now that senior players, including captain Agarwal, will be under close scrutiny from the selection committee should they continue to flounder. “When we won the double-treble, it was a young Karnataka team,” Abhiram said. “We’re banking on youth once again to get us there.”Karnataka squad: Mayank Agarwal (capt), Shreyas Gopal (vice-capt), S Nikin Jose, KV Aneesh, R Smaran, KL Shrijith, Abhinav Manohar, Hardik Raj, Vyshak Vijaykumar, Vasuki Koushik, Vidyadhar Patil, Kishan Bedare, Abhilash Shetty, Manoj Bhandage, Pravin Dubey, Luvnith Sisodia

Atletico Madrid have 'no excuse' for not challenging for La Liga & Champions League trophies as former star Saul says Diego Simeone has 'a long way to go'

Saul Niguez believes Atletico Madrid have no excuse for not challenging for major honours after all the money they have spent in recent years.

Praises Simeone’s honesty in final talksSlams ‘fake’ figures inside the clubDemands trophies after €400m investmentFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Former Atletico midfielder Saul has hit out at his old club during an interview with , saying they have “no excuse” not to challenge for major silverware this season. The Spaniard officially left the club this summer to complete a move to Brazilian side Flamengo and has reflected on his 13-year spell at the Spanish club.

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Atleti have strengthened over the summer and expectations are rising, with president Enrique Cerezo recently challenging Simeone to deliver Champions League, La Liga and Copa del Rey crowns. They have already Alex Baena, David Hancko, Johnny Cardoso and Matteo Ruggeri among others this summer, and are reportedly working on the signing of Stuttgart's Enzo Millot and Giacomo Raspadori from Napoli.

Having spent big for the second summer in a row, Saul believes it is time for the capital club to challenge Barcelona and Real Madrid for domestic silverware and set their sights on delivering European glory at the same time.

WHAT SAUL SAID

He said: "They have fewer and fewer excuses. Last year they spent 200 million and this year they've paid another 200. Now the reality is different. They're already spending the same as other clubs and they have to compete for everything. Last year wasn't as bad as some people make it out to be. It was a year they came close to winning and didn't. As long as Cholo's message continues to resonate with the players, I think he's got a long way to go."

Saul also reflected on his final conversation with Simeone while he was still on loan at Sevilla, saying: "My relationship with Simeone had ups and downs, but he was always direct, he wasn't fake like some others at the club. He may have been a little more distant as a manager, but everything he said to me was always to my face. In my last chat with him at the Sanchez-Pizjuan, he told me that he wasn't counting on me for the following season. I think it was a very good chat because in the end it was thought that I was going to complain about anything, but in the end it was the opposite."

AFPWHAT NEXT FOR ATLETICO?

Saul’s remarks shine a light on internal dynamics and raise fresh questions about whether Simeone can evolve tactically and emotionally to meet the moment. It’s now or never if Atleti are to reclaim their place at Europe’s top table.

Ashwin: In the last IPL, I felt like I needed to widen my game

At 37, in his first full Tamil Nadu Premier League (TNPL) season, R Ashwin is expanding his range as a batter. He has always been good at finding boundaries down the ground, a skill that Rajasthan Royals leverage when they send him up the order in the IPL in order to provide their finishers a more suitable point of entry. But at this year’s TNPL, Ashwin has been working on playing boundary shots square of the wicket, and it’s paying off.In the Qualifier 2, against Idream Tiruppur Tamizhans at Chepauk on Friday, Ashwin dismantled left-arm fingerspinners R Sai Kishore and S Ajith Ram with a number of reverse sweeps. He was particularly severe on Sai Kishore, scoring 28 off nine balls at a strike rate of over 300. In all, Ashwin has 200 runs in eight innings in this TNPL at a strike rate of 166.66, with five of those innings coming right at the top or No. 3 for Dindigul Dragons.”Look, everything is work in progress, right?,” he said on the eve of the TNPL final against Shahrukh Khan’s Lyca Kovai Kings in Chennai. “You can even ask Shahrukh Khan about it. How does he do power-hitting… how do you hit the ball through the off side and leg side? It’s all about repetitions, and understanding angles and triggers.”Obviously, in the last IPL, I felt like I needed to widen my game and widen my horizons square of the wicket because I know I can hit the ball down the ground, and I can use my feet. Do I want to explore other options is something I had to ask myself. So if I can ask that question and if I can find an answer, it gives me a new avenue to explore and keep myself interested in the game.”Dindigul’s rookie left-arm fingerspinner P Vignesh had missed the Under-19 World Cup cut for India earlier this year but has been particularly impressive with his accuracy and control in this TNPL. In Qualifier 2 against Tiruppur, he came away with figures of 3 for 8 and the Player-of-the-Match award. Like Vignesh, Tiruppur’s offspin-bowling allrounder Mohamed Ali was excluded from India’s Under-19 World Cup squad but has made a mark in the TNPL. Ashwin has urged the next generation of cricketers to embrace setbacks and keep upgrading their skills.”Look, firstly I think missing the Under-19 cut is not the end of the world. Looking at how fragile our next generation can be, I really urge people to look at this game as a part of life,” Ashwin said. “Failure and success is very, very normal, and people become better only through failures. So I know P Vignesh, he has been coming to the Indian team nets, and I think he has improved every day. And this sort of a tournament gives these guys opportunity to be able to express and expand their game. I really hope that they’re ready to expand it constantly, and find answers to the questions that are going to be asked.”Lyca Kovai Kings captain Shahrukh Khan with the TNPL trophy•TNPL/TNCA

Shahrukh: GT helped improve my game against spin

Shahrukh has often struggled against spin, especially at the start of his innings, but he has been working on a technical tweak – a trigger movement where he pushes his weight forward – and he believes this will help him be a more rounded batter.”When I was with the Gujarat Titans, we had a camp for about a couple of months there, so I started working a lot on my spin game because they wanted me to bat up the order,” Shahrukh said. “And when you bat up the order, obviously for a batter like me having my concerns against spin bowling, especially, opponent teams would bring in spin when I come out to bat.”So their role was to help me improve my spin game, and it really helped. The front press I’m doing [in the TNPL] is quite obvious now, and it has helped me to score off the front foot and off the back foot as well.”While Shahrukh’s overall strike rate against pace in the IPL is 161.11, it falls sharply to 112 against spin. But in IPL 2024, he managed to lift his strike rate against spin to 168.75 while maintaining a similarly high strike rate against pace. And when Kovai met Dindigul in the league phase in Tirunelveli, Shahrukh took on mystery spinner Varun Chakravarthy and left-arm spinner Vignesh on his way to an unbeaten 51 off 25 balls.Having lost that game to Dindigul, Shahrukh has called his team to put together their “best cricket” in their quest for a three-peat in the TNPL.”I really don’t know [about the law of averages]. We’re taking it as just another game,” Shahrukh said. “The law of averages and the hat-trick [of titles]… all these things on social media are there, but we aren’t focusing on that. Out of the eight games we’ve played, only in two games we’ve stepped up to the expectations we have as a unit.”I hope even in this game we try and bring it out. As far as I’m concerned, we still haven’t played our best cricket this year, and we will try and do that.”

Offers on the table: Rangers must now cash in on "anonymous" flop & Dessers

It is no understatement to say that Glasgow Rangers require a major overhaul this summer.

Not just in the playing squad or staff members, but in mentality. Since the Ibrox side won the Premiership title in 2021, the Gers have won only two trophies since.

In comparison, Celtic have won every available league title on offer and have clinched a domestic double this season, although they did lose to Aberdeen in the SFA Cup final.

Rangers interim managerBarryFergusonbefore the match

Things have to change at Ibrox, and fast. The 49ers’ involvement should give those at the club a boost, but the priority is a new manager.

The likes of Steven Gerrard and Davide Ancelotti have been linked with a move to Glasgow, while several other candidates have been touted for the vacant role.

Whoever becomes the next permanent manager will have work to do in order to improve the first-team squad this summer.

There are various positions that need urgent improvement, no doubt about that. Furthermore, several players could be sold to raise funds and help reduce the wage bill.

Cyriel Dessers may finish the season as the top scorer in the Premiership, but if a reasonable offer comes in this summer, the club should cash in.

Why Rangers must sell Cyriel Dessers

Never has a Rangers player exuded more Jekyll and Hyde-like qualities than Dessers. One minute, he is simply unplayable, causing chaos for opposition defenders domestically and in Europe.

Next, he struggles with the easiest of chances and offers next to nothing in the final third.

There is no doubt about his record in front of goal for the Light Blues since he joined in a deal worth £4.5m from Cremonese in the summer of 2023. Indeed, the Nigerian striker has scored 51 goals and grabbed 16 assists across 109 games for the club during his first two seasons.

On the surface, this is an impressive record in front of goal. He has shone in Europe, with his display against Fenerbahce one of the finest by a Gers forward in quite a while.

Unfortunately, these performances are few and far between. Throughout the 2023/24 league season, Dessers missed a staggering 27 big chances across 35 matches.

Over the same number of games in 2024/25, he missed 21 big chances, a slight improvement, but still not great.

Metric

2023/24

2024/25

Goals

16

18

Assists

4

2

Shots per game

2.9

2.4

Big chances missed

27

21

Goal conversion percentage

16%

22%

During the winter transfer window, several clubs were linked with making a move for Dessers. Saint-Étienne, Cagliari, and Empoli were all showing interest in securing a move for the 30-year-old.

Much to the disappointment of large sections of the support, the centre-forward remained in Glasgow until the end of the season at least.

He has two years left on his current contract, which suggests now would be the ideal time to cash in and secure a decent fee for the player.

This could be used to fund future signings, especially a couple of younger players with a higher ceiling for growth.

Dessers shouldn’t be the only player to be moved on this summer by the new manager. Nedim Bajrami is reportedly attracting interest from afar, and now might be a good time to part ways with the Albanian.

Nedim Bajrami has offers on the table

According to reports in Albania (as relayed by Glasgow Times), Bajrami has two options on the table with regard to a summer exit away from the Light Blues.

One comes from the Italian top flight, while the other is from the Bundesliga, and the report states that the midfielder is likely to leave Glasgow when the transfer window finally opens.

Much will depend on the price, however, as the 49ers will be keen on recouping much of the £3.4m that was spent on the Albanian last summer.

It’s safe to say he hasn’t exactly enjoyed the most productive of campaigns in Scotland, despite arriving with plenty of hype.

What exactly went wrong with Bajrami?

Why Rangers must sell Nedim Bajrami this summer

The 26-year-old had impressed for his country at Euro 2024, scoring an incredible opener against Italy after just 23 seconds.

A move to Ibrox in the final days of the summer transfer window looked like a real coup for Philippe Clement.

What looked like a potentially transformative signing for the club eventually turned into a waste of money. Across 44 games for Rangers, he only scored five goals and chipped in with four assists, showing that he has rarely made a big impact at the top end of the pitch.

Considering the sum of money the club had paid, this was hardly the best of returns, especially following a decent start to life in Glasgow.

The midfielder only started 15 Premiership matches, creating only four big chances, averaging one key pass and succeeding with just one dribble per game in the top flight.

In Europe, Bajrami didn’t fare much better. Indeed, he could only muster a single goal from 11 appearances, winning less than half of his total duels per game and averaging 1.3 key passes per game, which shows how ineffective he has been on the European stage since his move to Ibrox.

Bajrami

The nadir came against Queen’s Park in the Scottish Cup back in February. Rangers suffered a shock 1-0 home defeat – arguably one of their worst domestic losses – but Bajrami was subbed at half-time following a dismal display.

Stevie Clifford, who runs Four Lads Had a Dream, criticised the Albanian a month before, saying:

“I’ll highlight it again, it’s not singling him out, but Nedim Bajrami is not offering enough at all.

“We need him to influence games & be involved, largely anonymous so far, again.

“£4m is big money to do it in these type of games & he’s miles off it so far.”

All of these points point towards a likely summer exit when the window opens next month. Should Rangers receive a bid that is deemed acceptable, then they must be ready to cash in.

He didn’t live up to initial expectations, and regardless of who the new manager is, Bajrami’s future already looks settled with the offers that are on the table from other clubs.

Hopefully, he can make better signings this summer.

Gerrard's next Defoe: Rangers could sign PL "living legend" this summer

Rangers must make a move for a current Premier League striker this summer

ByRoss Kilvington May 24, 2025

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