منتخب مصر يخوض تدريبًا مسائيًا استعدادًا لـ كأس امم إفريقيا 2025

خاض منتخب مصر الأول لكرة القدم بقيادة حسام حسن تدريبا مسائيا بمركز المنتخبات الوطنية بالسادس من أكتوبر في إطار الاستعداد لبطولة كأس الأمم الإفريقية 2025 بالمغرب.

ويستعد منتخب مصر لمواجهة منتخب نيجيريا الودية، المقرر لها 16 ديسمبر باستاد القاهرة، وبطولة كأس الأمم الإفريقية 2025 التي تنطلق 21 ديسمبر بالمغرب.

طالع.. منتخب مصر يخوض مرانه بـ”الكرة الرسمية” لكأس أمم إفريقيا

ويقع منتخب مصر الأول ضمن المجموعة الثانية في كأس أمم إفريقيا والتي تضم: “زيمبابوي وجنوب إفريقيا وأنجولا”.

بدأ مران منتخب مصر اليوم، بمركز المنتخبات الوطنية بتدريبات بدنية وجمل فنية وتقسيمة.

كما حضر مران المنتخب طارق أبو العينين عضو مجلس إدارة اتحاد الكرة، ومصطفى عزام الأمين العام لاتحاد الكرة.

وستنطلق بطولة كأس أمم إفريقيا 2025 في المغرب، خلال الفترة من 21 ديسمبر 2025 إلى 18 يناير 2026، وسيشارك بالبطولة  24 منتخبًٍا، مقسمة إلى 6 مجموعات.

Reforço do Palmeiras brilha pelo Novorizontino e tem missão de eliminar São Paulo do Paulista

MatériaMais Notícias

Classificado para a fase final do Paulista, o Novorizontino conta com a estrela de um já contratado pelo Palmeiras para seguir fazendo mais história no Estadual de 2024.

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➡️ Tudo sobre o Verdão agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso novo canal Lance! Palmeiras

O Tigre do Vale se classificou para enfrentar o São Paulo nas quartas com mais um belo gol do meia Rômulo, que já foi apresentado pelo Palmeiras e vai integrar o elenco de Abel Ferreira após a participação do seu time no Paulistão.

Rômulo marcou o segundo gol do Novorizontino na vitória por 2 a 0 sobre a Portuguesa e fez o seu segundo gol nesse Estadual.

O camisa 10 chega como uma das principais peças do time de Eduardo Baptista que terá a difícil missão de eliminar o São Paulo em pleno Morumbis, na próxima semana.

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O time de Novo Horizonte chega invicto contra os principais times do Estado, uma vez que empatou com o Palmeiras na estreia e venceu Corinthians e Santos, ambos como visitante.

+ Richard Rios descarta favoritismo do Palmeiras no Paulistão!.

Rômulo assinou um vínculo com o Palmeiras até o final de 2028 e estará disponível para as disputas do Brasileirão, Copa do Brasil e Libertadores.

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Man Utd have unseen teenager who "looks better than half their first team"

One of Carrington’s most impressive players left media stunned as Manchester United’s U18s thrashed rivals Liverpool 7-0 in the U18 Premier League.

Man Utd's U18s thrash Liverpool

The present-day Man United side may not be firing on all cylinders, but their academy continues to produce some absolute gems. It’s been responsible for Marcus Rashford and, more recently, Kobbie Mainoo in recent years – not to mention Scott McTominay – and could have more young stars on the way.

The Red Devils’ U18s side even got some revenge for their first-team this weekend by thrashing Liverpool U18s 7-0 in ruthless fashion. Goals from Bendito Mantato, Louie Bradbury, Jim Thwaites, Samuel Lusale and a hat-trick from JJ Gabriel saw those at Carrington make a statement on Saturday afternoon.

Of course, the success of the academy has always been a priority for those at Old Trafford and Ruben Amorim recently ensured that he extended their record of having a homegrown gem in every matchday squad since 1937.

After handing Jack Fletcher a place on his bench against Tottenham Hotspur, Amorim told reporters: “It’s really important. I think again we are in the moment [where] if we are going to take some corners and succeed right away, it’s the wrong thing.

“There are some things especially in our club that we need to be bulletproof. It’s the way we behave, the way we feel the club and all these small things. We are not going to stop with the Academy players.”

It may not be too long before 15-year-old Gabriel gets the call to the first-team, either. The young forward left media stunned in an incredible display against Liverpool’s U18s.

JJ Gabriel "better than half" the Man Utd first-team, says reporter

Among those blown away by Gabriel was the Daily Mail’s Lewis Steele, who went as far as claiming that Gabriel “looks better than half their first team” at Man United.

After netting a hat-trick, the teenage sensation has taken his total for the season to seven goals and one assist in nine appearances in the U18 Premier League.

It won’t be long before Gabriel is progressing through the ranks in Man United’s academy and he looks destined to make his mark on the first-team in years to come. If some believe he looks better than some of the current stars now, he may be a world-beater by the time he turns 18.

The best teenagers in world football ranked (2025)

The future of football is in safe hands.

ByTom Cunningham Nov 26, 2025

The future is still bright at Old Trafford even if Amorim’s first-team are struggling for consistency. Like it has done so often in the past, Man United’s academy could yet provide the spark that the Red Devils need to return to Europe’s top table.

South American gem now "on his way" to sign for Man Utd as INEOS seal £1m deal

Aaron Judge Passes Yankees Legend, Jumps Into Fifth on New York's All-Time HR List

Aaron Judge is climbing up a special page of the Yankees' record books.

With a home run in the first inning of the Yankees' game against the Tigers on Tuesday, Judge has now compiled 359 home runs during his time in New York, surpassing legendary catcher Yogi Berra for fifth-most in franchise history.

Judge previously tied Berra with his 358th home run on Aug. 31, and now surpasses the Hall of Famer and three-time MVP with his first home run of the month. It's an incredible achievement, as Judge becomes the first player to crack the top-five of the Yankees' home run list since 1957.

Judge now trails only Hall of Famers Joe DiMaggio, Lou Gehrig, Mickey Mantle and Babe Ruth for the most home runs in Yankees history.

Yankees' All-Time Home Run Leaders

Player

Total Home Runs With Yankees

Seasons Played With Yankees

Babe Ruth

659

1920 to ’34

Mickey Mantle

536

1951 to ’68

Lou Gehrig

493

1923 to ’39

Joe DiMaggio

361

1936 to’ 42, 1946 to ’51

Aaron Judge

359

2016 to present

Judge is a long ways away from Gehrig, Mantle and Ruth on the Yankees' all-time home run list, but he should pass DiMaggio for fourth all-time in franchise history before the end of the season. Judge needs only three more home runs to do so, and there are 18 games remaining in the regular season following Tuesday's matchup.

At 33, Judge has time to potentially reach the top-three Yankees' home run leaders, but he will need to continue playing at a high level for several more seasons to approach Gehrig, Mantle and/or Ruth.

Judge has averaged 48 home runs per year over the last five seasons, meaning it would take a little less than three seasons at that pace to pass Gehrig, over three and a half to pass Mantle, and over six seasons to pass Ruth at his current pace.

Tarik Skubal Played Coy on Uncertain Future Following Tigers' Crushing Loss in ALDS

Tarik Skubal dominated on the mound for the Tigers yet again Friday night in a decisive Game 5 against the Mariners. Unfortunately for Detroit, it wasn't able to capitalize on the Cy Young Award front-runner's latest impressive start, which is a trend that became all too familiar toward the end of the Tigers' season.

The Tigers went 1-4 over Skubal's final five starts of the year, which includes the regular season and postseason. That poor record is no fault of his own, though, as the big lefthander allowed just six earned runs over 32 2/3 innings pitched in his last five starts. Other than a nine-run outburst in Game 4 against the Mariners to keep their season alive, the Tigers' offense sputtered down the stretch, giving Skubal little run support and leaving his quality starts hanging in the balance once he hands the ball to the bullpen.

Nobody could have expected a 15-inning marathon in the winner-take-all Game 5, which saw a full nine innings after Skubal's night was done. However, the Tigers can only wonder what could have been after they fell in another critical game in which the ace started. Plus, the franchise may have limited opportunities left to capitalize on his dominance.

Detroit's ace remains under team control through the 2026 season. After that, he's slated to become a free agent where he's in line for the richest contract ever for a pitcher. That is, unless the two sides can work out a long-term contract extension in the meantime, which looks less and less likely with Skubal's astronomical value on the open market. After the disappointing end to the Tigers' season, Skubal spoke to his uncertain future and the direction ahead for the franchise, although he left it fairly open for interpretation.

"My job is to play," he said after Game 5 against the Mariners via Evan Petzold of the . "That's not my job—to do anything other than play. Those questions should be asked toward the front office and the people that make those decisions, but my job is to play."

He's represented by Scott Boras, who will undoubtedly try to get the best contract for his client who's one of the best pitchers on the planet. And it's a fair assumption that the best contract out there likely isn't from Detroit, which hasn't necessarily been the biggest spenders as of recent. Skubal's goal is to win a World Series, and he may have only one more shot to do so in a Tigers uniform.

And then there were eight – a look at the Ranji Trophy quarter-finalists

Usual suspects Karnataka and Saurashtra, indomitable J&K, on-a-roll Bengal among last teams standing

Saurabh Somani18-Feb-2020

Gujarat

After beginning steadily, Gujarat’s season took off with a stirring win over Punjab in their fourth game. They were 72 for 5 in the second innings, with the overall lead just 124, but the last five wickets added 95 runs, and the target of 220 proved beyond Punjab. The next games had Gujarat defeating defending champions Vidarbha in a close contest, taking a hard-fought first-innings lead against Delhi, and rounding things off with a win against Andhra.Best performers
Axar Patel has played only four matches in the season so far, but he’s already taken 24 wickets. He also made an important 89 against Andhra.The all-round talents of Roosh Kalaria have served Gujarat well across formats, particularly this season. In the Ranji Trophy so far, he’s Gujarat’s highest-wicket taker with 30 strikes. His batting average is a useful 16.25 too.

Bengal

Bengal had been good without being great in the first half of the season, but the surge came in their second half. A Manoj Tiwary triple-century led to an innings win over Hyderabad, rain robbed them of potential first-innings lead points at least against Delhi, and then they came from behind to win each of their last two games, against Rajasthan and Punjab. They chased down 320 against Rajasthan, and won a tense, low-scoring shootout against Punjab.Best performers
Manoj Tiwary was always going to be one of Bengal’s go-to batsmen, but the sudden downturn of form for captain Abhimanyu Easwaran meant the responsibility on Tiwary was greater. He was scoring consistent runs, then exploded with that monumental 303*. He ended the league stage with two half-centuries on a dustbowl against Punjab.Shahbaz Ahmed had played just two first-class matches before this season, but he turned out to be Bengal’s surprise weapon; 29 wickets at an average of just 13.44 were already fantastic, but Shahbaz has also hit 281 runs at 31.22. One of his two half-centuries came in that chase against Rajasthan.

Karnataka

Karnataka were expected to top the table, and would have done so if not for a couple of uneven performances. But they won the big moments. They came out on top in two thrilling games against two long-time rivals: Tamil Nadu and Mumbai. They also stepped on the gas when needed, with two wins in their last three league games.Best performers
Injury has meant K Gowtham has played only four games, but he’s been a strong presence in each of those, with bat and ball. A batting average of 44.60 and a bowling average of 20.57 speak for themselves.Devdutt Padikkal tapered off somewhat in the second half of the season, but he had begun with a bang, and is still the highest run-getter for Karnataka this season with 547 runs. That comes on the back of good form in the Vijay Hazare and Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophies.

Saurashtra

Saurashtra continued the form that took them to the final last year, with solid performances through the league phase. They might have finished higher on the table, but Madhya Pradesh held on for a draw with nine wickets down. Saurashtra’s only blip came in a loss to Uttar Pradesh.Best performers
Jaydev Unadkat had what was till then his best Ranji season last year. This year, he’s taken it a notch further. He’s missed a game but still has 51 wickets, at an incredible average of 11.90 and equally stunning strike rate of 25. Unadkat has been the heartbeat of the bowling attack.Cheteshwar Pujara has the best average among Saurashtra’s batsmen, though that was perhaps only to be expected. However, with Pujara not available, it’s Sheldon Jackson who has stepped up, much like he did last season too. Jackson is the leading run-getter for Saurashtra, and a lot of his runs have come at crucial times.Parvez Rasool shares some smiles with team-mates after yet another Jammu & Kashmir victory•PTI

Andhra

Andhra had a splendid campaign and were leading the combined A & B table for a large part until two consecutive losses at the end dented their position. However, thanks to the good work put in earlier, they still qualified comfortably enough.Andhra served early notice of their form. In their opening-round game against defending champions Vidarbha, they battled back from conceding a 230-run first-innings lead to force a draw. In their next match, they beat Delhi by nine wickets, narrowly missing out on a bonus point. They had a run of four wins in five matches at one point.Best performers
Before this season, medium-pacer KV Sasikanth had made only sporadic appearances for Andhra. Now, he’s indispensable to Andhra’s plans. The leading wicket-taker with 35 scalps despite missing a game, he’s also scored 203 runs at 22.55, becoming a useful lower-order batsman.This has been the season that Ricky Bhui’s talent has met with more consistent performances. Bhui is Andhra’s leading run-getter, but more than the runs, it’s the situations in which he’s got them. He made 100* in the season opener against Vidarbha to help salvage a draw and his 144* in the next match against Delhi was the cornerstone of Andhra’s win.

Jammu & Kashmir

They came into this season on the back of unprecedented strife in the state. Even without that context, their performances on the field have been sensational, but given the larger picture, they have been even better. The only game they lost, to Haryana, was a two-wicket defeat. The best part about J&K’s season has been how much of a team show it has been. They haven’t relied on any one person significantly more than others. Four batsmen have over 400 runs (a fifth has 386). Five bowlers have more than 20 wickets. The entire team has showcased indomitable spirit.Best performers
Even in a team effort, you can’t keep Parvez Rasool away from the limelight. He’s got 403 runs, and his average of 44.77 is the highest in the team. He’s also got 25 wickets at just 14.56. And he’s done this despite missing games.The exciting young Abdul Samad had made a name for himself at the start of the season when he was picked up in the IPL auction. The rest of the season has shown why. That he has 547 runs is impressive enough – but stunningly, they have come at a strike rate of 116.13. His innings have been truly game changing. And he’s found the time to turn his arm over and grab four wickets in 15 overs too.

Odisha

Odisha began their season with three consecutive bonus-point wins. They were a bit fortunate to get a draw against Tripura with two days and a session lost to rain. It could have marked a slide in fortunes, but the inflexion point was successfully passed in a heart-stopping one-wicket win against Haryana in the next match. Though they lost two of their last four matches, they had done enough to finish in the top two in Group C.Best performers
He’s only 26 but Suryakant Pradhan is already a veteran for Odisha. He has never quite enjoyed a season as spectacular as this one, though. He’s already the team’s leading wicket-taker with 35 wickets, but he’s also contributed 244 runs, including a manic 64 off 28 balls against Services, batting at No. 9.Their ages – 33 and 19 – are possibly the only differentiators between Basant Mohanty and Rajesh Mohanty. Basant has 30 wickets at 18.90, Rajesh has 32 wickets at 18.43. Basant is more economical, Rajesh strikes quicker. Together they have given Odisha a pace edge that they lacked when Basant was operating solo.

Goa

Relegated to the Plate Group last year, Goa are back to Group C after topping the Plate table this year. Goa were expected to get tough competition from only two teams – Chandigarh and Pondicherry – and they came through those tests well. Conceding a massive lead of 329 against Chandigarh, they dug in during the second innings to force a draw. They held off Pondicherry for a ten-run first-innings lead and then induced a late collapse to surge to victory on the final day.Best performers
Amit Verma has had the season of an allrounder’s dreams. It would have been great as a batsman or bowler alone – 791 runs at an average of 71.90, and 41 wickets at 13.26. He’s been Goa’s highest run-getter and wicket-taker, and he’s the captain too.Smit Patel began the season relatively slowly, with 71 runs in his first three innings. Then he began reeling off the big scores without pause, ending the league stage with 751 runs at an average of 75.10.

An experience of a lifetime at the Chinnaswamy Stadium

How a group of friends managed to get tickets for the India-Pakistan clash and then partied in the stands and streets

Sudhindra Prasad05-Apr-2020″Shall we swing by the Chinnaswamy?”This was an oft-used query in my vocabulary while growing up in Bangalore. Once I joined UVCE (University Visvesvaraya College of Engineering) – a convenient five-minute ride away from the KSCA’s M.Chinnaswamy stadium – the ground was just around the proverbial corner. The use of that query during those days could have referred to anything from catching up with an absorbing day of a Test match, a quick visit to watch an hour of Karnataka’s Ranji game, checking out the pre-match practice sessions or attending the book fair at the stadium, which was also an annual ritual for folks like me to simply sit on the empty Eastern stand just to admire our field of dreams.The particular use of that query “Shall I swing by the Chinnaswamy?” on one fine occasion in 1996 rewarded me with an experience of a lifetime.It was a tense evening around 7pm in Basavanagudi, as I finished my study session with friends for upcoming exams and started my motorcycle ride homewards towards North Bangalore.This happened during early 1996 and with the World cup all set to kick off in a few days, the city was gripped with cricket fever. A few days earlier, we had meticulously eye-balled the KSCA advertisement in , which announced the sale of tickets for the second quarter-final match of the Cricket World Cup 1996. Ticket counters were supposed to open at 9am. Along with some friends, we came up with a robust plan to take everyone by surprise by showing up at the counters at 5am! Of course, we expected everyone to show up at 7am. An air-tight plan, if ever there was one. Or so we thought!On my way home, I rode past National College Basavanagudi and in the unlikeliest of places/time of the day, that compelling question sprung up: “shall I swing by the Chinnaswamy?”While the ticketing strategy for the following morning was already set in stone, my sixth sense urged me to run a quick reconnaissance. Although the commute time to home had almost doubled, I willingly took the detour and as I turned left on Queens road, I had to re-visit my lowly standards on “taking everyone by surprise”. There were already long lines of people in front of every ticket counter and this was more than 12 hours before the counters opened for a game that potentially would not even involve India. I panicked at the thought that I might not have the chance to watch another World Cup game at the ground for decades, if at all.I was stuck with my college backpack and had no way to send out an alarm to the rest of the group (I had no pager, wasn’t an amateur radio operator and this happened before mobiles were a thing). Immediately, I rode home as fast as I could and headed straight to my brother’s room with the alarming news. After a bunch of frantic calls to alert all the friends and dinner, which lasted five minutes at most, we were out again, heading to the Chinnaswamy. By the time we got there, just after 9pm, a few of our friends were already in the line and we joined them.As evening turned to night, our group had grown to 30-plus and although, the city traffic trickled down, the whole place around the stadium was abuzz with people. We sat on the pavement in our line on Cubbon road. As the night wore on and got colder, folks within the group ran various errands such as get food from an all-night highway Dhaba, get cups of hot tea along from a local vendor or in my case, I walked along to MG road to get a fresh-off-the-press copy of the newspaper. This long night out was also a good opportunity to catch up with friends. Amidst all the potential match-ups for the A3 Vs B2 encounter on March 9th, the teams discussed were mostly West Indies, Sri Lanka and South Africa. Just myself and one more person (don’t recall who anymore) in the group even brought up the potential of an India-Pakistan match.Tickets for the India-Pakistan and India-Australia 1996 World Cup games•Sudhindra PrasadAround sunrise, the crowd was out of control and the single-person lines of the previous night had bloated many times wider. While we were extremely apprehensive about tickets running out before we made it to the counter, we finally did get our tickets by 9.45am and these were the 150 Rs tickets for the newly built Eastern upper galleries. Forget the distant dream of an India-Pakistan line-up. To watch a World Cup quarter-final under the newly installed floodlights in our home ground left us absolutely thrilled! Everything else was a bonus. I distinctly remember a bunch of us standing on the broad road divider on Cubbon road, intensely admiring our tickets, as morning work commuters whizzed past caught up in their honkathons. That would have been quite a selfie/Instagram moment in today’s world.The tournament kicked off a few days later and the Indian team initially appeared to be on cruise control. At the India-Australia game at the Wankhede Stadium, a thrilling chase ensued and the hosts ended up short despite Sanjay Manjrekar fighting hard, like he unsuccessfully did at the Gabba four years earlier. With India slipping up further against the toast of the season, Sri Lanka and South Africa being clinical in their chase against Pakistan, the low probability of an India Pakistan match-up actually turned into reality.The build-up
Suddenly the group of 30-odd friends – called “Park boys” because of the daily meeting point at a park in Rajajinagar – who had the tickets for the quarter-final, felt like lottery winners! An emergency meeting was called. What have we got to support our team, besides loud throats and arms to wave around? Everyone pooled in and decided to get a huge flag for the day. It was a 10-m flag and had to be specially ordered. Box ticked.Indian Jerseys? Oh well, that 90s gripe can be a separate story altogether. As replicas weren’t available back then, each of us picked up a white T-shirt from our respective wardrobes and got the Indian tri-colour printed on them. We were excited to finally sport tri-colour at the cricket, albeit smelling of printing ink.While all of that was happening on the outside, my bedroom was the location of an elaborate activity spread across three-four days. On multiple layers of cardboard, I had laid out a 3x2m white cloth banner and spent days painting a bull’s eye with a red centre. It had “Hit Here” in big letters on the top of the bull’s eye and underneath, I announced “Prize: Audi A4”.Finally, the last bit of the accessory involved music. Back in the 90s with neither the budget nor a pressing need to buy a bugle myself, I was lucky to be able to borrow it from my Physical Education teacher at VVS High School. With all of these boxes ticked, we warmed up for the big day.March 7th, 1996
Two days before the game, the flag was ready. The “Park boys” decided to meet for a flag march. An upcoming thriller and we surely had one of the bigger flags in the ground. We went around the park with our flag, singing songs and chanting. Fun times!March 8th, 1996
The evening before the game, we went to the stadium with a hope of catching up with some players. But the place was packed with fans like us, hoping to get a glimpse of the practice session under lights.The light towers were installed at the Chinnaswamy ahead of the World Cup and the lighting accessories themselves were previously used at the Gabba in Brisbane. Those were times when Indian cricket’s pockets weren’t as deep as they are today. The background details notwithstanding, we stood on Queen’s road admiring our beloved stadium bathed under artificial lights and the roads around it shone as bright as day. The feeling on that evening is hard to put into words, but it suffices to say that we were beaming the whole time with genuine pride!March 9th 1996, Match day
Although the game was set to begin at 2.15pm, my day started very early. The banner was dried and folded, the bugle had long tricolour ribbons attached to it to sling around and all that was left was to apply face paint. Before my mom left early for her work, she had made some 20 rolls with stuffed potatoes and as was standard for all stadium visits, and my dad prepared a huge box full of spiced curd rice before he left for work. Both asked me to enjoy the game and stay out of trouble.Until the crowd trouble happened later during a 1996 ODI game against Australia, one could take along food into the Chinnaswamy stadium without any issues.Instead of jostling for a parking spot with 50,000 others near the stadium, we rode instead to UVCE and decided to leg it from there. As we walked past the Vidhana Soudha, many fans were headed in the other direction after seemingly visiting in the morning to take in the atmosphere around the stadium. A group of fans came over and said “Sir, here please take some banners” handing us some 4/6 placards to signal boundaries. They went on in English asking us “Which country are you from?”With our long hair hanging below our shoulders, beach glasses, ripped jeans, jazzy arm/headbands etc, they thought we were visitors from abroad. My response of “Thanks ” (Thanks mate. We are locals and we will display these placards on your behalf) was met with chuckles.The area around the stadium was clogged, much more than the typical match day in Bangalore. The line for entry into that stand was almost a kilometre long. As is always the case, the line moved slowly, and as the clock hovered around 12:30pm, the crowd started to get apprehensive about missing the start of the game and the line then started to move aggressively forward. After braving the near-stampede like conditions, we finally reached the gate with 45 minutes to go. Security checks were precise and the cops saw my bugle. That got confiscated as they thought that it was a potentially dangerous object for the players. The negotiation didn’t work. Due to the absence of a cloakroom, I wrapped the bugle in my spare T-shirt and hid it in between sacks of cement that lay there (as the construction of the eastern upper stand was completed a few weeks before the game).Pakistan relax during a drinks break•Getty ImagesMy first glimpse of the ground was at 2pm and it sent a chill up my spine. It was my first entry to the new Eastern upper stand, which is the highest in terms of elevation among all the stands, giving a spectacular and almost-bird’s eye view of the action. As I turned to the right, the electronic scoreboard displayed “India won the toss & elected to bat”. I was shocked! How could we even dream of containing an almost ATG batting line up of Sohail-Anwar-Inzamam-Ijaz-Malik-Miandad-Akram and under lights? As the teams were shown on the scoreboard, we noticed that the Sultan of Swing, Wasim Akram, was not playing. A good omen right there!Mahesh and I settled right at the top row of the eastern stands with the Bulls-Eye banner hanging right above the top entrance. The players walked in and we were thrilled to finally see an ODI in coloured clothing in Bangalore. I recall asking, “will we ever again get to see players in blue and green in our stadium again?” That was an obvious reference to the long-standing tension between the two countries.Sachin Tendulkar and Navjot Sidhu started off sedately and did not take many risks. Sidhu appeared in good nick and kept the scoreboard ticking over at four-five runs per over. As the score neared 100, Tendulkar played on of Ata-ur-Rehman and this was indeed a huge blow. Manjrekar came in and the game slowed down well to a point that the crowd were chanting “We want sixer” in jest suggesting him to get a move on. Sensing a lull in proceedings, I took the opportunity to run down to try and get my bugle. As I went to retrieve it, a constable loudly commented “Thuthuri” (Kannada for bugle) and asked me to speak with the top cop, who was comfortably seated close by. As a student, I couldn’t afford a huge spike in expenses (if the bugle was lost), when my allowances were mostly being used up for fuel. After some discussion and listening to my honest explanation, he was convinced that my intent was to add to the atmosphere and could also understand my fear of eventually losing the bugle. He allowed me to take the bugle along in the end. I excitedly ran back up the flight of stairs and once I got to my spot, the music began.The mid-innings was steady but unremarkable, as Sidhu fell for 93 and Mohammad Azharuddin and Vinod Kambli scored quick twenties. With 40 overs gone, we hoped for 70-plus runs in the final 10 overs to get a fighting 260, although my estimation of a defendable total for this Pakistani batting line-up was well north of 300. Both Azhar and Kambli did not convert their starts and although Ajay Jadeja had smashed Zimbabwe in the previous game, our hopes on him getting India to a huge total against this world-class attack weren’t high.With three overs to go and with two overs left for Waqar Younis, 260 seemed distant. However, Anil Kumble started the unlikely final assault with two consecutive boundaries. As the six by Jadeja off the final ball of the over landed in the stand below us, there was absolute mayhem in the stands. That six probably needed another 20 meters elevation and distance to have had a chance at winning the Audi A4, which I had generously put on offer! Javagal Srinath, the local boy, came in and started off with a boundary against Aaqib Javed. The estimate of 260 had slowly crept up to an unbelievable 275 in the making.Jadeja had other plans and continued his assault on Waqar in the final over. Over in the stands, the crowd was absolutely delirious. Having seen countless matches before and since in stadiums around the world, the atmosphere on the day was incomparable. Although Jadeja perished attacking, Srinath’s enterprise got India to a mammoth total. Given the score after 40 overs and with Waqar and Aaqib leading the attack, the final score of 287 was far beyond dreams of grandiose proportions in those times.Since Azhar’s dismissal, I had agreed with the anti-jinx measure in the stands that the bugle be blown only when there are more than two runs scored. I almost didn’t stop during the last few overs. A touch out of steam at the halfway stage, but high on adrenaline, we still vociferously celebrated the Indian batting.During the innings break, the floodlights started to take over from the daylight. Ian Chappel’s commentary has been an integral part of growing up for my generation. His “under lights, it’s a magnificent sight” illustration of the Chinnaswamy that evening was an apt one, as I realised having watched countless ball-by-ball reruns of this game. We sat there admiring every tiny detail of the spectacle, including even the shape of the towers.Given the manner in which the Indian innings ended, it felt as though the intimidating crowd belted out , the big hit by Guns N’ Roses, as the Pakistan openers walked into the arena.Anil Kumble appeals unsuccessfully against Aamer Sohail in the quarter-final of the 1996 World Cup•Getty ImagesHowever, Anwar and Sohail soon hushed the packed crowd with their aggressive stand. After about eight overs or so into the chase, I saw a group of UVCE seniors make their way to the exit. When I put my arms up as if to signal “what the heck”, they responded before leaving, “This game is done, we’ll go get a few drinks and cool off.” Famous last words!After ten overs Pakistan had raced to 84 and made the target look much smaller. Then, to borrow tennis parlance, came an unforced error. Anwar succumbed to Srinath while trying to work a ball to the leg side. We were on our feet for the first time in more than 30 desperate minutes of sitting on those steps in the eastern gallery. There was hope in the air and the crowd had gotten chirpy. That man, Sohail, though, was quick to quell the upsurge as he slammed a few more big shots on the way to a fantastic half-century.Eventually Venkatesh Prasad, another local lad, sent Sohail’s off stump cartwheeling and pandemonium ensued in the stands. This match itself is still famous for that Prasad-Sohail incident.Normalcy was restored thereafter, with Prasad accounting for Ijaz Ahmed and Inzamam-ul Haq. Malik and Miandad then got together and Miandad, in particular, was struggling to time the ball. Around the 27 or 28th over of the innings, I noticed that required run rate on the electronic scoreboard was incorrect. About three-fourths of the “Park boys” were Engineering students and an incorrect calculation quickly brought up intense discussions. A close analysis was followed by raucous celebrations in our area, much to the bemusement of everyone else in our stand, who were unaware of the reason for a random celebration during a quiet but intense stage of the game! My calculation of the asking rate was lower than the number shown on the scorecard. Upon a review of the differences, it came about that Pakistan had only 49 overs to get to the target! There were no announcements in the stadium to that effect and the scoreboard did not specify it.Kumble finally got rid of Malik and we were absolutely ecstatic. With Miandad still struggling and Wasim Akram not fit, the optimism among the crowd was high. This was only helped along as Rashid Latif and Miandad poked around after Malik’s dismissal. The mood of the crowd unexpectedly turned into panic, as Latif hit the biggest six of the day. As the ball went high into the clear night skies, it seemed like clearing the ground, but eventually hit the edge of the roof right next to the BEML stand and bounced back into the ground. The chase was back on and it seemed that Pakistan had potentially found yet another hero in the making. Javed joined in with a boundary of his own and we were back on our bums and that bugle fell silent. Pakistan were still in with a real chance as it was about 72 to get off eight overs.Despite being hit around by Latif, Venkatapathy Raju held his nerve to gently flight the ball, beat Latif and got Nayan Mongia to whip the bails off in a flash. The intense celebrations resumed.Miandad’s ageing legs then gave way while attempting a risky single. As we awaited the TV umpire’s decision, we could see that Miandad was already halfway down to the Pavilion. He knew the outcome! The “Park boys” were elated to see the signal and so was the entire crowd. The eastern upper stand trembled as the crowd jumped around berserk. Now, this was surely it! The stadium turned deafening as the chants rang out, loud firecrackers went off in random places and the musical instruments, including that VVSHS Bugle, were in full blast.Pakistan just about avoided being bowled out and after the final ball was bowled, the cheers from the crowd swelled to a crescendo. We could see the post-match presentations go on, but could hear none of it. Reluctantly we started to make our way outside the stadium, stopping to hug and dance with various other groups along the stairs. This was simply pure joy. Cubbon road was packed with people and there were some folks with boxes of sweets.After partying in the city centre, we decided to head homewards. While walking along the Raj Bhavan road close to midnight, there was still a steady stream of excited folks on two-wheelers screaming into town for the after-party. A couple of us broke off from the group and headed back to UVCE. Much to our delight, the college canteen was still open amidst their own celebrations. After a long day under the blazing sun, we got some cool drinks to fix our dehydrated bodies and took a crate along to cool off the boys, who walked home as there were not enough tuk-tuks around. We caught up with them at Seshadripuram to deliver the cold drinks. Some of the cola bottles were sprayed around as though it was champagne and why not! It reflected the mood of the hour. I eventually got home after 2am.As requested, my mother had come home early from work and had recorded the entire game on VHS tape. Needless to say, I watched the entire Indian innings, forwarding some parts, and the Pakistan wickets well past 5am on March 10th, before I decided to call it a night. Despite being in the stadium, I properly saw the Sohail-Prasad incident only about eight hours after it happened! Imagine life without internet, on-demand TV, social media etc.The hangover of the game lasted for a long time and I am glad to have asked myself question on that evening in Basavanagudi.

Australia take flight in high spirits despite Ellyse Perry blow

The players boarded their flight to Sydney full of laughs, and with a heavy round of applause from co-flyers.

Annesha Ghosh03-Mar-2020A punch of the air from Megan Schutt emerged from the corner of the 20th row, as the pilot welcomed on board a celebrated group of guests. A spirited round of applause from fellow passengers quelled any questions of unfamiliarity the absence of selfie-hunting co-flyers may have triggered. Reciprocation for the recognition came quickly as an ever good-humored Alyssa Healy grinned ear-to-ear and waved a victory sign in jest from her aisle seat.Travelling with athletes may be far from a unique flying experience the world over, but as the Qantas flight prepared to take off around noon on Tuesday from Melbourne to Sydney, the lengthy ovation for one of Australia’s most successful sports teams seemed a fitting prelude to their highly anticipated knockouts at the first T20 World Cup at home.The buzz in the lead-up to this spectacle on the flight had been commensurate with the tournament’s. Throughout this T20 World Cup, the home team has taken centre stage in the ICC’s goal to attract a record crowd for the final at the MCG on March 8.A decisive stride towards that target was made just hours before, a thrilling win in a virtual quarter-final against New Zealand on Monday securing Australia’s berth in the semi-finals. This was after they had tottered close to the unthinkable during the group stages, losing to India and nearly made a mess of a straightforward chase against Sri Lanka.By the time the team boarded the flight, though, confirmation had arrived from the Australia camp that their star allrounder Ellyse Perry would play no further part in their title defence due to a hamstring injury. One might have expected the mood in the squad to be deflated, but once the aircraft’s wheels retracted, there was little indication of anything but normalcy.Peals of laughter occasionally – and somewhat unsurprisingly – emanated from the corner occupied by Schutt, seated next to allrounder Jess Jonassen. Left-arm spinner Sophie Molineux, whose corked thigh marked the start of a worrying slew of injuries in the Australian side this World Cup season, kept to herself in the aisle seat just in front of Healy.Headphones on, teen allrounder Annabel Sutherland kept busy with her phone, while Shelley Nitschke, the former Australia player and current assistant coach, buried herself in a book. The pair, though, would often disengage from their preoccupation to help in the endeavors of Healy, who remained steadfast in her commitment to solving Sudoku puzzles through the duration of the flight.Halfway into the journey, as the crew served rice crackers, chocolate-chip biscuits and drinks as refreshments, the television monitors flashed news about the coronavirus being deemed “the ‘gravest threat’ since 2008 GFC”, “PM drawn back into ‘sports rorts’ saga”, and Georgia Wareham starring in Australia’s win on Monday. A highlights package of that game ran soon after. Meanwhile, Perry, with her wireless earpods on, limped six steps to about four rows in front, where she stayed put until the end of the flight.”We are sure the whole of Australia by now know that Ellyse Perry is [out of the tournament],” Justine Hughes and Bibi Khaleel, two of the flight attendants, told ESPNcricinfo as they made their way out of the aircraft. “It surely must have affected them, but I loved how they seemed to be in good spirits, all of them – lovely and very confident. It was a great to serve such an established bunch of athletes.”What would they remember most from this experience?”No one made any special requests. They were all very kind, very gracious actually. Especially Ellyse Perry. Despite her being one of the most famous [sportpersons] in our country and, yes, the injury as you mentioned, when a couple of us asked for a photo [with her], she was very happy to oblige,” Khaleel said, smiling.The Australians will hope they are on a flight back to Melbourne in a few days’ time. If things go well, by Sunday night their photos could be in even higher demand.

Talking Points – Did Shikhar Dhawan bat too conservatively?

Also, why did Axar Patel bowl only three overs?

Karthik Krishnaswamy11-Oct-2020Rishabh Pant was injured, but why did the Delhi Capitals leave out Shimron Hetmyer?The Capitals only have two wicketkeepers in their squad, so Pant’s absence meant Alex Carey necessarily had to play. That meant one of their four overseas players would have to drop out, and with Marcus Stoinis, Kagiso Rabada and Anrich Nortje un-droppables, the Capitals made the difficult decision to leave out Hetmyer despite him being the top-scorer with a 24-ball 45 in their previous game against the Rajasthan Royals.Did Shikhar Dhawan bat too conservatively?With Pant and Hetmyer out, Carey making his IPL debut, and with a bowling allrounder in Axar Patel slotted at No. 7, the Capitals may have been a little worried about their middle and lower order, which might have prompted Dhawan to bat with a little more caution, especially after two early wickets.There’s also a case to be made that Dhawan’s low strike rates are a little different to those of, say, KL Rahul. Where Rahul, this season, seems to be playing within himself, Dhawan has a more limited range of shots and can therefore be contained by good bowling. The Mumbai Indians planned and executed excellently against him, diligently keeping the ball away from his strong zones.But equally, the Mumbai Indians’ innings showed what Dhawan could have done to counteract those plans. Quinton de Kock and Suryakumar Yadav, in particular, made great use of the crease, moving across their stumps or away from them in order to play with the bowlers’ lines and target unguarded areas of the field. There was an example within the Capitals innings too, when Marcus Stoinis gave himself premeditated room to hit Trent Boult for a pair of boundaries either side of mid-off in the 16th over. Dhawan didn’t do enough of this, and finished unbeaten on 69 off 52.How did Krunal Pandya and Rahul Chahar keep the Capitals so quiet?Iyer is a noted six-hitter against any kind of spin bowling. Dhawan is a left-hander and should theoretically thrive against left-arm spinners and legspinners. Krunal is a left-arm spinner, Chahar is a legspinner.Krunal and Chahar bowled the bulk of their overs to these two batsmen and finished with combined figures of 2 for 53 in eight overs, conceding just three boundaries between them. How did they manage it?Axar Patel sent back Rohit Sharma but bowled only three overs•BCCIThis was partly down to the Capitals’ cagey approach through the middle overs but also to some good bowling. Chahar – much like the Kings XI Punjab’s Ravi Bishnoi against left-handers through this season – bowled from over the wicket to Dhawan and angled the ball across him and away from his natural hitting arc while mostly bowling wrong’uns and sliders. To Iyer, he bowled quickly and slightly short of length, making it hard for him to go over the top – especially with the long boundaries in Abu Dhabi – or step out.Krunal bowled back of a length and into the stumps, and occasionally fired one in really full against Dhawan.When Iyer finally decided to go big in the 15th over, he made a bright start, slicing Krunal for a four over point. But the left-armer went back to shorter lengths and straighter lines for the rest of the over, and Iyer couldn’t pull off the big hit. After hitting a one-bounce single to long-on, Iyer tried to go aerial again when he came back on strike, and holed out to deep midwicket.Why did Axar Patel bowl only three overs?Axar has been one of the Capitals’ most valuable players this season – his economy rate before this match was 4.50 – and he bowled two excellent overs in the powerplay, conceding just 12 runs and picking up the wicket of Rohit Sharma. He didn’t bowl too badly when he came back for the 13th over, despite conceding 12 runs – one of the two boundaries in the over came via a misfield from Prithvi Shaw in the deep. So why didn’t he bowl another over?Axar could have bowled the 15th over too, but with the Mumbai Indians needing only 47 from 36 at that stage with eight wickets in hand, the Capitals brought back Kagiso Rabada, probably to try and dismiss either Yadav or Ishan Kishan, both of whom are better players of spin than pace.Rabada went for 14 but sent back Yadav. The Capitals stuck with the medium pace of Marcus Stoinis for the next over, and he did well to get the wicket of the dangerous Hardik Pandya with a cross-seam delivery. With only four overs left thereafter, the Capitals went with the tried-and-tested route of their two best bowlers – Nortje and Rabada – finishing off their quotas in the 17th, 18th and 19th, leaving the 20th for either Axar or Stoinis or Harshal Patel. Stoinis has done the job before this season, so it was he who took the ball with the Mumbai Indians needing seven off six balls.Did the Capitals use their fielders in the right positions?Shaw isn’t the fleetest of fielders, and the Capitals seemed to station him in the so-called “hot zones” at two crucial junctures late in the game. In the 18th over, he was at deep square leg where Kishan’s pull just about cleared him and went over the rope. Shaw was at full stretch, and a taller fielder might have pulled off the catch.In the final over, with three runs required off five balls, Krunal knocked the ball just behind square on the off side and set off for a quick single. Kieron Pollard didn’t want the run initially, and a quicker fielder might have swooped on the ball from backward point and made him pay for the indecision. Shaw, despite going towards his natural right side, failed to make a clean pick-up, and let Pollard off the hook.

How will Ireland cope with Rashid Khan's threat?

No bowler has more international wickets against one team at a better average than Khan against Ireland

Matt Roller20-Jan-2021In the storied history of international cricket, no player has taken more wickets against a single team at a better average than Rashid Khan against Ireland. Not Muttiah Muralitharan against Bangladesh; not Cathryn Fitzpatrick against New Zealand; not even Sydney Barnes against South Africa. None of them can match Khan’s record against the Irish: 89 wickets across all three formats, at an average of 13.34.At one stage, across a period spanning nearly two years, Khan took at least two wickets in 14 consecutive matches against Ireland – comprising nine ODIs and five T20Is – returning 42 wickets at 10.11 during that stretch. Despite his youth, he has often resembled a grown man playing in a children’s game.Unsurprisingly, therefore, Ireland will approach their ODIs against their most regular opponents this week with some trepidation. Their preparation for the three-match series – which forms part of the World Cup Super League – has been far from ideal: they arrived in Abu Dhabi in late December targeting a 4-0 win against the UAE, but had two fixtures cancelled due to Covid cases in the hosts’ squad and needed an inspired comeback to level the series 1-1.Related

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But in recent times – even if the bar is at a record-breaking low – they have improved against the man who will again provide Afghanistan’s main threat this week. Across his last 10 innings against Ireland, Khan has taken more than two wickets only twice: 5 for 82 in the second innings of a Test, and 3 for 22 in a T20I.In his last six ODI innings against them, he has taken only seven wickets, albeit at a miserly 3.87 runs per over, suggesting a more restrained, defensive approach. The irony of the fact that the worst figures of Khan’s ODI career came at the hands of an Irishman will not be lost on them.”In T20, having to take someone like that down is really difficult,” said Paul Stirling, Ireland’s vice-captain, who has made two hundreds in his last three ODI innings. “We’ve got a chance to play him in 50-over cricket, and give ourselves a chance to see the ball. Defence comes into the game: if he goes for 30 or 40, not taking many wickets, then we can maybe try and target someone else.”I generally try to read the ball in the air. His action is so quick. It looks really easy when people slow it down. I usually pick it in the air and off the pitch and play from there. The world’s best might be able to pick it from earlier in his run-up but certainly not me. Given the speed he bowls at, if he gets a little bit of turn both ways, it’s hard work.”

“Whenever I’ve had trouble against any of those spinners, I’ve been caught in two minds about what to do. But whenever I’ve had some sort of success, I’ve backed my game completely and gone with that.”Andy Balbirnie on facing Rashid Khan, Mujeeb Ur Rahman and Mohammad Nabi

“Some days you can pick him, some days you can’t,” explained Andy Balbirnie, Ireland’s captain, who successfully negotiated 31 balls against Khan while making his highest ODI score two years ago. “He’s always thinking, always looking to change it up. It’s really enjoyable to play against him because it’s a real competition and from ball one, you’re under the pump.”It’s a great place to be because if you can get beyond that, the message that sends to the rest of the guys is great. We’re aware that when he fires, by and large, they have a good day, but if he doesn’t, sometimes we get up on them. It’ll be a great contest – it always is.”And while Khan presents a particular threat, Ireland will not take the rest of Afghanistan’s attack lightly. Mujeeb Ur Rahman and Mohammad Nabi have been regular wicket-takers against them over the years, while Naveen-ul-Haq looks set for a bigger role in this series and left-armer Sayed Shirzad took 3 for 28 in a warm-up game on Saturday.ESPNcricinfo Ltd”You can’t take their seamers for granted,” Stirling said. “But without getting too caught up on them only, it’s Nabi, Mujeeb and Rashid who are their big three. We’ve got to combat that in such important games. We’ve done it before, it’s just about doing it again and again. It’s quite a hard one to practise for: there’s only a certain amount that our net bowlers can try and replicate those three, so you’ve got to get your skills bang in order and make sure everything is working.”Balbirnie said: “I think it’s pretty simple: [it’s about] having a really clear gameplan against them and backing that. Whenever I’ve had trouble against any of those spinners, I’ve been caught in two minds about what to do. But whenever I’ve had some sort of success, I’ve backed my game completely and gone with that.”The great thing about having such a young squad is that they’re so enthusiastic to learn. Not many of them have played specifically 50-over cricket against Afghanistan, so they’ve been asking questions since we got to the airport. They’ve all got the confidence to back their game against them.”That’s what I learned from the senior guys in the squad when I first came in: no matter who you’re playing, just back yourself. If you get out doing what you’re good at, so be it. Always have the mind to back your skills and your gameplan 100%.”It is a mindset that Ireland’s batsmen will hope serves them well when they come up against their chief tormentor this week.

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