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I Dig Sports
Flick warns Barça must 'improve a lot' despite win
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Barcelona coach Hansi Flick said his side must "improve a lot," despite winning 2-0 away at Las Palmas on Saturday to return to the top of LaLiga.
Atlético Madrid leapfrogged Barça by beating Valencia earlier in the day, but second-half goals from substitutes Dani Olmo and Ferran Torres took the Catalan side back to the summit.
Real Madrid can move level on 54 points with Barça, one ahead of Atlético, when they host Girona on Sunday as the race for the title heads towards a fascinating climax.
"In the first half, I missed 5-10% from the players, maybe more," Flick said in assessment of his team's performance against Las Palmas.
"It's about positioning, the passing, all these things. It was not like we can do. We have to improve a lot after this match.
"It's also about occupying the box. This was not good. We need players in the box, in the right position.
"It's not always in the midfield where we build up, it's also very important in the box. I am not happy about that and this is where we can do it better.
"The players are also not happy with the performance, but very happy with the three points.
"We are still top of the table and this is a good situation. We always said we want to improve, be better, a better team. I think today we have to improve a lot."
Besides the three points, there were also positives for Flick in the form of substitutes Olmo and Torres supplying the goals which won the match at the Estadio Gran Canaria. Olmo, who is fully fit again after a recent injury, opened the scoring in the 62nd minute with his first goal since November, firing in off the bar after exchanging passes with Lamine Yamal.
Torres' late strike also went in off the bar as the Spain forward, like Olmo, made his case to start more regularly and demonstrated the squad depth available to Flick.
"[Olmo] scored the first goal and it was very important for us," Flick added. "He was injured and maybe others have been one step higher with the fitness [recently], but Dani is very important.
"He needed these minutes to adapt and we are happy he scored the goal -- it was good for him as well.
"But I am also happy with Ferran, he has scored a lot of goals and is on the bench, it's not so easy for him. But they are doing good. They are always an option for the starting XI."
Barça, who are now unbeaten through 13 games in 2025, have a quick turnaround before their next game -- a visit from Atlético on Tuesday in the first leg of the Copa del Rey semifinal between the two teams.
Atlético won 2-1 when they met at the Olympic Stadium in LaLiga just before Christmas.
Amorim criticizes United players for slow starts
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Manchester United head coach Ruben Amorim criticized his players for starting matches slowly after they recovered from a 2-0 halftime deficit at Goodison Park to earn a point against Everton.
Beto and Abdoulaye Doucouré both scored after suspect defending from the visitors before Bruno Fernandes' well-placed free kick and Manuel Ugarte's first goal for the club leveled proceedings.
A late penalty for Everton was controversially overturned by VAR to leave both teams with a point, but United were once again left ruing their slow start as their disappointing Premier League season continues.
Amorim's team have now scored in the first half just once in their past 11 games in the league -- Fernandes' penalty against Brighton -- and failed to register a shot of any description in the opening period on Merseyside.
"The worst part is that we have the free men, and we are losing the ball without pressure and we are not doing what we are supposed to do," Amorim told TNT Sports after the game.
"We did not exist in the first half. ... We suffered two goals from second balls, and that was clear that they will create that chances by second balls, we were soft.
"When you go to the game and you let the time pass -- it's really hard. The second half was so much better in belief, and in the end we were near to winning this game."
Amorim added that he doesn't yet have the solutions to United's problems as they languish in 15th in the table having won just one of their past five Premier League games.
"I don't know. If I knew, I would change it," he said.
"We need to focus on day-by-day; we need to survive this season and then think ahead."
United host Ipswich Town on Wednesday before an FA Cup fifth-round clash with Fulham at Old Trafford on Sunday.
Arteta blasts players' 'standards' in damaging loss
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Mikel Arteta accused his Arsenal players of lacking the standards required to win the Premier League after Saturday's 1-0 home defeat to West Ham United.
Jarrod Bowen's 44th-minute diving header was enough to secure a surprise win for the visitors at Emirates Stadium as Arsenal mustered just two shots on target in a subdued display.
The result leaves Arsenal eight points adrift of leaders Liverpool, who can extend that advantage into double figures with victory at Manchester City on Sunday.
Following injuries to Kai Havertz, Gabriel Jesus, Gabriel Martinelli and Bukayo Saka, the Gunners were without a recognized striker against West Ham with midfielder Mikel Merino called in as a makeshift alternative.
Asked whether the absence of a forward was to blame, Arteta said: "No, no and I refuse that completely because I am talking about the standards of the players and the team that we played today, me included.
"And that was nowhere near the levels that we have to hit to have the opportunity to win a Premier League. Today, no. We were very consistent, yes, but football is about what you do today and today, nowhere near."
Arteta could not conceal his frustration after Arsenal missed the chance to apply pressure on their title rivals.
"Even though the [possession] that we had and 20 shots, I never felt that we were at the standard and the level that we needed," he said. "First of all to have more threat and then not to allow them to run because we lost a lot of balls that we allowed West Ham to run in very dangerous positions.
"We have to be [angry]. I hope we are very much because we didn't hit the levels today, and I am very much responsible of that, so I am very, very angry."
Pushed on whether the title race was over if Liverpool beat City, Arteta said: "It's not in our hands. For me, I'm really, really annoyed about the things that are in our hands, and we didn't do as well as we possibly could and that's the performance and the result today."
After losing to West Ham, is Arsenal's title race now over?
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LONDON -- With eight minutes of normal time left on Saturday, West Ham United replaced match winner Jarrod Bowen with Evan Ferguson, a striker they signed on loan earlier this month.
If you didn't know better, it almost felt like a move to mock Arsenal. After all, how Gunners boss Mikel Arteta must have wished he could do the same, bereft of attacking options after opting against a midseason signing.
That decision appeared questionable at the time, but after losing 1-0 to the Hammers at Emirates Stadium on Saturday, it has already triggered the biggest question of all: is Arsenal's title race now over?
"It's not in our hands," Arteta admitted after the match. "For me, I'm really, really annoyed about the things that are in our hands and we didn't do as well as we possibly could and that's the performance and the result today."
The hope that Mikel Merino would follow a trajectory comparable to that of Kai Havertz -- midfielder turned striker -- seemed fanciful from the outset, even if he filled the vacant centre-forward position impressively with a late double at Leicester City last weekend. Havertz has a much greater pedigree as a forward, and in any case, his transition to leading Arsenal's attack came organically over a period of time when the team was playing well, not as a stop-gap in their hour of need.
Arteta claimed on Friday that Arsenal had been "re-energised" by the way they rallied together following confirmation Havertz would miss the rest of the season with a hamstring injury. There was very little sign of that here and, in fairness to the Spaniard, he did little to mask his frustration at a performance that never matched the task at hand.
"We have to be [angry]," Arteta said. "I hope we are very much because we didn't hit the levels today and I am very much responsible for that so I am very, very angry."
The Gunners had some zip in the play for the opening 15 minutes or so, trying to angle balls to Merino, which, on two occasions, they managed effectively. After West Ham became alive to that threat, though, Arsenal struggled to assert any sustained pressure beyond control of the ball in safe areas.
Despite the sense of opportunity before them -- Liverpool's 2-2 draw at Aston Villa in midweek and Arne Slot's side not playing at Manchester City until Sunday created a chance to cut the gap at the top to five points -- the Gunners were curiously flat.
Perhaps belief was in short supply. Creativity certainly was.
Martin Ødegaard lacked his usual guile, Leandro Trossard made too many wrong decisions and Ethan Nwaneri was subdued. Declan Rice, berated throughout by supporters of his former club, was hooked after just 56 minutes.
Mohammed Kudus caused Arsenal problems all afternoon, none more so than when substitute Myles Lewis-Skelly hauled him down just inside the Gunners half. Referee Craig Pawson initially gave Lewis-Skelly a yellow card but that was correctly upgraded to a red on VAR review due to David Raya's positioning, 40 yards out of his goal.
One second-half moment summed up the Arsenal malaise. On 79 minutes, the home side won a free kick and a chance to put the ball in the box. Ødegaard instead went short and sideways to William Saliba, who then went back to Raya.
The move was met with anger and a smattering of boos in the stands, which steadily emptied as West Ham completed a well-disciplined defensive display with a degree of comfort.
Arsenal mustered just two shots on target all afternoon, one a first-half Riccardo Calafiori effort that Alphonse Areola held comfortably and the second a Trossard shot cutting in from the right. Including added time, Areola did not need to make a save in the final half hour.
Arteta rejected the idea that their lack of a recognised striker could explain everything he witnessed, believing the problem to be more fundamental.
"No, no and I refuse that completely because I am talking about the standards of the players and the team that we played today, me included," he said. "And that was nowhere near the levels that we have to hit to have the opportunity to win a Premier League. Today, no. We were very consistent, yes, but football is about what you do today and today, nowhere near."
There are still some grounds for hope. This was only Arsenal's first league home defeat in 10 months and Liverpool have a tricky week ahead with City away before a trip to Newcastle United, where Arsenal have already lost twice this season.
Increasingly, though, the Gunners don't look in a position to capitalise on any mistakes with Havertz and Gabriel Jesus ruled out for the season, while Bukayo Saka and Gabriel Martinelli are both several weeks away from a return.
Arsenal made a judgement call not to pursue a January move for Ollie Watkins more aggressively as their 40 million bid was rejected, falling short of Aston Villa's 60m demand to sanction the England striker's transfer. That decision not to spend the extra 20m -- or close to it with a bit of negotiation -- was based on the possibility of disrupting future plans and an objective valuation of a 29-year-old, albeit one proven in the league.
The evidence is mounting that not signing Watkins, or an alternative, may end up costing them a lot more than that.
'What's your focus? Ball, bat' - Aaqib Javed plays down Ind-Pak hype
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Pakistan vs India matches will always inspire passions. But for Pakistan's players, this is just another opportunity to do the cricketing things they train to do as professionals.
"For the cricketers, this is a profession," Javed said. "For them, it definitely is an honour. But, it is a profession. You try your best. In that, you sometimes lose as well. It is a match... one team will win, one will lose. How does it matter? Why so much pressure? Every game is different.
"In a Pakistan-India game, the energy will remain high. And this is the beauty of this contest. What does the crowd do? When you play well, the crowd supports you, they clap their hands. When you play poorly, be it India or Pakistan, the home crowd will go against you. As a player, you shouldn't keep the crowd in mind. We never kept it and neither should these players. What's your focus? Ball, bat - that's it."
There is also particular focus on this game, because although Pakistan are the official hosts, they have had to travel to Dubai, where India have set up camp, and have already played a match. There have been suggestions that it is India who are enjoying the closest thing to home advantage in this scenario. But Javed played those suggestions down.
Almost all of Pakistan's home fixtures had been played in the UAE between 2009 and 2019.
"There's no advantage [for India] at all, because if you look at all the Pakistani players, they have been playing leagues here. The PSL has been played here. So there's nothing really - there's no advantage or disadvantage."
The surface in Dubai is expected to play slower and lower than those in Pakistan, partly because the ILT20 has been played here over the past six weeks. Very few of the strips on the square are fresh surfaces.
"We also have to see the pitch and the ground here," Javed said. "Are these similar to the one we have in Pakistan or are they different? We will play in accordance with the pitches, conditions and the opposition team."
Josh Inglis 120* seals record win for Australia
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Australia 356 for 5 (Inglis 120*, Carey 69, Short 63, Rashid 1-47) beat England 351 for 8 (Duckett 165, Root 68, Dwarshuis 3-66, Labuschagne 2-41, Zampa 2-64) by five wickets
The first match at an ICC event in Lahore since March 1996 saw batting completely dominate this Champions Trophy blockbuster with little margin for error for the bowlers on such a benign surface.
With a mixture of inventive strokes and meaty backfoot blows, England-born Inglis hit his maiden ODI century to finish unbeaten on 120 from 86 balls as Australia reached the target of 352 with relative ease in the 48th over. England's bowlers struggled to handle the dew under lights, with Australia achieving their second-highest successful ODI chase after their 359 for 6 against India in Mohali in 2019.
It was a bitter disappointment for England, who now face must-win games against Afghanistan and South Africa. They ultimately will rue falling a little bit short with the bat, but Duckett's magnificent 165 off 143 was the highest individual score in Champions Trophy history. He received strong support from Joe Root, who made a crisp 68 in a third-wicket partnership of 158.
Even though no other batter scored more than 25 runs, England still compiled the highest-ever total in the tournament and took full toll on the least experienced Australian attack at an ICC ODI event since 1983. They were without frontline quicks Pat Cummins, Josh Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc, while seam-bowling allrounders Cameron Green, Mitchell Marsh and Marcus Stoinis are also missing.
However, the result was not a fait accompli on this flat surface, with Australia boasting a deep batting line-up. Australia's innings mirrored England's with two early wickets after Travis Head and stand-in captain Steven Smith fell in the powerplay.
Having blazed an unforgettable century the last time he was sighted at a 50-over ICC event, Head loomed as the key but on 6 his swipe hit the toe-end of the bat and Jofra Archer held a sharp return catch.
Short overcame a lean run of form by superbly using the pace of England's quicks but legspinner Adil Rashid bowled a brilliant spell in combination with Liam Livingstone that squeezed the batters.
A frustrated Labuschagne hit a slow 70 kph legbreak from Rashid straight to cover before Short on 63 offered a return catch to Livingstone as Australia slumped to 136 for 4.
Carey sheepishly celebrated his half-century after hitting Rashid straight to deep midwicket only for Archer to drop a sitter. Inglis then whacked Archer for consecutive boundaries as the wheels started to come off for England.
Just as Australia started to gain control, Carey hit Carse straight to mid-off with 70 still needed off 50 balls. But Inglis was unperturbed and mowed a six off Archer to reach his century in style.
Smith elected to bowl after being swayed that dew would play a factor under lights as Australia stepped onto the field at an ICC event without their big three quicks for the first time in nine years.
Australia's considerably weakened attack was under immediate pressure on a road of a pitch. There was no Starc, but Australia were not short on aggressive left-arm quicks with Spencer Johnson, whose trademark golden locks had been shorn off, and Ben Dwarshuis handed the new ball.
Dwarshuis was selected ahead of Sean Abbott, who had played in both of Australia's ODI games in Sri Lanka, for match-up reasons although his two early wickets were mostly due to rash strokes.
England's reshuffled batting line-up didn't go to plan initially. In a common bane for them, they went a bit hard early with Phil Salt falling in the second over after falling to clear the on-side as a high-flying Carey plucked a one-handed blinder of a catch to his right.
It was a spectacular first-ever ODI catch for Carey as an outfielder and helped justify the decision for Inglis, the incumbent white-ball wicketkeeper, to retain the gloves.
All eyes were on Jamie Smith, who batted at No. 3 for the first time in international cricket - and only the second time in his List A career - in a decision that forced Root, Harry Brook and Jos Buttler to shift down from their usual positions.
Smith stroked a couple of gorgeous cover drives, before falling tamely to the on-side where Carey took a far easier catch on this occasion.
England did not envision being 43 for 2, but they recovered quickly as Duckett and Root cashed in on errant bowling from Johnson and Dwarshuis. Duckett had started relatively slowly, but blasted a boundary off the last delivery of the powerplay as England moved to 73 for 2.
Smith reverted to spin after the restrictions were eased but there was little turn on offer as Duckett and Root easily rotated the strike. Smith was fairly conservative with his tactics and deployed four sweepers.
Duckett showcased his improved prowess of hitting down the ground by targeting Maxwell straight and he reached his half-century in style with a horizontal bat shot off Johnson.
Root was making it look easy, not fussed about hitting boundaries but smartly working the gaps to reach his half-century off 56 balls. He had a perfect opportunity to end a long ODI century drought stretching to the 2019 World Cup as England eyed a total in the high 300s.
But Root got tied down by legspinner Adam Zampa, was was in the midst of a good spell, and missed a rare attempted sweep to fall in a tight lbw after an unsuccessful review. Australia fought back through Zampa, whose subtle variations proved effective and accounted for Brook with Carey taking another terrific catch after a diving effort running backward at point.
Seamer Nathan Ellis also utilised his noted defensive skills and conceded just 51 runs off his 10 overs - the only bowler with an economy of under six.
England feared letting slip a great platform just like they did against Australia at Trent Bridge last September. But Duckett held things together and blasted consecutive boundaries off Johnson to reach his third ODI century.
He punched the air in celebration, but did not waver in his concentration despite being clearly fatigued. Duckett's brilliant innings finally ended in the 48th over when he was trapped lbw by the legspin of Labuschagne, who was preferred over Johnson at the death and finished with 2 for 41 off five overs.
Archer hit a flurry at the death, but his mood soured later in the night.
Tristan Lavalette is a journalist based in Perth
Gill on what makes him and Rohit tick: 'The way we play is quite different to each other'
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"The way we play the game in the powerplay is quite different to each other," Gill said. "Rohit bhai likes to play more aerial shots, and tries to hit those big sixes. And I like to play along the ground, and I like to pierce those gaps. In between, if I see the bowler is under pressure, I like to go over the circle. I think that's the hallmark of us as a pair. We score boundaries with different shots. The bowlers really have to think which areas to target for us, because the areas we play the shots are different from each other.
"It's a delight to watch [Rohit] from the non-striker's end. He has his own style and if at all it helps me to find my own groove."
"I don't think there was any flaw in my batting in Australia that I couldn't score runs," he said. "But, definitely, sometimes there is a mental aspect and we start focusing on the batting, which leads us to think there has to be some fault in the batting that the runs aren't coming.
"But, I don't think every time it has something to do with batting. It is possible, we are lacking in some other facet. I haven't worked on any area in particular, but knowing I am going to play white-ball format now and then T20s, so I practised accordingly."
This stat only includes games where overs-at-fall-of-wicket data is available.
Henry's onslaught, Harris and Goud's dream spells get Warriorz off the mark
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UP Warriorz 177 for 9 (Henry 62, Jonassen 4-31, Kapp 2-18) beat Delhi Capitals 144 (Rodrigues 56, Harris 4-15, Goud 4-25) by 33 runs
Goud's dream spell
A player's first season of the WPL could easily make or break her confidence, with performances being put under the microscope. Goud, 21, bowled just four overs in the first two matches in her debut WPL season. Warriorz lost both games and she leaked 47 runs. But Deepti Sharma persisted with her over India seamer Saima Thakor, who had to miss out the second time.
Goud quickly found her feet and repaid the team's faith in the team's first game in Bengaluru this season. She was hit for a first-ball four by Meg Lanning but, two balls later, nipped one back sharply to disturb the stumps of Capitals' captain. She conceded just two off her next over, seventh overall, and dismissed Shafali Verma in her next over with a short delivery. Three overs, 16 runs and two wickets. When Goud finished her first spell, Capitals needed 126 runs from 66 balls.
When she came back for her final over, Capitals had to chase 76 off 36 with Rodrigues going strong after her fifty. But Goud had Jonassen caught and bowled and Rodrigues caught at extra cover in the same over to leave Capitals 111 for 6.
Warriorz's middle-over concern and Henry's rescue act
Deepti batted at No. 4 in the opening game, making a 27-ball 39. In the next two games, both against Capitals, she came in at No.3 and made a run-a-ball seven in Lucknow, and 13 off 19 balls in Bengaluru. Whether it's the ideal slot for her is something to keep an eye on especially when the middle order isn't firing.
In this WPL, the likes of Tahlia McGrath and Harris not stepping up in the middle order has been a concern for them. It has left Henry with a lot of rescue work to do late in the innings. In the last match, she blazed away an unbeaten 33 off 15 to power them to 166.
On Saturday, Henry came in at No.8 in the 14th over when Warriorz were 89 for 6 and straightaway dispatched two sixes off Reddy to ease some pressure. She then targeted Pandey, smashing a four and two sixes in the 17th over, and threw a few more big blows before eventually losing her wicket to Jonassen in the final ball of the innings.
Warriorz have been the worst team in the middle phase (from overs 7 to 16) this WPL, having lost 15 wickets in the three games including five on Saturday, but Henry's unbelievable innings helped them fight back.
Rodrigues fight but Capitals fail to adapt to conditions
The ball was swinging and nipping at the start of the second innings, troubling the likes of Shafali and Lanning. But Warriorz were sloppy in the field, Thakor dropped two catches and wicketkeeper Uma Chetry failed to hold onto chances; however Goud pulled them back. Barring Rodrigues, none in the Capitals top seven was able to adapt to the conditions in Bengaluru.
Even Rodrigues took 19 balls to score her first 23 runs and once she found her rhythm, she grew in confidence and smashed eye-pleasing boundaries to the cover region. She raced to her first fifty of this season off 30 balls. And her eight fours and a six gave Capitals some hope but the middle order let the game slip away from them in the end.
Harris bags a hat-trick
In her own words, Harris is a batting allrounder. But she has not set the stage on fire in this WPL yet, scoring just 18 runs in three games. However, with the ball, she had picked up two wickets in her first two matches and levelled that up on Saturday. She first dismissed Capitals' Player of the Match from last fixture, Annabel Sutherland, in the 14th over of the chase.
In the final over, with 34 needed for a win, Harris removed Prasad, Reddy and Minnu Manni off successive deliveries to become the third player in the WPL to bag a hat-trick after Deepti and Issy Wong.
Srinidhi Ramanujam is a sub-editor with ESPNcricinfo
Inglis savours 'special' innings as Australia make winning start
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None of this, Inglis understood, would be helpful to worry about. "We were in and around the run rate to start off with, so that was a big help," Inglis said after the game. "The partnership between Shorty [Matt Short] and Marnus [Labuschagne] was really important. They sort of set the platform there, got us off to a good start. And then me and [Alex] Carey, we didn't really say too much out there. Carey is pretty quiet when he's batting, so I think we were going pretty well. So, I just tried to not look at the scoreboard too much, [not] look at the run rate, just keep batting the way we were going."
Australia were in pursuit of what would be the highest chase in an ICC tournament, and despite his obvious talent, Inglis hasn't had an ODI career of particular note yet. In 28 matches, he had scored 543 runs, averaging under 22, a quickfire 65 against West Indies in February 2024 his most significant ODI contribution. If Australia were to get close, he had to produce an effort little in his career so far provided reason to expect.
In the immediate term, Carey and Inglis minimised risks while keeping the asking rate under control. Like Australia, England had opted for the security of a deeper batting order, and would have to compensate for it with part-time bowling. In just the second over after the partnership came together, Carey struck two fours of Livingstone, before Inglis launched him for six the following over. It balanced out the respectful caution they treated Adil Rashid with without falling too far behind.
"We trained here at night for the last couple of days and it got really dewy around half past seven or eight o'clock," Inglis said. "So, we sort of knew that was in our favour during the run chase and if we could take it deep enough it would be tough for the bowlers at the back end. It made life easier for us, the wicket skidded on beautifully and it really helped our run chase.
"And we knew if we could get close enough with Maxi [Glenn Maxwell] still to come - we've just seen what Maxi can do and everyone's seen it for a while now. So, to get close enough for him to be able to explode like that at the back end was probably in the back of our thoughts."
Inglis and Carey worked the run chase so expertly they didn't necessarily need any explosions. They added 146 in just 116 deliveries, and by the time Carey holed out to mid-off, Australia just needed to stick with a similar rate of scoring.
That fireworks came via Maxwell's bat wasn't especially surprising; he took the sting out of England's two gun seamers in Jofra Archer and Mark Wood, scorching them for 31 in 11 balls. Inglis, however, wasn't far behind, his last 36 coming off just 14 balls. It included a huge six over midwicket off Archer to bring up his hundred, and another one in the same region off Wood to seal the win.
"Maybe under the circumstances [it's my best innings]. It's really special. I think in an ICC event, you want to have an impact and you want to help your team win a game, so maybe - I'll reflect on that in the future."
Inglis' personal history with England perhaps adds a further layer of intrigue to the story. He was born in Leeds and only moved to Australia as a teenager, and said as recently as 2022 that he still supported England at cricket. Those days, he said today, were "long gone now".
"It doesn't matter who it's against," he said. "It's a really tight, quick tournament. We knew how we started the World Cup in India last year and we weren't able to get a good start, we knew you can't work your way into this Champions Trophy. You've got to be right on it from the first game. So, I think that's probably the most pleasing thing, to get a win on the board in game one."
And if there's little doubt about Inglis' loyalties now, the same couldn't necessarily be said about the crowed. With 26,232 packed into the new Gaddafi Stadium, Australian and English flags were visible in roughly equal measure, and celebrations at each six or wicket, almost irrespective of who they came from. The quality and intensity of the game, without doubt the best of this tournament so far, meant the spectators' attention was held right through the end, with few leaving before Inglis had struck the final blow.
"I thought the atmosphere was amazing all day today. It's obviously the new stands. I think the ground and the stadium looks amazing. To play tonight in front of a packed crowd was unbelievable and the noise at times was deafening, especially with the Mexican wave. I saw that going around a few times and it was a really nice crowd and good atmosphere tonight."
Danyal Rasool is ESPNcricinfo's Pakistan correspondent. @Danny61000
Sources: Fresno State subject of betting inquiry
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The Fresno State men's basketball program has drawn scrutiny for potential ties to sports gambling, sources confirmed to ESPN on Saturday.
The NCAA and university are both investigating, sources said. The school has removed one player from the team and suspended two others for at least Saturday's 72-69 loss to Air Force.
The investigation came about because of a tip to Fresno State, which then launched its internal investigation, a source told ESPN. The school subsequently involved the NCAA.
Fresno State said in a statement that guards Jalen Weaver and Zaon Collins were "being withheld from competition as the University reviews an eligibility matter."
Leading into the Air Force loss, Weaver and Collins were two of Fresno State's top three scorers, with averages of 12.5 and 12 points per game. Collins also led the team with 4.7 assists per game.
A third former Bulldogs player, Mykell Robinson, is also under investigation. Robinson, who was averaging 10.3 points and 6.2 rebounds per game, had not played for Fresno State since Jan. 11 and is no longer on the team.
The Fresno Bee first reported on the investigation into the program.
The Bulldogs have lost 10 straight games and sit at 5-23 (1-16 MWC). Prior to the Air Force loss, their defeat in their previous game, by 23 on Wednesday against San Diego State, set a program record for most losses in a season.
ESPN Senior College Sports Insider Pete Thamel contributed to this report.