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New Canucks D Pettersson lands 6-year extension

Published in Hockey
Wednesday, 05 February 2025 23:08

The Vancouver Canucks and newly acquired defenseman Marcus Pettersson reached agreement on a six-year contract extension worth $33 million, the team announced Wednesday night.

The deal comes just days after Pettersson was shipped to Vancouver along with forward Drew O'Connor in a trade with the Pittsburgh Penguins over the weekend. Pettersson was set to become an unrestricted free agent after the season.

The Canucks have split their two games since Pettersson's arrival. He played a season-high 25:57 in his Vancouver debut in a 3-2 overtime loss to Detroit on Sunday. He followed it up with 23:03 of ice time in Vancouver's 3-0 win over Colorado on Tuesday.

"In just a couple of games, Marcus has already shown us the type of leadership, poise and character that we want in a top four defenseman," general manager Patrik Allvin said in announcing the extension. "He has a calming influence on the ice, uses his long reach and hockey smarts to break up plays and has a good first pass to help us create more offensively. We are extremely happy to get this deal done and look forward to working with him in both the short term and long term."

Pettersson, 28, had been widely expected to be moved out of Pittsburgh after seven years with the team due to his expiring contract and the Penguins' retooling. A strong two-way defenseman, he has 18 points in 49 games this season and is a strong two-way defenseman.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

Neymar: 'No words' after emotional Santos return

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 06 February 2025 03:51

After nearly 12 years playing for two of the top teams in Europe and a brief stop in Saudi Arabia, Neymar is back playing professional football in his native Brazil.

The former Barcelona and Paris Saint-Germain superstar came on as a substitute at the start of the second half for his boyhood club Santos in its Campeonato Paulista match against Botafogo SP on Wednesday at the Estádio Vila Belmiro.

Santos were leading the match 1-0 when Neymar took the field but conceded a second-half goal, and the game ended in a 1-1 draw.

"I love Santos. I have no words to describe what I felt tonight when I stepped again on this pitch," Neymar said after the game.

The Brazilian star, who was named the game's best player, acknowledged that he's not yet in peak physical condition, but he said he took positive feelings from his first match in over three months.

"I need minutes, games. I'm not at 100 percent. I didn't expect to run and dribble so much tonight. I think I'll feel better in four or five games," he added.

Neymar, who turned 33 on Wednesday, sealed the move back to Santos on Jan. 31, signing a six-month deal that the club said it hopes to extend through at least the 2026 World Cup.

He won six titles during his time at Santos, located in a beachfront city outside São Paulo, including a Copa Libertadores trophy in 2011.

Neymar, once hailed as one of the world's best players, left Santos for Barcelona in 2013 and then became the most expensive transfer in the history of the game when he moved to PSG for 222 million (then $262 million) in 2017.

He signed for Al-Hilal in the Saudi Pro League in summer 2023 but suffered an ACL injury several months after the move while playing for Brazil in a World Cup qualifier.

Despite Neymar's injury, Al-Hilal still managed to win last season's Saudi league. The Brazilian's contract was due to expire after this year's FIFA Club World Cup, which will be played between June 15 and July 13 in the United States.

After Al Hilal declined to include him in the team's squad list for the second half of the SPL season, and manager Jorge Jesus said there was no longer a place for him with the team, the reports of a return to Santos began to pick up steam ahead of his return.

Neymar's salary with Al Hilal was reportedly one of the biggest in world soccer.

United's Martínez out for season with knee injury

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 06 February 2025 03:51

Manchester United defender Lisandro Martínez has suffered a cruciate ligament injury, the club have confirmed.

Martínez was taken off on a stretcher during the second half of United's 2-0 defeat to Crystal Palace on Sunday.

The Argentina international will not play again this season and is likely to be out for more than six months.

A club statement issued on Thursday read: "Manchester United can confirm that Lisandro Martínez suffered an injury to his cruciate ligament in Sunday's game against Crystal Palace.

"Assessment of the injury is ongoing to determine the appropriate course of treatment and the timescale for his rehabilitation.

"Everyone at Manchester United wishes Lisandro Martínez strength for a successful recovery and we will be supporting him every step of the way."

Argentina's next games are World Cup qualifiers against Uruguay and Brazil in March. The Albiceleste are top of the standings for the CONMEBOL zone, five points clear of Uruguay.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

Real Madrid legend Marcelo announces retirement

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 06 February 2025 03:51

Real Madrid and Brazil defender Marcelo has announced his retirement in a video posted to social media on Thursday.

The left-back enjoyed one of football's most successful careers in terms of trophy hauls, picking up five Champions League titles and six LaLiga triumphs in a career that spanned 19 years.

Channing Tatum stars in Wrexham Super Bowl ad

Published in Soccer
Thursday, 06 February 2025 03:51

Wrexham have shared a Super Bowl advert featuring Hollywood superstar Channing Tatum for their stadium sponsor, STōK Cold Brew.

In the advert -- featuring Wrexham stars Ollie Palmer, Paul Mullin, Jacob Mendy, Jack Marriott and others -- Tatum challenges the team to improve their goal-scoring celebrations and offers choreography suggestions.

"We're so happy that three of the stars of Deadpool & Wolverine were able to work together again to bring this ad to life for our incredible Wrexham sponsor, STōK Cold Brew Coffee," McElhenney and Reynolds said in a statement. "We will take no further questions related to Rob's actual screen time."

This is the second year running that Wrexham have a spot in the sought-after Super Bowl advert line-up following last years STōK advert that showcased acting legend Sir Anthony Hopkins as the club mascot, Wrex the Dragon.

Tatum's advert, titled "Hollywood Magic," will stream on the Fox Sports and NFL app during Super Bowl LIX on Feb. 9.

Welcome back to Onside/Offside! As we say goodbye to January, Luis Miguel Echegaray shares his thoughts on last month's transfer window in the Premier League and assesses the clubs who failed and delivered. From Arsenal's hesitance to Manchester City's gung-ho approach, here are the winners and losers from the winter's wheeling and dealing.

ONSIDE

A good month for Man City

Let me begin by stating that Man City, the four-straight defending champions of the Premier League, don't need any extra plaudits here because their need to aggressively act in January was due to their own self-sabotage. Yes: I know, I know. Rodri's season-ending injury was not the club's fault, but they did shoot themselves in the foot in other ways that directly impacted their horrific run in November and December, disastrous losses -- including the latest one (5-1) against Arsenal -- and their struggles in the Champions League.

Factors like the inability to replace Julián Álvarez or allowing themselves to become the fifth oldest squad in the league? That's all on them. So before the club do any back-patting in the wake of the January window, let's remember that they had to act because they had no other choice. It's the equivalent of high-fiving the kid in chemistry class who put out a fire he started while playing around with the bunsen burner.

However, whether down to choice or need, Man City had to not just act in the window: they needed to get it right. They spent more money than any other team in the Premier League (approximately $223 million), but the arrivals had to justify the outlay for this season and the future too -- and I think they delivered.

Omar Marmoush ($79m) is a tremendous player and most importantly, he gives Pep Guardiola's strategy another dimension. It's like having two Marvel superheroes with different superpowers: Erling Haaland's Hulk and now Marmoush's Spiderman. Despite the errors in his pressure-cooker debut against Chelsea, Abdukodir Khusanov ($42m from Lens) is a very good center-back; as for Vitor Reis? ($37m from Palmeiras), he needs to bulk up, but he is a future Brazil captain. Argentina wonderkid and prospect Claudio "Diablito" Echeverri ($15.6m from River Plate, deal agreed in January 2024) will also arrive after his time with Argentina at the Under-20 South American championship.

On deadline day, City finalized a move for Nico Gonzalez ($61m from FC Porto) and this was a big transfer because the versatile midfielder -- who can play as a No. 6 or a No. 8, naturally filling some of what Rodri offered -- is well liked by Guardiola. In fact, City have been chasing the former Barcelona man since he was a teenager and finally, in the final hour, they got their man. They also signed center-back Juma Bah (Real Valladolid) and 18-year-old left-back Christian McFarlane (NYCFC) for undisclosed amounts.

Letting veteran defender Kyle Walker leave for Milan was also a smart move because what Guardiola needs right now is hunger and a desire to be at the club.

All in all, Man City acknowledged last summer's faults by pushing forward with their rebuild a window earlier. The title is more than likely out of question this season, but the Champions League? The competition remains alive, as does their chance to retain a top four/five place. But for City, January was not just about the present; it was about the future.

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1:25
Laurens: Man City should've had Nico González in on January 1st

Julien Laurens looks at new Manchester City midfielder Nico González and explains why Pep Guardiola needed him a month ago.

Liverpool were smart to do nothing

What if I told you that one of my favorite quotes actually comes from Winnie the Pooh: "Don't underestimate the value of Doing Nothing, of just going along, listening to all the things you can't hear, and not bothering with any of them."

Basically, it means that sometimes, in life -- and in this case, the transfer window -- the most productive thing you can do is to sit still and appreciate the value of what's around you. Listen, observe and simplify your decisions because the best possible outcomes often happen because you embrace your surroundings and allow yourself to disengage, just focusing on the present.

And in terms of incomings, that's exactly what Liverpool did in January.

As far as I am concerned, the current best team in the league and Europe are a steady ship under Arne Slot. Their identity is strong and the harmony of the squad doesn't need to be disrupted. In other words: don't try and fix something that isn't broken.

The contract negotiations between Mohamed Salah, Virgil van Dijk and Trent Alexander-Arnold are the clear priorities, which prove to be continued headline-grabbers and discussion fodder for all of us, but behind closed doors, the club have a plan for any outcome. They don't need to burden themselves with outside noise and just like Slot has said over and over again, the only thing that matters right now is the internal necessities of the squad and the next game. Everything else is noise.

This also means that the summer -- coupled with the outcomes of the pending contract negotiations -- becomes a window in which Liverpool can be extremely aggressive in the market. So if Man City aced this transfer window with their determined recruitment of much-needed personnel, then I salute Liverpool for also winning by doing the exact opposite: NOTHING.

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1:56
Echegaray: Disasi caps off 'ambitious and aggressive' Aston Villa window

Luis Miguel Echegaray reacts to a big transfer window for Aston Villa, completed with a loan deal for defender Axel Disasi from Chelsea.

Aston Villa get some much-needed upgrades

It wasn't long ago that Aston Villa were fighting in the Championship and using January's transfer window to scramble anything they had in order to complete a couple of loan deals for players like Lewis Grabban and Axel Tuanzebe. Now, I don't mean any disrespect to the aforementioned players but Villa -- fresh from earning a bye into the Champions League's Round of 16 and competing for a top four spot in the league -- are a different animal in the market nowadays and Unai Emery (manager), Monchi (president of football operations), Damiá Vidagany (director of football operations) all know that the Premier League is a do-or-die environment. For every action, there needs to be a reaction.

This window, therefore, has been the most aggressive January in the history of the club as Villa had to react over and over again. And it all started with the almost-ostentatious $80m exit of Jhon Durán.

It's really quite simple. Since arriving from Chicago Fire in 2023 for $17m (add-ons eventually increased the fee to $20m), the 21-year-old Colombia striker has always had his eye on another, shinier destination. He always wanted to leave, and everyone close to the club knew it. You only have to go back to last summer, when he made the crossed-Hammers salute that hinted at his desire to join West Ham after they'd made a bid. It was rejected, but the sentiment remained: Durán always felt he deserved more on the pitch and off it.

Villa kept him happy for a brief moment by increasing his salary back in October, but Emery knew that it really didn't matter. In the end, at some point, Durán wanted more and it wasn't going to be with Villa. The club stuck to their transfer valuation because they knew his departure would leave them with just one natural striker: Ollie Watkins. It didn't help when Arsenal added fuel to the fire by lodging a $45m bid to sign the England international, though it was quickly rejected.

Durán's move to Al Nassr opened the doors for Villa to strengthen: not only did they received a total package worth more than $90m, but they had other squad needs as defender Diego Carlos headed to Fenerbahçe ($10m), fan favorite Emiliano Buendía left for Bayer Leverkusen (loan with $21m option to sign permanently), 19-year-old Serbia international Kosta Nedeljkovic joined RB Leipzig (loan with option to sign permanently), and Jaden Philogene headed to Ipswich Town for nearly $25m. How would Villa replenish?

With a dire need for center-backs while Pau Torres and Tyrone Mings are out injured, Villa recruited Chelsea's Axel Disasi on loan (for a fee of $6m), while Andrés García (Levante, $7.2m) arrived as a backup and project behind Matty Cash.

Villa arguably did better with reinforcements in attack. Donyell Malen (Borussia Dortmund, $26m, plus add-ons), Marcus Rashford (loan from Manchester United with $45m option and Villa covering around 75% of his salary), and Marco Asensio (loan from PSG, no option) are impressive arrivals offering quality, Champions League pedigree and versatility. In those three players, Villa now have diverse coverage across the final third.

In terms of Rashford (and to a certain degree, Asensio), you can read more elsewhere in our coverage, but ultimately: this is a win for everyone. It's an audition for the 27-year-old attacker and a chance to prove he can still produce. For Villa? I think sometimes a player needs a manager that can get the best out of them, and I've talked to many players that have worked -- and continue to work -- under Emery. They all say the same thing: Even after years of playing and experiencing almost everything on the pitch, he teaches you things you never thought you knew.

Financially is where the win truly lies because in the age of Profit and Sustainability Rules (PSR), Villa also didn't want to enter a summer with limited decisions. All in all, the departure of Durán and others meant raised more than $100m, which will give them flexibility in the summer when it comes to other moves.

This was a ridiculously busy window for Aston Villa and I think, overall, they reacted with ambition, purpose and acumen.


OFFSIDE

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2:11
Why Man United fans aren't ecstatic about transfer window moves

Mark Ogden breaks down Manchester United's moves at the winter transfer window and what it means for the club moving forward.

Manchester United didn't get it done

A public service announcement: I am not completely placing Manchester United in the Offside section. Perhaps it's a VAR-check type of Offside, because there were some positive things that the Red Devils did in this window.

For example, Rashford's departure was necessary because one way or another, he was a cloud hovering over manager Ruben Amorim. His hefty salary was also a burden, so for Aston Villa to come in to pay the majority of it is a big win for United. I also think the versatile, left-sided wing-back Patrick Dorgu ($31m from Lecce) is a great signing for the present and future as his skillset fits Amorim's vision.

However, I really think there could have been more creativity when it came to what United needed up front, because it's quite clear that Rasmus Højlund and Joshua Zirzkee are not good enough -- at least right now -- to be Amorim's leading men.

Could there have been a situation where one of those players went on loan and in return, United brought in someone else? I really liked the idea of Chelsea's unhappy playmaker Christopher Nkunku at Old Trafford, but he was reportedly only interested in making a permanent exit. Could there have been a bigger incentive to make it work with an option to sign permanently? Who knows. All I know is that United can't play another game with defensive midfielder Kobbie Mainoo leading the line as a false No. 9 like they did vs. Brentford.

Experts keep telling me that the plan is to wait for the summer, but why? Premier League aside -- they are 13th with 14 games left; 27 points behind leagues Liverpool -- Man United are still in the FA Cup and earned a bye to the Round of 16 in the UEFA Europa League. There might be a chance for a trophy here. I know it's improbable, but it's not impossible and Amorim has a good record in cup competitions. It will be harder without more firepower, but I guess they disagree.

To make matters worse, defender Lisandro Martínez has been ruled out for the season with an ACL injury. When it rains, it pours.

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1:08
Did Arsenal miss a chance by not spending for a striker?

Mark Ogden discusses Arsenal not bringing in a striker during this transfer window and why they may regret it.

Arsenal also didn't address their biggest need

Now remember: I'm grading their transfer window, not their performances on the pitch, so in that spirit I have to put the Gunners in Offside here for one obvious reason: the inability to bring in a legitimate goal scorer.

I know there are many arguments to counter this point. One, Arsenal have the second-best scoring record in the Premier league, with last weekend's magnificent 5-1 victory against Man City showing how they spread the goals around. (This looks even more impressive when you factor in that Mikel Arteta is having to manage without Bukayo Saka and Gabriel Jesus, both of whom are nursing long-term injuries.)

But I have said it many, many times. Arsenal are not supposed to be satisfied with a top-four finish. They want the Premier League title, but this won't happen unless they sign a star striker.

When it comes to bringing in a striker of legitimate pedigree, Arsenal keep delaying something that should have happened a long time ago. Three years ago in January, Arsenal were in a similar situation after Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang was exiled. Arteta needed a striker, and there was a possibility of attaining the services of Alexander Isak. The club refused to pay the Real Sociedad's $92m release clause and decided to wait until the summer, but Arsenal finished fifth in the league and missed out on the Champions League to Tottenham, while Newcastle pounced to sign Isak for an initial $70m. The following season, Edu joined the club as their first-ever sporting director to help Arteta materialize his vision.

Back to the present. Edu left the club a few months ago, and we're back to the same hesitancy. Arsenal made a $45m bid for the 29-year-old Watkins, but reports suggest Villa may have listened for offers north of $60m. But just like the Isak situation from 2022, Arsenal's cautious vibes could once again cost them the title. They remind me of an inexperienced Vegas tourist playing blackjack and following the advice that you should always stick to No. 13. No matter the season, Arsenal always stick to No. 13.

The other part that bothers me is that there seems to be a lack of ingenuity and some tunnel vision here, because there were plenty of tremendous strikers available for a lower fee than Watkins. For example,Feyenoord's Santiago Giménez just left for AC Milan for approximately $40m. I think he could have been fantastic in North London, but alas, a golden chance missed for the Gunners and a gain for the Rossoneri.

How about Liam Delap? He certainly fits a lot of the characteristics. Would Ipswich Town have listened? We'll never know, as once again in this window, a striker didn't arrive at Arsenal because they stuck to No. 13.


SOMEWHERE IN BETWEEN

I don't know what to make of Tottenham's moves

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1:04
What are Tottenham getting with Mathys Tel signing?

Julien Laurens explains why he thinks of new Spurs signing Mathys Tel as the "complete package" when it comes to forwards.

I'm cautious on Spurs, and that's why I didn't have them in either category because the jury is still out on how they did.

We have heard about the talent of Mathys Tel (loan from Bayern Munich, with a $60m option to sign permanently), who was pretty much wanted by every top club if we're to believe the reports in January. But after 344+ minutes of action this season, he hadn't scored a goal with Bayern and despite his obvious talent, there's inconsistency. I get it. He's 19. There's still a lot to come from the young man and I sincerely hope he shines with Tottenham, but Ange Postecoglou doesn't need a project. He needs an end product.

Goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky, 21, from Slavia Prague ($16m) has been thrown in the deep end and delivered. He's a great addition. Kevin Danso (from Lens for approximately $26m) is a very good center-back too, so there are pluses for sure. But I still think they needed a stable, game-changing midfielder because Tottenham have always had that. From Glenn Hoddle to Luka Modric, it's always been part of their DNA, and they're still missing that aspect. Spurs fans will yell James Maddison to me, but he is not as stable or anchored in the midfield as the names I mentioned because he plays just behind the striker.

Anyway, Postecoglou has a lot to worry about, including an ACL injury to Radu Drăgușin and the continued absence of Cristian Romero. They're being very careful with the latter. The same is true of Micky van de Ven, who didn't play against Brentford despite returning in the Europa League.

So yes, Spurs made some good decisions in January, but they didn't get much extra depth in defence and there was a gamble on a very talented, somewhat inconsistent attacker. I hope he delivers for the sake of the club.

Golden-arm Head and Lyon strike as Sri Lanka collapse

Published in Cricket
Thursday, 06 February 2025 02:07

Tea Sri Lanka 144 for 5 (Chandimal 70*, Lyon 3-47) vs Australia

Unrelenting accuracy from Australia's versatile attack and superb tactics from stand-in captain Steven Smith had Sri Lanka in trouble on day one of the second Test as the dry surface in Galle started to produce significant turn.

Sri Lanka built a strong platform at 93 for 1 before losing 4 for 34 to reach tea in a precarious position at 144 for 5 in their first innings. Dinesh Chandimal was again playing a lone hand with 70 not out.

After Sri Lanka suffered their worst defeat in Test cricket on a slow surface, there had been much speculation that this new surface would produce significant bite and turn. There was sharper turn in the second session, but it has been the consistency and variations of Australia's bowlers that led to several cheap dismissals.

Offspinner Nathan Lyon was outstanding as he mixed up his speeds and lengths to bamboozle Sri Lanka as he moved to 549 Test wickets, while left-arm quick Mitchell Starc found reverse swing during a sensational spell late in the second session.

Left-arm spinning allrounder Cooper Connolly has only bowled two overs after replacing offspinner Todd Murphy in Australia's only change.

Australia were effectively playing with just three specialist bowlers, but allrounder Beau Webster has bowled three overs of seam having not been required to bowl in the first Test. Smith worked his resources to good effect with Travis Head proving that he might just have a golden arm after taking the wicket of Kamindu Mendis.

Sri Lanka made three changes with Pathum Nissanka replacing Oshada Fernando at the top of the order, while offspinnser Ramesh Mendis and quick Lahiru Kumara were included at the expense of Jeffrey Vandersay and Asitha Fernando.

Skipper Dhananjaya de Silva had no hesitation to bat when the coin fell in his favour amid stifling humidity.

After receiving a long guard of honour on his way to the crease, including from the Australians, retiring Dimuth Karunaratne was tasked with trying to help restore Sri Lanka's battered confidence in his 100th and last match. He also had to confront tormentor Starc having fallen to him nine times previously, including in the first innings of the series-opener. But having overcome a groin injury to take his place, Nissanka mostly faced Starc and had mixed results against speeds touching 145kph.

Fresh from his nine-wicket haul in his Test return, left-arm spinner Matthew Kuhnemann was also handed the new ball and had a loud shout for lbw on Nissanka turned down with the decision upheld on umpire's call after Australia reviewed.

Sri Lanka's openers steadily built despite some nervous moments as Smith reverted to Lyon in the eighth over. Aiming at the footworks from Starc, Lyon produced significant turn and bounce on his second delivery that flew down the legside for four byes.

But Lyon wasn't made to wait long for a wicket after hitting the top of leg stump when Nissanka moved too far across his stumps looking to paddle sweep. Australia were buoyed, but inroads proved difficult against the type of disciplined batting from Sri Lanka that was lacking in the first Test.

Chandimal was clearly Sri Lanka's best batter in the first Test and continued his strong form, smashing Kuhnemann over mid-off, that dismissive blow taking the ball over the rope.

Connolly was brought in just before lunch having never taken a wicket from the 96 balls he had bowled in his four previous first-class matches. Connolly did develop a knack of taking key wickets in the recent BBL season, but he could not strike as Sri Lanka make it to lunch well placed.

Chandimal resumed after the interval with a boundary off Lyon before the game turned on its head.

Lyon varied his speeds and slid a faster delivery from around the wicket past Karunaratne's defence to rattle the stumps. He was in lovely rhythm and went about working over Angelo Mathews knowing he had his number after dismissing him twice in the first Test.

Lyon and Kuhnemann pinned down the batters with accurate bowling as scoring came to a halt. Mathews crawled to 1 off 25 before succumbing to a slower Lyon delivery and feathering an edge into the gloves of Alex Carey, who has performed well behind the stumps in this series.

Lyon seemingly had his 550th wicket when Kamindu was adjudged caught behind on 3 only for the decision to be successfully reviewed with no nick detected. Kamindu could not capitalise and fell relatively tamely to Head's handy offspin after a thick edge off an attempted cut shot flew to Smith at slip.

Head unfurled his now customary celebration, suggesting that his spinning fingers are on fire, as Kamindu's struggles continued after entering the series with an average over 70.

Deploying Head was another move from Smith that has worked a treat and his gut instincts were again rewarded when he threw the ball to Starc, who dismissed de Silva for a golden duck after he steered a wide delivery straight to gully.

Starc bowled menacingly from around the wicket, conjuring reverse swing as Australia sensed running through Sri Lanka's batting-order like they did in the first Test.

But Chandimal held firm having survived on 63 a tough chance for Carey off the energetic Head.

Tristan Lavalette is a journalist based in Perth

Vaughan six-for as England U19s complete 10-wicket thrashing

Published in Cricket
Thursday, 06 February 2025 03:02

England U19s 353 (Sawant 130, Fonseka 52, Rossouw 5-74) and 25 for 0 beat South Africa U19s 224 (James 84, Hansen 63, Jack 3-42) and 153 (Rowles 71, Vaughan 6-19) by 10 wickets

Young Lions captain Archie Vaughan put the finishing touches on a comfortable 10-wicket win over South Africa Men U19s in the second Youth Test at Cape Town.

Vaughan helped tidy up the home tail on the fourth morning to return 6 for 19 before he and Ben Dawkins knocked off a victory target of 25 in just 3.1 overs.

The tourists needed two wickets to end the Young Proteas' second innings when play resumed and Vaughan, who did the damage on the third evening with five wickets, immediately made an impact bowling Sandiswa Yeni for a duck.

Eddie Jack wrapped up the innings when Nqobani Mokoena hit out to Alexander Wade in the deep as the hosts were bowled out for 153.

The England Men U19 openers made light work of the chase, with Vaughan lap-sweeping Mokoena for six before Dawkins crunched Nathan Rossouw to the rope to win the game.

England Men U19s won the series 1-0, after falling one wicket short of victory in the first Youth Test last week. South Africa Men U19s had won the preceding Youth ODI series 2-1.

Cummins and Hazlewood ruled out of Champions Trophy

Published in Cricket
Thursday, 06 February 2025 03:14
Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood have both been officially ruled out of the Champions Trophy. The two of them "are managing some ongoing injuries and haven't come up in time for the Champions Trophy," selection chair George Bailey said on Thursday.
Australia have until February 12 to finalise their Champions Trophy squad, and they will have to make at least four changes to the initial 15-man squad they had named on January 13. Apart from Cummins and Hazlewood, they are also without Mitchell Marsh, who is grappling with a back injury and was ruled out of the tournament on January 31, and Marcus Stoinis, who announced on Thursday that he would be retiring from ODI cricket, removing himself from the Champions Trophy squad as a result after being selected in the original 15.

It's possible that two of the three quick bowlers could get into the Champions Trophy squad while Fraser-McGurk appears to be the like-for-like replacement for Marsh given he has not been bowling much recently in ODI cricket and was locked in to bat at No. 3. Connolly could be the replacement for Stoinis but there is now only one seam-bowling allrounder, Aaron Hardie, left in the current squad. Test allrounder Beau Webster has not been included among the additions to the Sri Lanka ODI squad.

"While disappointing, it does present a great opportunity for other players to perform for Australia in a world event," Bailey said.

Cricket Australia said Cummins and Hazlewood would begin an "extended period of rehabilitation". They are missing the ongoing Test series in Sri Lanka too. Both have IPL contracts with Cummins set to lead Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) again while Hazlewood is returning to Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB). Whether they can play any part in the IPL ahead of the World Test Championship final against South Africa at Lord's in June remains to be seen.

Australia are likely to pick between Steven Smith and Travis Head to lead Australia in the two Sri Lanka ODIs and then the Champions Trophy.
Prior to Thursday's confirmation, Australia coach Andrew McDonald told SEN radio on Wednesday that Cummins was "heavily unlikely" to make the Champions Trophy which meant Australia would need a new captain with the ODI vice-captain Marsh also unavailable.

"Steve Smith and Travis Head are the two that we've been having conversations with while we've been building out that Champions Trophy team along with Pat back home," McDonald said.

"They'll be the two that we look at for that leadership post. They're the two obvious ones. Steve has done a great job here in the [first] Test match. He's done some good work in one-day international cricket across the journey as well. So it's between those two."

Cummins skipped the Sri Lanka Tests to be at home for the birth of his second child, but he has also been nursing the ankle issue that had flared up after a heavy workload in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy against India. Hazlewood is understood to be dealing with a hip issue after recovering from the side and calf injuries that made him miss three of the five Tests against India and the Test tour of Sri Lanka.

The selectors might also have a challenge cobbling an XI together for the first ODI against Sri Lanka given that, apart from the missing players, there is only one travel day scheduled between the fifth day of the second Test and the first ODI, with ODI squad members Head, Smith, Marnus Labuschagne, Josh Inglis, Alex Carey and Mitchell Starc all playing the Test match that is currently on in Galle. Starc would seem very unlikely to play in those two ODIs.

AAP contributed to this news report.

Ireland's Aimee Maguire suspended for illegal bowling action

Published in Cricket
Thursday, 06 February 2025 03:27
Ireland left-arm spinner Aimee Maguire has been suspended from bowling in international cricket with immediate effect after her action was deemed to be illegal.

She subsequently got her action tested at the ICC-accredited testing centre in Loughborough on January 21, where it emerged that the amount of elbow extension in her bowling action exceeded the 15-degree level of tolerance permitted under the ICC regulations.

"As a result, in accordance with clause 6.1 of the regulations, Aimee is immediately suspended from bowling in international cricket," an ICC release said. "Her suspension will remain in effect until she undergoes a re-assessment of her bowling action which confirms that she can bowl with a legal action."

Maguire was initially named in Ireland's squad for the recent Women's Under-19 T20 World Cup in Malaysia. Since the assessment window fell in the middle of the tournament, she had to be withdrawn.

Maguire made her international debut in 2023. So far, she has played 11 ODIs and nine T20Is, taking 25 wickets in all with a best of 5 for 19 against England in an ODI last year.

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