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West Indies captain Kraigg Brathwaite said that batters had to be brave and trust their plans to succeed on the difficult pitches in Multan, after they won the second of two Tests to level the series and also create a little bit of history. This 120-run victory was their first in Pakistan for 34 years.
Brathwaite led by example. After being part of a collapse that left West Indies 38 for 7 in the first innings, he chose a far more aggressive approach in the second. In fact, he made his fastest fifty in Tests, consciously taking chances against the Pakistan spinners. This approach earned West Indies a lead of 254 and it proved plenty more than enough.

"Both Test matches the pitch was tough to bat on and we knew that so as I said I just wanted us to be brave, to do whatever plans we have, to go there and execute them as good as possible, because regardless of what there will be a ball with your with your name on it on this pitch," Brathwaite told reporters after the second Test in Multan on Monday.

"I mean it was a difficult pitch to bat on so it was good to see the confidence we went about doing it and you know as I said very proud of this team.

"It was just for the batsmen to be brave you know. I mean as batsmen, as I said everyone's going to have their plans. Be brave in whatever you want to do as batsmen," Brathwaite said about West Indies' strategy. "Bowling wise bring forward the batsmen as much as possible and there will be 20 balls that you will get 20 wickets because as I said the pitch is a difficult pitch so there's no second guessing.

Brathwaite maintained that the pitch was "very, very difficult" but had no complaints about PCB preparing spinning tracks.

"I would say Pakistan could prepare the pitch how they want. What I'll say is batsman will not be averaging high on these pitches. You would average 15-20 and obviously the spinners will do well. and as I said it's a difficult Test pitch to score runs. You're going to get out regardless, it's just a matter of when. So you know as batters we had to come up with a plan of how we want to score and put runs on the board."

"Jomel was outstanding. To see how he went about his bowling and the pressure he built from from ball one, I mean it was amazing," Brathwaite said.

Warrican also put in a crucial contribution with the bat, finishing unbeaten on 36 in the first innings, with his 68-run stand for the last wicket with Gudakesh Motie key in reviving West Indies from being 38 for 7 after they won the toss and chose to bat.

"With the bat you can't count him out, I think he did a fantastic job with the bat as well. But bowling wise I know he's worked hard over the years. He's been in and out of the team but it's good to see him get the chance and he grabbed it. very very proud of him uh he was outstanding."

West Indies' triumph in Multan came almost exactly a year after Gabba 2024, and Brathwaite said it showed their ability to adapt to different conditions.

"It's a very important win for us it just shows that we can get it done in any conditions once we believe and always have a plan," he said. "It's right up there with some amazing Test wins because coming here, playing here in Pakistan, it's never easy to win a test match you know so coming up with a win is fantastic."

Pakistan captain Shan Masood said he expected the team to continue their recent experiment of heavily turning tracks at home, and that they would be replicated across domestic cricket as well. After falling to a 120-run defeat at home against West Indies that levelled the series 1-1 and confirmed Pakistan's position at the bottom of the current World Test Championship cycle, Masood maintained there were "encouraging signs" that Pakistan would seek to build on.

"Domestic cricket will be played like this," he said. "We've already talked about this. The more we'll play the better we'll get at it. We've shown encouraging signs. After the four matches, we've won three in these conditions. We dominated the first hour of the first day which could have swung the match in our favour. It's just about winning those key moments and ensuring we're consistent with these conditions domestically and internationally."

Since Pakistan lost the first Test against England on a flat wicket in Multan, they have reverted to producing tracks that break up and spin from the first day, rendering fast bowling almost redundant. The last four home Tests have seen Pakistan take 80 wickets, with just one falling to a seam bowler. Fingerspinners Sajid Khan and Noman Ali have dominated the bowling attack, taking 70 of the 80 wickets, and frequently opening the bowling attack in each innings. It has turned around Pakistan's straggling home form, allowing them to beat England 2-1 at home and easing to a victory in the first Test against West Indies. This Test, however, the visiting spinners turned the script around on them, with left-arm spinner Jomel Warrican of West Indies walking away with both the Player-of-the-Match and Series awards.

"It's a game of all stakeholders. We should appreciate the players for throwing themselves in the den without being exposed to these conditions. We know we haven't played domestic cricket in these conditions. In some ways, it's a kind of bravery to expose ourselves to these conditions. We practiced, but this is new for us. But we need to replicate this in domestic cricket, give our batters exposure so we play in these conditions and get runs in them. In the fourth innings, anything over 150 is a competitive score, where spinners will always have the edge."

An unavoidable outcome of such surfaces is the outsized role the toss plays. All four times, the side winning the toss has batted first, walking away with victory three times. While Pakistan were able to flip that script against England in the series-decider, West Indies' win once more demonstrated the way these pitches can slant a game in favour of the side bowling last.

However, it didn't appear that way when Pakistan bowled in the first hour, having reduced West Indies to 54 for 8, and letting that situation slip through their fingers frustrated Masood most of all. "We didn't get the result we wanted. The positive thing was when you field first and you know the fourth innings will be difficult. So you try to restrict the opposition in the first innings. We bowled brilliantly for the first eight wickets. But we've talked about the first innings batting and bowling combining to do well, so you have the advantage in the third and fourth innings. If you look at our batting and bowling, and the mistakes we made collectively, that was a crucial time because their last two wickets cost us dear.

"Then, with the bat, we went from 119 for 4 to 154 all out. When these collapses happen and the other side puts on partnerships, they can set you back. If we'd got them out early and got a 100-run lead, the Test match would be completely different. With Test matches on these pitches, you can't wait to make a move, because things are decided on day one, and that is where you can win or lose matches."

This is the end of a cycle, an unhappy one for Pakistan, and for its leader. Pakistan have lost nine of their last 12 matches, all five away from home and four of seven at home. Despite starting off with a crushing away win in Sri Lanka, they have finished bottom of the WTC table, and do not play another Test for nearly nine months.

Masood acknowledged Pakistan had fallen short of expectations, but did not believe the side required a complete overhaul, pointing out fine margins made the difference in this Test, and could be worked on.

"The tail not getting wickets is an area of concern, and we need to finish off sides quicker," Masood said, echoing his frustrations in South Africa, where the last two wickets adding too many runs cost them dear in the first Test at Centurion. "Against Australia, who have the best tail in the world, we got them out cheaply, but not here, or against Bangladesh or South Africa.

"Batters have been proactive, but we need more contributions. You may not get hundreds here but 30s and 40s contribute to the winning conditions. Kraigg Brathwaite was an ideal example. He took the game on. One batter will need to step up in these conditions especially when the ball is new.

"It's not about holding someone responsible. This isn't an accountability bureau. This is a team effort. Our mistake as a team was the first two innings. That was what set us back, and gave the opposition a degree of freedom. If we had a 100-run lead, I do not think they'd have been able to play in the way they did. We need to understand the direction of matches will be decided very quickly, as early as day one."

Danyal Rasool is ESPNcricinfo's Pakistan correspondent. @Danny61000

As chants of "Mitchell Owen, Mitchell Owen" were ringing around a packed Ninja Stadium, with the majority having stayed on to see Hobart Hurricanes be presented with the BBL trophy for the first time, the man himself was still trying to take it all in after what had the makings of a life-changing performance.
Owen's 42-ball 108, the century coming from a tournament joint-fastest 39 balls, included some of the cleanest hitting imaginable as Hurricanes made what appeared likely to be a demanding chase of 183 become a cakewalk with 35 balls remaining to end a 14-year wait for the title.

"So surreal," Owen told Fox Cricket. "To be here and hear them chanting my name, it hasn't quite sunk in, but it's amazing and I'm so grateful for it.

"All I wanted to do was lift that trophy. I was actually disappointed to get out, I wanted to be able to hit the winning runs and get us home a little bit easier, so I didn't have to sit there a bit nervous, but it's super special, it's a childhood dream and I'm so grateful."

Owen's transformation from a middle-order batter with a middling record to a T20 opener who will now likely attract attention from around the world has been remarkable and the story of the BBL season.

"I think feeling backed by [coach] Jeff [Vaughan] and Nath [Ellis], and the whole team really, that's quite powerful," he said. "I was just super clear when I went out there, I knew what I wanted to do and needed to do, and I was lucky enough it paid off."

Team-mates were quick to laud a display which has propelled Owen from a fringe state cricketer into the global limelight.

"I haven't seen too many blokes hit the ball like that and the way he can just keep going," Matthew Wade told Fox Cricket. "To be honest, I was wanting him to go through the gears a little bit, but he doesn't have that in him, he just keeps going and takes the game away from the teams. It was exceptional hitting, he's going to be a hell of a player for a long time."
Captain Nathan Ellis recalled training alongside Owen when he was younger having made his move from New South Wales when he was unable to break into the professional system there.

"I said the Scorchers innings was the coming-of-age innings; I think today he went up another level," Ellis told Fox Cricket. "I was bowling to a 15, 16-year-old Mitch Owen in the indoor nets here at Tassie when I first moved down, and to be a part of his journey, and also to captain him and win a title with him, is something that I'll never forget, hopefully he'll never forget. I'm just super proud and excited for not only tonight, but what's to come for him."

Ellis was also key to Hurricanes' victory as he halted a strong Thunder start of 97 without loss with the wickets of David Warner and Matthew Gilkes in consecutive deliveries during the 11th over and also claimed top-scorer Jason Sangha. He was reluctant to take much credit himself, but at the presentation said that Tasmanian cricket had changed his life.

Asked to expand on his comment by Fox Cricket host Mark Howard, Ellis said, "I came down here as a budding grade cricketer, sort of not knowing what way was up and never living at a home, and eight years later, I played for my country and now won a BBL title, so it goes without saying, it's changed my life. I'm just really honoured that I get the opportunity to bring this title to the state of Tasmania for the first time.

"It felt like the right moment for me to come on there," he added of the 11th over. "Thankfully, it potentially changed the momentum, they were getting away from us there. But I can't speak highly enough about bowling attack this year. We've bowled in all scenarios, in all conditions, we've been under the pump in different situations, and I feel like we've never missed the mark. So as a captain, really lucky to have the squad we have, but as a cricket fan, as I've said many times, I'm in awe of our squad."

For Wade, who was born in Tasmania and is now purely a T20 player, it was a significant moment late in his career having come to Hurricanes for the 2017-18 season.

"It's quite emotional, it was really, really cool," he said. "I would have liked to get the winning runs actually, Reggie [McDermott] ran off on me there. I was nervous today. It's as nervous I've been for a long time for a game of cricket, even playing for Australia, so I really wanted this one, especially for the people [in Tasmania]cricket's taken a huge step this year down here. We've got big crowds and just rapt for the BBL to be back to where it was it seems like 10 years ago."

Andrew McGlashan is a deputy editor at ESPNcricinfo

Tickets for the 2025 Champions Trophy final, scheduled on March 9, will be available only four days prior to the match. Announcing the sale of tickets on Monday for the eight-team tournament, which begins from February 19, the ICC said tickets for the final will be available after the first semi-final, which is scheduled on March 4.

The primary reason behind the ICC releasing the tickets for the final that late is the hybrid model put in place for the tournament due to India refusing to travel to Pakistan for the Champions Trophy. Consequently, it was decided India would play their matches in Dubai, which would also host the first semi-final if Rohit's Sharma's team qualified for the knockouts. In case India reach the final, that match, too, will be played in Dubai. In the event India don't make the semis, then all the knockout matches will be played in Pakistan, including the final in Lahore.

The ICC on Monday said the tickets for the Pakistan leg of the Champions Trophy, comprising 10 matches including the second semi-final (scheduled in Karachi), would be put on sale from Tuesday (2 pm Pakistan time/1.30 pm IST). As for the tickets for the Dubai leg, the ICC said, "information would be made available in the coming days" without specifying any date.

Tickets for matches in Pakistan are priced from 1000 Pakistan rupees for the general category, while the premium category starts from 1500 rupees. Sumair Ahmad Syed, the tournament director, said the tickets have been made "affordable" to ensure "fans from all walks of life can be part of this historic spectacle, making it a celebration for all generations of cricket lovers."

India and Pakistan are both in Group A, along with Bangladesh and New Zealand. The highly anticipated India-Pakistan group game is scheduled to take place in Dubai on February 23.

Ex-soccer star arrested in drug trafficking probe

Published in Breaking News
Monday, 27 January 2025 05:41

Former Belgium national team player Radja Nainggolan has been arrested in connection with an investigation into cocaine trafficking from South America to Europe, a source told Reuters on Monday.

The cocaine was allegedly trafficked through the Port of Antwerp, the Brussels Public Prosecutor's Office said in an official statement, adding that 30 house searches had been carried out on Monday as part of the probe. As per Belgian practice, the statement did not name Nainggolan, giving only his initials and profession.

The arrest was earlier reported by local media.

Nainggolan's management team did not immediately reply to Reuters' request for comment.

Nainggolan's club Lokeren-Temse said in a statement that the player was absent from training on Monday morning. The club added it respected the presumption of innocence and declined to comment further.

Last year, former Netherlands international Quincy Promes was sentenced to six years in prison in absentia by a Dutch court for his involvement in smuggling of 1,360 kg of cocaine through the Belgian port to the Netherlands in two shipments in 2020.

Car runs into crowd, injures 3 after Eagles' win

Published in Breaking News
Monday, 27 January 2025 05:43

PHILADELPHIA -- A car hit and injured three pedestrians in a crowd of people leaving the Philadelphia Eagles' playoff game on Sunday night, police said.

A driver is in custody, and the collision did not immediately appear to be intentional, the Philadelphia Police Department said in a social media post.

The victims did not suffer any life-threatening injuries, according to news reports citing the Philadelphia Police.

The car struck the large crowd near the historic Center City area around 9:30 p.m. after the NFC Championship Game at Lincoln Financial Field, according to news reports.

The Eagles defeated the Washington Commanders 55-23, and they will face the two-time defending Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans on Feb. 9.

Welcome folks, it's a resplendent fall day in Flatbush, and six months ago, who could have imagined this? The visiting Los Angeles Dodgers are ready to take the field in Brooklyn at the new Ebbets Field with the 2025 National League pennant on the line.

Standing in the way of the L.A. nine are their literal offspring, the Brooklyn Trolleys, the most unusual expansion team in baseball history. Champions of the NL West, the Trolleys' 98 wins earned them today's homefield edge over the 87-win wild-card Dodgers.

The grandstand at Ebbets is already full on this clear autumn day, the patrons shuffling through the fabulous rotunda down below. The scoreboard is gleaming and the reconstituted Schaefer Beer sign above it is ready to call the hits and errors.

Roki Sasaki is making his final warmup throws now for Brooklyn. Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani watches from the on-deck circle, ready to lead off the game for Los Angeles. Game 7 of the NLCS is about to get underway.

It's time for Trolleys baseball!

Wait ... what is happening here?


The Los Angeles Dodgers -- the real ones -- are working on a streak of 12 straight playoff appearances. Eleven of those seasons have ended with an NL West title. Four have added to the franchise's pennant count. After last fall's World Series win over the New York Yankees, two of those seasons have resulted in championships.

After this winter's stunning run of high-level acquisitions, people are asking with real concern about whether the Dodgers might have finally broken baseball. It's not hard to understand why.

The expectations for the Dodgers have never been higher, and that's saying something. ESPN Bet currently has the Dodgers' over/under for wins at 103.5, 10 more than any other team. Cot's Contracts estimates L.A.'s CBT payroll number at $374.1 million. If you split that in half -- $187.05 million -- the CBT payroll would still rank 15th in the majors.

Hmmm, split the Dodgers in half? Is that a solution? Well, obviously it is not. But let's imagine that it was, that some trust-busting commissioner took over, or some bizarre schism took place in the Guggenheim Baseball Management group.

This is fantastical, but stick with me. Here's the sequence of events that have led to our dream game at a brand new version of Ebbets Field.

The Dodgers' dominance and hoarding of superstar talent becomes viewed as an existential threat to baseball. Fans are screaming. Owners are wringing their hands.

Partially in response to this situation, Colorado Rockies owner Dick Monfort announces that his franchise is withdrawing from MLB and will join the Banana Ball Championship League. The Rockies struggle in their new circuit, but their fans keep turning out anyway.

Fights break out in the Guggenheim group. Who knows why. Lawsuits are filed. Desperate to resolve the situation and to fill the one-team void in the NL West, commissioner Rob Manfred takes up a Brooklyn developer's offer to construct an exact replica of Ebbets Field on the same block where the sacred old green cathedral stood for decades. The residents who are currently there are respectfully relocated. The new park springs up with alarming alacrity.

At the winter meetings, Manfred's solution is announced. The Dodgers will be split in half. Everything. Their organizational talent -- on the field and off -- is divided evenly. The offshoot of the Dodgers will play at the reconstituted Ebbets Field and will be called the Trolleys, keeping with tradition. The new club will be managed by Gabe Kapler and its front office run by Farhan Zaidi.

It's a lot, I know. It's impossible. But let's suspend disbelief for just a moment so we can get at a real question: Have the Dodgers accumulated so much talent that, at this point, they could field two contending rosters?


Before Game 7 gets underway, let's run through the lineup Dodgers manager Dave Roberts will pit against Brooklyn ace Sasaki.

Designated hitter Ohtani will lead off. Batting second is shortstop Tommy Edman. Catcher Will Smith is in the three-hole. Batting cleanup is right fielder Teoscar Hernandez. Out in left and batting fifth is Michael Conforto. Batting sixth is center fielder Andy Pages.

Youngster Dalton Rushing will play first and hit seventh, followed by third baseman Chris Taylor in the eight-hole. Finally, batting ninth and playing the keystone is second baseman Andy Freeland.

Let's get started.


To divide the Dodgers' current organizational roster, I took a straightforward approach. I started by flipping a coin for Ohtani. Los Angeles got him. Since Ohtani pitches and hits, I then gave Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman to Brooklyn.

From there, I just ranked each positional group by projected WAR and assigned every other player to one team or the other. Some jostling was done to make sure the spread of positions was equitable and that the bottom-line WAR projection was as close as possible. Each team was assigned 35 players.

Kirby Yates, whose reported agreement with the Dodgers has not yet gone official, was included. So was Clayton Kershaw, still a free agent, but let's face it -- we all think he's going back to L.A.

We had to dip pretty deep into prospect lists to fill things out, accelerating the MLB arrival of some young players in a way that would never happen. The Dodgers' list of non-roster invites for spring training was light on veterans with any kind of track record, so other than Yates and Kershaw, we had to stick with who is already on hand.

Here are Opening Day rosters of the split-in-two Dodgers, which are also the rosters in effect for our imaginary game.


There's nothing going for the Dodgers against Roki Sasaki in the first despite Ohtani's drive to the screen in the deepest reaches of right-center. Nice play by Outman on that one.

Mookie Betts striding to the plate, getting ready for the first offering by Dodgers starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto. Let's run through Gabe Kapler's lineup for the Trolleys.

Betts, playing right, will get things going. He'll be followed by second baseman Kim and first baseman Freeman in the three-hole. Hitting cleanup is third-sacker Max Muncy, followed by young left fielder Josue De Paula.

Shortstop Miguel Rojas is hitting sixth, followed by center fielder Outman, catcher Barnes and, batting ninth, rookie Austin Gauthier.

Yamamoto is set. Betts digs in. Yamamoto winds. Someone in the grandstand is ringing a cowbell. Here's the pitch ...


The position player groups on our split rosters are thin. That's the first thing that jumps out. That's why there are so many prospects in the mix who are not ready for prime time. If these teams were real, Zaidi and Andrew Friedman would have been much more proactive about filling out the benches with veteran options.

Still, both rosters can field nearly full lineups of bona fide big league regulars, including a smattering of stars for both sides. Neither would be close to the worst lineup in the majors.

Now about that Rockies thing ... I needed to pull a team out of the league to accommodate the new club. To do that, I changed all of the Rockies players into free agents and then flagged my future Trolleys as members of the Rockies. This allowed me to easily fold the new team into my projection machinery.

My projection system includes some organizational factors that are blended to the team forecast to account for depth (or lack thereof), which some teams are better at producing consistently than others. I beefed that factor a little here to account for the youth on the teams.

That helped, but neither squad projects as elite on offense. In the park-neutral run projections, the Dodgers came in at 672 (24th) and the Trolleys at 655 (26th). That might not read as impressive but it actually is because -- remember -- we are literally measuring two half-teams.

Still, the split Dodgers aren't contention-worthy from an offensive standpoint. They'll need some elite pitching to enter the playoff picture.


We're in the top of the second. Two down, no one on base. Sasaki has set down the first five Dodgers in order. Andy Pages is stepping up to the dish for L.A.

From here, I can see a group of confused-looking people wandering around on the sidewalk on the other side of Bedford Avenue. They're probably looking for that coffee shop that was there a few weeks ago. Things have changed fast around here.

Pages sends a bouncer toward short. Rojas races over, but it's going to get through into left field. Pages rounds the bag at first, but he'll hold on there for the Dodgers' first hit of the game. Dalton Rushing is next.

... After two misses from Sasaki, Rushing is up in the count 2-0. Sasaki checks the runner at first but Pages has a short lead. Sasaki from the stretch ... Rushing crushes a fastball to right-center! Outman is giving chase. He's back, to the warning track -- and it's gone!

Dalton Rushing crushes a two-run homer off of Roki Sasaki, clearing the green canvas batting eye in center field. The Dodgers have grabbed the early 2-0 lead.


What really stands out on our split rosters is the pitching, both in terms of the quality and the depth. That's true for both rotations and both bullpens. This gives you a sense of just how much pitching the Dodgers have accumulated for their coming title defense.

Both teams have a star-studded rotation of big threes: Yamamoto, Glasnow and Ohtani for the Dodgers; Snell, Sasaki and Kershaw for the Trolleys.

Both have three legit closer-level back-end relievers: Scott, Treinen and Yates for the Dodgers; Phillips, Vesia and Kopech for the Trolleys.

I didn't overinflate inning projections. In most cases, they are within bounds of what I've forecasted for the real Dodgers, who have so many injury returnees and young arms that they will monitor.

That means prospect depth is tapped more deeply than it would be in real life, just as with the position players. This is a drag on the split teams' forecasts, but the outlook for both remains promising. As with position players, an organizational depth factor was blended into the projections.

The Trolleys have the edge with a projection of 680 park-neutral runs allowed (11th) while the Dodgers come in at 703 (15th). A pitching staff split in two. Both average or better.

That is pretty stunning.


One down, bottom of the sixth. We're still knotted at 2. Yamamoto will stay in after walking Freeman, with Max Muncy striding to the plate. Muncy's solo homer in the bottom of the second accounted for Brooklyn's first run. Josue De Paula's fourth inning single plated Freeman with the other tally, after Kim was thrown out at the plate by Teoscar Hernandez on Freeman's double off the screen in right.

I'm a little surprised Roberts is sticking with Yamamoto here. The lefty Scott has been getting hot in the bullpen and Muncy represents the go-ahead run for Brooklyn if he goes yard again.

... Here's the 2-2 pitch. Muncy lines one into right for a base hit. Freeman rounds the bag at second and retreats. The Trolleys have something cooking. And here comes Roberts. That'll do it for Yamamoto, who has been excellent.

... So Tanner Scott whiffs De Paula and it'll be up to Rojas. ... Scott checks the runners. Here's his 2-2 pitch. Popped up! Moving over toward the line is Taylor. He's there and puts the squeeze on it. The side is retired.

The Trolleys threaten but Scott works out of Yamamoto's jam. We're through six and the Dodgers and Trolleys are tied at 2.


Our baseline projections have both versions of the Dodgers being outscored, but not by much. The Trolleys fare a little better with a baseline win projection of 78.2, while the Dodgers are at 77.7.

Thus, rounding off, both squads project as 78-84 teams. The balance between them was intentional, of course. So was the decision to keep the Rockies-turned-Trolleys in the same division -- the NL West -- which in real life wouldn't make sense. But sense isn't what we're after today.

Both teams would be forecast to finish behind, in order, the Diamondbacks, Padres and Giants in the NL West, but both are also close to the 80-win Giants. All of those teams would certainly be very happy about the Dodgers being broken up.

While a 78-win projection isn't super exciting, in the current landscape of MLB, it's good enough that a team can enter a season with realistic playoff hopes. How realistic? To answer that, we of course turn to simulations.


Freeland flailed at that 1-2 offering from Kopech and there's two down in the Dodgers' half of the eighth. Kapler emerges from the Brooklyn dugout. He wants the lefty Vesia to face Ohtani, who represents the go-ahead run.

... Ohtani jumps in front 1-0 after Vesia misses with the fastball. It's been a tough day for Ohtani, who flew out to the fence twice in the early innings and whiffed against Sasaki in the sixth.

Vesia, an absolutely vicious southpaw, stares at Barnes behind the plate and nods his head. Here's the pitch.

Ohtani swings and there's a fly ball into right center. This one's got a chance. Hernandez and Pages are fading. They look up and it's gone! Ohtani has clubbed one over the Schaefer sign and out onto Bedford Ave.

The Dodgers have broken the logjam, nabbing a 3-2 lead in the eighth. Dave Roberts has already used Tanner Scott and, in the bottom of the inning, Blake Treinen will enter his second inning of work. He still has Ryan Brasier and Kirby Yates in reserve.


Our 78-win split Dodgers rosters were fed into my simulation machinery and 10,000 runs of the 2025 schedule were logged.

Both teams made the playoffs about 19% of the time, mostly as wild-card entrants. They landed at less than 1% odds to win it all, but, of course, that means it did happen on occasion for both the Dodgers and the Trolleys. The Braves emerged as the new overall favorite to win the World Series.

I scanned the simulation logs and found four instances out of 10,000 when the Dodgers and Trolleys squared off in the NLCS. In one of them -- simulation #3,368 -- the series went seven games. That's the one in which the Trolleys won the NL West with 98 wins, while the 87-win Dodgers nabbed the six-seed.

Those are the squads I decided to breathe virtual life into by recreating those rosters in the sim Action! PC Baseball, produced by Dave Koch Sports. The play-by-play you're reading in these alternating sections comes from that game, in which I managed both teams. Yes, it's actually my fault, not Roberts, that the Dodgers nearly waited one batter too long to get Yamamoto out of the game in the sixth.

And, yes, I even went so far as to use the Los Angeles and Brooklyn logos and to play the game in a rendering of Ebbets Field. Hey, it's January, and we've been without baseball for too long now.


The Trolleys are down to their last two outs. The usually raucous crowd at Ebbets Field is quiet and a nervous energy pervades this little block of Brooklyn. The walk Gauthier drew against Yates to start the inning had the gathering stirred up again, but the strikeout of Betts has silenced them for now.

Those two insurance runs the Dodgers tacked on against Vesia are looming large now, even after Evan Phillips limited the damage in the ninth. Hyeseong Kim steps to the plate. He's reached base three times on a single and a pair of walks. The Trolleys need him to reach for a fourth time to get Freeman to the plate representing the tying run.

Man, this place is tense.

Yates checks Gauthier at first. He's got a huge lead but the Dodgers, with that three-run bulge, don't care what he does. Not sure why Gauthier doesn't just break for second. Here's the pitch.

Kim reaches and taps a little bouncer toward Freeland, he scoops and flips to Edman for one, the relay to first is ... in time! It's a game-ending double play! The Dodgers are the National League champions!

Can you believe it? After all of that drama and tumult of last winter, one during which the entire industry rose to break up the Dodgers' dynasty, they've done it anyway. L.A. is headed to the World Series.

Again.


Cherry picking one simulation out of 10,000 doesn't prove anything, but hopefully it does illustrate the point: The Dodgers are unbelievably stacked.

Going through the actual exercise of pitting two teams, comprised only of right-now Dodgers players, really draws that out. While the game unfolded, it never felt like I was working with two strange, thin teams, but two bona fide, well-constructed big league rosters full of outstanding and interesting players.

I went with the Yamamoto-Sasaki matchup, but it would have been just as exhilarating had I gone with any combination of those two, Ohtani, Glasnow, Snell or Kershaw.

Because the sim game was close, I had to think situationally in the late innings, but at no point was I confronted with a bad bullpen option. The closest I came to it was when I had to use Brasier to get two outs in the eighth after Treinen tired. I had already burned Scott and wanted to keep Yates for the ninth.

This is the kind of thing the Dodgers' opponents are going to have to overcome next October. If the Dodgers can get that staff to the postseason healthy -- obviously far from a sure thing -- there will be no room for opposing offenses to breathe.

And those lineup holes that pop up when you split the Dodgers' position group in two? Those won't be there.

The 12-team playoff format, so inclusive and so random, means no team can be a sure thing in any projection of the next champion. I have referred to that as the illusion of competitiveness, and the Dodgers are the perfect example. They have built a powerhouse roster and set themselves apart from every other team in baseball. Yet they still have less than a one-in-three shot at repeating as champs.

Make no mistake though: These Dodgers are an absolute on-paper powerhouse. It's a team that has a chance to do truly historic things. If they do, the other 29 teams still can't collude to break them up as if they were an 1890s railroad monopoly.

But some of those teams might well look into joining the Rockies in the Banana Ball Championship League.

Another topsy-turvy weekend of European football is in the books, and there are talking points galore across the big leagues.

In the Premier League, Tottenham's latest defeat piles more pressure on manager Ange Postecoglou, while Manchester City shrugged off an early deficit to Chelsea -- and shaky debut for Abdukodir Khusanov -- to pick up a 3-1 win and get back into the top four.

In LaLiga, Real Madrid took control of the title race as Kylian Mbappé scored an impressive hat trick to beat Real Valladolid, though Barcelona thrashed Valencia to remain in contention. Elsewhere, there were talking points for Borussia Dortmund and their caretaker manager, AS Monaco, AC Milan and Juventus.

Luis Miguel Echegaray, Sam Marsden and Constantin Eckner take a look at what you might have missed this weekend.


English Premier League

Top takeaway: Postecoglou's future in doubt as Tottenham endure worst-ever Premier League run

On Sunday, Tottenham Hotspur lost 2-1 to Leicester City, a result that moved the Foxes out of the relegation zone. For Spurs and Ange Postecoglou, however, the numbers are not good. Spurs have now recorded their 13th loss of the season -- as many as Ipswich Town -- which also marked their fourth straight in the league. They haven't earned a league victory since Dec. 15 and are 15th in the table, only eight points from the relegation zone.

A counterargument could highlight the fact that key injuries are impacting their ability to execute their style of play. Another angle could be the available players and how they should shoulder the responsibility. But these are one-dimensional excuses because this is a situation where, sadly, the main focal point is the manager's stubborn approach and how it's costing the team's physical and mental stamina. For a while now, Spurs have looked very tired and when you have a diminished squad, it is the role of the manager to be more pragmatic and alter the style of play. That's not happening under their Greek-Australian manager.

I still think he's a good coach with good ideas and the Carabao Cup run could be their only saving grace, but if this rut continues, the club's executive chairman and decision-maker, Daniel Levy, will have a lot to think about.

Best match: Manchester City 3, Chelsea 1

Part of the reason this game earned my vote was its erratic nature as well as the introduction of two league newcomers.

Pep Guardiola opted to start two of his three new signings -- defender Abdukodir Khusanov and forward Omar Marmoush -- and both delivered headlines for varying reasons. The 20-year-old Khusanov, who doesn't speak English and had only two training sessions leading up the game, made a huge mistake that resulted in Chelsea's opener. Then he received an early yellow card after a foul on Cole Palmer. Only Jonathan Woodgate's debut with Real Madrid (an own goal and a red card) was looking worse for a centre-back, but as the game developed, the Uzbekistan defender grew into it.

Marmoush, however, was a beautiful revelation for the Premier League. His pace, aggression and ability to make dangerous runs will add another dimension to a City side that's returning to form. To add more erratic themes, Chelsea's goalkeeper Robert Sánchez wins the lot after his terrible decision to come off his line, allowing Erling Haaland to score and make it 2-1 before Phil Foden netted the third in the 87th minute.

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1:28
Did Cole Palmer go missing for Chelsea in their loss vs. Man City?

Luis Miguel Echegaray reacts to Chelsea's 3-1 loss to Manchester City in the Premier League.

Best goal: Alexander Isak, Newcastle United vs. Southampton

Newcastle United returned to winning ways on Saturday thanks to a 3-1 win over Southampton with Isak scoring a brace in the space of four minutes. It was another trademark weekend by the Swedish international, who at this point is possibly winning the argument for currently the best striker in Europe. The first was a penalty, but the second? A wonderful ball from Jacob Murphy, which split the defensive line and found Isak, who beautifully controlled the ball before putting it past Saints goalkeeper Alex McCarthy. The movement, the placement -- all of it was world class.

Our colleague and former Man City defender Nedum Onuoha mentioned this weekend on BBC Sport that Isak brings reminiscences of Thierry Henry, and I have to tell you, I don't disagree.

MVP of the weekend: Riccardo Calafiori, Arsenal

There's an argument for Bournemouth's Dango Ouattara following his second-half hat-trick in Bournemouth's 5-0 rout of Nottingham Forest, but my vote goes to the Italian defender who entered the game in the second half to help the Gunners earn three very valuable points.

Calafiori's winner against Wolves served as inspiration in a game that saw Arsenal had to fight hard with 10 men after Myles Lewis-Skelly's red card due to "serious foul play," but it also delivered the most important takeaway: Calafiori's goal keeps Arsenal's title hopes alive. -- Echegaray

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2:18
Did Arsenal keep their title hopes alive with late win vs. Wolves?

Luis Miguel Echegaray reacts to Arsenal's 1-0 win over Wolves in the Premier League.


LaLiga

Top takeaway: Real Madrid have daylight at the top of LaLiga

There has been heat on Real Madrid this season -- at times fairly, as they have failed to deliver in big games -- yet this weekend saw them open up a four-point lead at the top of LaLiga. Carlo Ancelotti's side took full advantage of second-placed Atlético Madrid being held to a 1-1 draw by Villarreal as they dispatched Real Valladolid with little fuss, Kylian Mbappé netting three in a routine 3-0 win.

Ancelotti points out there is still a long way to go (17 games, to be exact) but it's going to be tough for the chasing pack to catch Madrid given this is supposedly them out of form. Their latest win came without Vinícius Júnior, too, who was suspended, but with Mbappé in increasingly devastating form. At the moment, despite injuries in defence and doubts about a Toni Kroos-less midfielder, that is enough.

Atlético, though, will be kicking themselves. After winning eight games in a row to climb to the top of the table, they are now without a win in two. The pending Madrid derby on Feb. 8 at the Bernabéu is not quite make-or-break, but it looks like a game Diego Simeone's side can afford to lose in the scheme of the title race.

Best match: Barcelona thrash Valencia

Barça showed they cannot be written out of the race yet, however, with a sensational first-half display against Valencia on Sunday. They scored five goals in the opening 45 minutes on their way to a 7-1 win that keeps them within seven points of Madrid.

Raphinha and Lamine Yamal were once again good, but coach Hansi Flick will have been happy with the performances from Fermín López and Frenkie de Jong, two players who have struggled for minutes this season. Fermín, in particular, was impressive, scoring twice and creating two more goals.

Best goal: Loïc Badé, Sevilla vs. Espanyol

Badé was the goodie this weekend as he rescued a point for Sevilla against Espanyol with a brilliant curling effort from 25 yards. What made the defender's goal even more memorable was that it came after he'd just had a goal cruelly ruled out and had been battling back days of transfer links to Aston Villa. He celebrated by sliding into the corner and kissing the Sevilla badge.

MVP of the weekend: Kylian Mbappé, Real Madrid

The Frenchman says he has finally adapted to his new surroundings following his summer move from Paris Saint-Germain and the evidence backs him up. He netted a hat trick in the win over Valladolid, his first for Madrid, and he has now scored eight times in his past five appearances in all competitions.

His first two finishes were typical Mbappé, shaping in from the left and finishing with the inside of his right foot. His third came late on from the penalty spot, and was his 15th in LaLiga this season. He is now just two behind the league's top scorer, Robert Lewandowski. -- Marsden


Bundesliga

Top takeaway: No win for Dortmund under caretaker manager Tullberg

Dortmund assigned Mike Tullberg, usually the Under-19s head coach, to manage the team against Werder Bremen following Nuri Şahin's dismissal last Wednesday. The 39-year-old Dane demanded the same kind of grit and hardnosed mentality he himself showed as a player. "I always slogged away ad nauseam, was never the best on the ball. It was all willpower in my case," Tullberg said before the game.

While we have witnessed the caretaker manager bump time and time again, with teams generally looking reenergized after a change in the dugout, it did not work out quite like that for Dortmund. In front of a passionate and nervous crowd inside Signal Iduna Park, the similarities to previous outings were striking, with Dortmund having loads of ball possession while looking vulnerable against counterattacks. One fast-paced attack by Bremen caused Nico Schlotterbeck to attempt an unwise last-man tackle, the veteran defender getting a red card barely 20 minutes in.

Fascinatingly, Dortmund did not change their strategy much despite being one man down, scoring twice before making familiar errors that ultimately cost them two points. Bremen staged a comeback thanks to Leonardo Bittencourt and Dortmund native Marvin Ducksch, as both teams played to a draw.

Surely, Dortmund's courageous display following Schlotterbeck's dismissal can create hope that there is life in this team. But mentality and willpower are not enough if the Schwarzgelben commit a number of mistakes in almost every game. Whoever is hired as Şahin's successor will have their hands full.

Best match: RB Leipzig 2, Bayer Leverkusen 2

The most high-profile game of the matchday was the clash between fifth-placed RB Leipzig and second-placed Bayer Leverkusen. Even though Leipzig were coming off their first win in the UEFA Champions League this season and should have felt confident, they were barely able to contain Leverkusen's transcendent playmaker Florian Wirtz during the first half. The Leverkusen playmaker scored the first goal after a beautiful dribble and he set up Aleix García to score the 2-0, which marked García's maiden goal for Leverkusen. However, Leipzig fought their way back into the game and were able to snatch points away from Leverkusen.

Interestingly, the match had almost the identical dynamic as their encounter on matchday two, when Leipzig beat Leverkusen 3-2 to end the unbeaten streak for Xabi Alonso & Co. in exciting fashion.

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0:46
Leonardo Bittencourt scores stunner to bring Bremen back into the game

Leonardo Bittencourt scores stunner to bring Bremen back into the game

Best goal: Leonardo Bittencourt, Werder Bremen vs. Dortmund

As mentioned above, Bremen managed to get back into the game at Signal Iduna Park despite being down 2-0 at the hour mark. In the lead-up to Bremen's first goal, Julian Ryerson headed the ball in front of Miloš Veljković from a high cross, with Veljković immediately passing it on to Bittencourt, whose shot from 23 yards out hit the top left corner of the goal. The Bundesliga measured the speed of Bittencourt's strike at 62 mph.

MVP of the weekend: Florian Wirtz

While Wirtz was unable to secure the win for Leverkusen at Leipzig, he once again stole the show. He could be awarded the MVP laurels this weekend for the way he fooled both Willi Orbán and Arthur Vermeeren before scoring the go-ahead goal alone. -- Eckner


What else you missed this weekend

AC Milan, Pulisic, Musah deliver in fantastic comeback win

On Sunday, new arrival Kyle Walker watched in the stands as AC Milan and American duo Christian Pulisic and Yunus Musah produced a wonderful comeback to beat Parma 3-2 at the San Siro. Parma led twice thanks to Matteo Cancellieri and Enrico Del Prato's goals, which were sandwiched between Pulisic's penalty. The visitors seemed as if they were about to do the league double over Milan, but in stoppage time, magic happened.

Tijjani Reijnders received Musah's ball to make it 2-2, with Samuel Chukwueze earning the winner in the fifth minute of added time. There was a long check for offside but once the goal was confirmed, the stadium erupted. It was a big win for Milan and Sérgio Conceição, as they try to keep up in the battle for European places. -- Echegaray

Juve's invincible dream over

Sticking in Italy, Napoli ended Juventus' unbeaten start to the Serie A season, sparing us what might well have been Europe's worst invincible campaign. Frank Anguissa and Romelu Lukaku's second-half goals helped Antonio Conte's side come from behind to reaffirm their place at the top of the table, after Randal Kolo Muani had given Juve the lead on his debut. Incredibly, considering they are a staggering 16 points off the pace, it was the Old Lady's first league defeat of the campaign, but they've won just eight of their 22 Serie A games, drawing 13, and slumped to fifth following this weekend's loss. -- Marsden

Panic stations at Benfica?

It has not been a great month for Benfica, who suffered their third defeat in four league games with a surprise 3-1 defeat to Casa Pia this weekend. They are now seven points behind leaders Sporting CP. Throw in the midweek 5-4 loss to Barcelona -- a game they led 3-1 and 4-2 -- in the Champions League and the pressure is on when they travel to Juventus on Wednesday, attempting to book their place in the knockout round of the competition. -- Marsden

AS Monaco end weeks of misery

The winter months have not been nice to Monaco. Following their win over Toulouse in early December, Monaco stumbled from one disappointing result to the next ... until this week. First, Adi Hütter's side beat Aston Villa in the UEFA Champions League thanks to a Wilfried Singo header, improving its chances of qualifying for the first knockout round. Then, it beat Rennes 3-2 in a real shootout on Saturday.

Hütter, who recently extended his contract until 2027 despite the recent slump, must feel some relief. With 30 points after 16 matchdays, Monaco had an identical record as last season. But it seemed as if Hütter's team could not maintain its level of performance this time around. Perhaps the two recent wins mark a turnaround.

Paris Saint-Germain might already be too far ahead in the Ligue 1 standings, but finishing second once again would still count as a success for the Austrian manager. -- Eckner

Matt Kuhnemann admitted he briefly feared his thumb injury could have ended his hopes of touring Sri Lanka but both he and Steven Smith completed full training sessions on the squad's arrival in Galle for the Test series.

Australia's premier left-arm spinner Kuhnemann is now pain-free after wearing a ball on his non-bowling hand playing for Brisbane Heat earlier this month. He reunited with the squad in Sri Lanka at the weekend and completed Sunday afternoon's first full session since arriving on the island for the two-match series.

Stand-in captain Smith, who suffered a minor elbow injury in the BBL, spent as much time batting in the nets as anyone else and did not appear hampered.

Every team member attended the optional session, with conditions so humid that top-order option Sam Konstas removed his helmet to finish batting in the nets.

Apparently in preparation for the turning conditions, allrounder Beau Webster bowled the right-arm offspin of earlier in his career rather than the medium pace trotted out on Test debut at the SCG earlier this month.

Kuhnemann is continuing to wear a brace on his right thumb and medical staff will monitor him. His injury appeared more serious than Smith's, but Kuhnemann feels fit ahead of the first Test that begins on January 29.

"I had a couple of sessions back home and I was obviously cautious batting and fielding and everything but bowling, I haven't had a problem whatsoever," Kuhnemann said prior to the first training session. "I did this same thumb a couple of years ago and it was real painful but this one has been fine from the get-go."

As he awaited surgery, Kuhnemann said he was unsure whether he would have the chance to add to his three Test caps in Sri Lanka. The 28-year-old was a late call-up when Australia toured India in 2023, and the lack of subcontinent visits since had robbed him of further chances.

"Definitely there were times when I was disappointed. It's not great timing," Kuhnemann said when asked whether he feared for his ability to tour. "There was a couple of hours. But I believe everything happens for a reason and you sort of move on. Obviously you do everything you can because these tours don't come around very often as a spinner."

Kuhnemann could not attend the squad's preparatory camp at the ICC Academy in Dubai but managed a hit-out with a Cricket Australia XI against England Lions at Allan Border Field last week.

"The boys said I didn't miss out on too much and what I was bowling on back in Brisbane was an eight-day old wicket so it worked out pretty good," Kuhnemann said. "If it was the off-season then maybe it would be a blow to miss Dubai but we're in the middle of summer and the workloads and confidence are high. Everything is all good."

Cricket Australia chief executive Nick Hockley has described Thursday's exhibition match featuring an Afghanistan Women's XI in Melbourne as the first small step towards playing international cricket saying it is a 'real beacon of hope' that should spark conversations globally.

An Afghanistan women's cricket team, consisting of refugees who now live in Australia, will play a T20 match between against a Cricket Without Borders XI at the Junction Oval in Melbourne on Thursday morning ahead of the opening day of the day-night Women's Ashes Test at the MCG that starts in the afternoon.

It is the first time they have been able to come together as a group since leaving their country following the Taliban takeover, with half of the group settling in Canberra while the other half settled in Melbourne.

Hockley spoke alongside two of the Afghanistan XI players, Nahida Sapan and Firooza Amiri, on Monday at the Junction Oval, with Sapan announced as the captain for the match. Cricket Without Borders Chair Clare Cannon, Director Ken Jacobs and Australia's Federal Assistant Minister for Foreign Affairs Tim Watts were also present as the organisation of the match has been a joint effort between, CA, Cricket Without Borders and the Australian government.

Hockley was hopeful that this match will be the first of many playing opportunities for the Afghanistan women in the future and indicated that the England and Wales Cricket Board were keen to help promote their cause after captain Heather Knight met the exiled Afghanistan female players in Melbourne earlier this month.

"I think this is a first step," Hockley said. "We've got colleagues from the ECB coming out for the women's Ashes, and there are conversations happening to support from England as well as from Australia. So I think the first piece is awareness. But I think it's going to be such an exciting day on Thursday, and my hope is that promotes lots of conversations, that this becomes an annual thing and then ultimately, that this team were able to compete on the international stage as is their want.

"I don't think any of us can comprehend what they've been through moving to a new country in such difficult circumstances, not speaking the language. I'm just inspired by their resilience, their love for the game and hopefully this game just raises awareness, a real beacon of hope.

"I was privy to a moment where they got to see their playing shirts for the first time with their names and numbers on the back, and you can just see how much it means to them. So I really hope this is kind of the first step of a really successful journey for this group, but also that this match shines a light on the fact that in places around the world not every woman and girl has a chance to play."

Sapan has been playing club cricket in Melbourne for Carnegie while Amiri has been playing for Dandenong. But both players were overjoyed at the opportunity to play in an Afghanistan Women's XI.

"It's really special for us, especially for Afghan women because this is a very historic moment for all Afghan women," Sapan said. "We have a big hopes for this match, because this match can open doors for Afghan women, for education, sport and future. We don't want this to be our first and last match. We want to more matches. We want more support."

Amiri, who has been a prominent voice for the Afghanistan female cricketers, was thrilled that the team can come together for the first time.

"We are going to represent millions of Afghan women that they are in Afghanistan and denied for their rights," she said. "And also it's very special for all of us to get back together after three years, leaving everything and losing everything back home in Afghanistan

"It's going to be very exciting for all of us to play together. We had couple of camps together, but it's going to be our first match. We're looking for a win."

Australia currently do not play Afghanistan in bilateral fixtures but continue to face them in ICC events and are in the same group for next month's Champions Trophy in Pakistan and the UAE.

Alex Malcolm is an associate editor at ESPNcricinfo

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