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I Dig Sports
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Plymouth Argyle's stunning victory over Liverpool on Sunday has seen them rewarded with a trip to face Pep Guardiola's Manchester City in the fifth round of the FA Cup.
The Championship's bottom club miraculously knocked out Arne Slot's previously all-conquering Liverpool side with a 1-0 win at Home Park thanks to Ryan Hardie's 53rd-minute penalty. The defeat was only the fourth suffered by the Premier League leaders this season.
Plymouth's famous win ended Liverpool's pursuit of an unprecedented quadruple this campaign.
Monday's draw also pitted holders Manchester United against Fulham, while Aston Villa will host Cardiff City. Elsewhere, Crystal Palace will face Millwall in a London derby and Carabao Cup finalists Newcastle United will play Brighton, who knocked Chelsea out on Saturday.
Preston North End's clash with Burnley means there is guaranteed to be at least one second-tier side in the quarterfinal stage of the competition.
Fifth round ties will be played across the weekend of March 1-2.
The FA Cup final will take place at Wembley Stadium on May 18.
FA Cup fifth round draw:
Preston North End vs. Burnley
Aston Villa vs. Cardiff City
Crystal Palace vs. Millwall
Manchester United vs. Fulham
Newcastle United vs. Brighton & Hove Albion
Bournemouth vs. Wolverhampton Wanderers
Manchester City vs. Plymouth Argyle
Exeter City or Nottingham Forest vs. Ipswich Town
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Carlo Ancelotti said Manchester City vs. Real Madrid "feels like a Clásico now" as the teams prepare to meet in the Champions League for the fourth season in a row, and backed the tie's winner to "go far in the competition."
In previous years, City and Madrid have met in the Champions League semifinals or quarterfinals -- with Madrid emerging victorious in 2022 and 2024, and City in 2023 -- but this time, they face off in the knockout phase playoff, after underwhelming European campaigns.
City go into Tuesday's first leg at the Etihad Stadium having struggled this season -- they're fifth in the Premier League -- while Madrid, despite leading LaLiga, are dealing with an injury crisis that's seen them deprived of senior defenders Dani Carvajal, Éder Militão, Antonio Rüdiger and David Alaba.
"It feels like a Clásico now, because we've played them now for many years," Ancelotti said in his pre-match news conference in Manchester on Monday. "I still think City are one of the best teams in Europe. City have the best coach [Pep Guardiola] in this competition. It's one of the most difficult games you can have ... And the same goes for us, we're competitive, despite the emergency we face."
In 2022, Madrid beat City 6-5 on aggregate in the Champions League semifinals -- winning a dramatic second leg 3-1 at the Santiago Bernabéu, all three goals coming in added time -- while in the 2024 quarterfinals, a penalty shootout was needed to separate the teams.
Madrid went on to win the Champions League on both occasions, with City triumphing after eliminating Madrid in 2023.
"It's the most difficult rival, the most important rival, and the best manager," Ancelotti said. "The team that goes through to the next round has the possibility to go far in the competition. In the last years, the team that won this tie, won the Champions League."
Ancelotti said facing Guardiola's City is "always a headache."
"He's a coach who always tries to bring something new to his team," Ancelotti said. "He's done a lot for football in terms of possession, pressing, playing out from the back. He's an innovator. I have a lot of respect for him ... It's always a nightmare preparing for the game."
In 2022, forward Rodrygo starred when the two teams met, scoring twice in a minute to see Madrid progress.
"I was talking two or three days to [midfielder] Fede Valverde, about the game against City," Rodrygo said.
"I asked him if we'd ever feel that emotion again. It was the most special night of my career ... Sometimes I've been happy playing against [City], other times not so much. I'm in good form and I can be decisive. But I try to be decisive in every game, not just against City."
Madrid derby lessons, Liverpool exit FA Cup, lucky Man United: Marcotti recaps the weekend
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The European soccer weekend didn't disappoint -- does it ever? Let's review. In LaLiga, Real Madrid and Atlético served up a feisty derby draw that both teams can ultimately feel good about as the title race and Champions League look like they'll go right down to the wire. The English FA Cup, the sport's oldest cup competition, delivered as well, with struggling Plymouth Argyle taking down high-flying Liverpool and Manchester City needing to empty the bench of stars in order to get past Leyton Orient in the fourth round.
Oh, and while we're on the FA Cup, how about the lack of VAR (which enters in the fifth round of the tournament) enabling Harry Maguire's clearly offside game-winning goal stand as Man United snuck past Leicester City?
Elsewhere, we had talking points galore from Borussia Dortmund, Napoli, Chelsea, Barcelona, AC Milan and much, much more. Here are musings and reactions to the most memorable moments of the weekend.
Real Madrid and Atletico can both turn derby draw into a positive
The last five Madrid derbies all ended in a draw and to some, this is some sort of testament to how well these clubs know each other, from Atletico's ability to rise to the occasion, to Real's ability to find a solution even when they're up against the wall, to -- one of my favourite, but generally meaningless, cliches -- "two teams canceling each other out."
This was pretty much the opposite -- though another cliche -- and what we saw was a "game of two halves." Atleti had a clear and obvious supremacy in the first 45 minutes, stunning the Bernabeu crowd into an eerie silence. Sure, take away the penalty -- which infuriated Real Madrid (more on this later) -- and neither team had a shot on target, the combined xG from both a paltry 0.53. But that suited Diego Simeone's side just fine. They were outworking and outhustling Real Madrid with a smile on their collective faces, knowing that they weren't giving up any real threat and, in any minute, something -- a counter, an opposition mistake, a moment of genius, a penalty (in this case) -- could break their way. And it did.
As for Real Madrid, it's as if all the usual ills came out at once. Fede Valverde and Dani Ceballos were outnumbered in midfield and the makeshift back four -- none of whom are first choice in that role -- looked overly nervous and deferential toward Antoine Griezmann and Julián Álvarez. But it was the front four who were MIA on Saturday night.
You know the drill; you've heard it a billion times. If you're going to carry three forwards like Rodrygo, Kylian Mbappé and Vinícius, plus ask Jude Bellingham to play as a de facto striker, you need them to do stuff off the ball. Like occasionally track back, help the midfield, help build play, make a run to draw a defender out of position. Some were more culpable than others, but it was way too intermittent, way too lightweight and for the first time in a while, Carlo Ancelotti could be seen raging at his front men as he roamed the sideline.
The rousing half-time speech is another mega cliche, though I imagine it applies here because after the break, we saw a different Mbappe and Bellingham (and, to a lesser degree, Rodrygo... Vinicius not so much). They got the equalizer, missed a couple clear chances and generally dominated. Had it not been for Jan Oblak doing his superman routine between the posts, they would have taken all three points.
Luis García reacts to Atletico Madrid's controversial penalty against Real Madrid.
I have no idea if Ancelotti tore into them at half-time -- it's hard to believe, but he does get angry sometimes -- but the fact that he didn't make any substitutions until nine minutes from time suggests that his message to the front four was something like "You guys are the stars, you got us into this predicament, I'm going to leave you out there until you turn it around. Show some pride and professionalism and, if not, the Bernabeu will boo the crap out of you."
Real Madrid's European season will be decided in the next 10 days, with the two-legged playoff clash against Manchester City. Simply put, even against this weakened, unrecognisable version of City, if the front four play the way they did in the first 45 minutes on Saturday night, they're going to get eliminated. (With their starting back four, they may have had a chance, with this hodgepodge -- Lucas Vázquez is out now against City, too -- they simply need those guys to show up.)
That's the positive message Ancelotti can deliver, more so than the fact that they've maintained their narrow LaLiga lead over Atleti. He can hold his forwards to account and show them the second half, hammering the fact that no, this is not a fire drill: They really were putrid in the first half, but equally, with a bit of effort, they tore apart the opposition after the break.
As for Simeone's positive message: Easy. You went into the belly of the beast and escaped unscathed. You got into their heads. You're not the ones who are going to implode: Real Madrid just might, and if they do, you'll be there to take advantage.
Gab & Juls look ahead to the first leg of the Champions League playoff between Real Madrid and Manchester City.
As for the penalty, you understand why it was given. In a strict reading of the directives given to referees, stepping on an opponent's foot is a foul (blame all those metatarsal injuries) and intent doesn't come into it. Equally though, referee Cesar Soto Grado was right there and did not deem it a foul. That tells you that if Aurélien Tchouaméni's foot did come down on Samuel Lino, as opposed to just across, while trying to play the ball, it was far from obvious. And, in fact, the VAR reviews suggested it was by no means clear-cut.
All this does is further fuel Real Madrid's vast referee conspiracy narrative, and it's a shame that on this occasion, the VAR didn't exercise better judgement. (Or, for that matter, the referee, who could have simply stuck to his on-field call.)
Both things can be true: Arne Slot was right, and Plymouth made history
Gab Marcotti defends Arne Slot for making wholesale changes to his Liverpool lineup, despite crashing out to Championship Plymouth.
Plymouth Argyle's greatest-ever FA Cup run came in 1984, when they reached the semifinal of the competition. Sunday's 1-0 win over Premier League leaders Liverpool probably ought to top that.
Back in 1984, they were a third division side, who beat just one top-flight team en route to the semis, where they lost to Watford. Today, they sit bottom of the Championship, one tier -- and 43 places -- below Liverpool, yet the gap in resources is probably far higher today.
And yes, that even applies to the Liverpool B-team that fell 1-0 at Home Park. Liverpool's starting XI, however weakened, featured no fewer than eight senior internationals, plus another two youth internationals. The centre-forward they brought on while chasing the game (Darwin Núñez) was acquired at a cost close to $80 million. Prior to this game, Plymouth had won one league match in the prior three months, so yeah: if you want to talk feat, this one beats the other one.
That said, Slot is correct in defending his team selection. Any suggestion that he's somehow "disrespecting" the "greatest cup competition in the world" is somewhere between the deluded and the silly. The irony is that we've been here before, with Liverpool in fact: Rafa Benitez was pilloried for resting starters in the cup 20 years ago and some still haven't learned their lesson.
"They trained yesterday and they will train tomorrow as well," Slot said of his missing starters. "Most of the things we do for a reason: we don't just do it. I said before, we have to play many games now. For the last few weeks, we have played twice every week and now in the upcoming weeks, twice again. It's not just good for them to only have to play once a week, but also good for the ones here today, who need the intensity of the game."
It's not "arrogance" that prompted Slot to leave a host of regulars home, including Mohamed Salah, Dominik Szoboszlai, Alexis Mac Allister and Captain Virgil van Dijk. It's simply the realisation that his players are human, they've played a ton of games, they have a ton more to come and he has to prioritise.
Sorry to the Magic of the Cup brigade: The Premier League and the Champions League come first.
I bet the anti-VAR brigade enjoyed this ...
Gab Marcotti assesses the reason why VAR was not used in the fourth round of the FA Cup.
I heard all the anti-VAR arguments when it was introduced. I listened to the folks worrying about fans, especially those in the ground "not knowing what's going on" (as if every consultation between match officials pre-VAR was crystal clear to all) to those saying it's not what those who created football intended. (Presumably, those people also don't like the offside rule, numbers on players' backs, substitutes, injury time, red and yellow cards, linesmen, etc. since none were part of the original version.)
I heard those moaning about the loss of "spontaneity" in celebrating goals (presumably they never cheered for a goal, only to notice that the linesman's flag had gone up) to those who fretted about technology, from camera angles to the impact of slow-motion replays on making a tackle look better or worse. And, of course, I also listened to those who were philosophically opposed: Their opinion is one I can respect because they're straight up about it, though I obviously don't share it.
I wonder what they all thought after Harry Maguire's winning goal for Manchester United against Leicester in the FA Cup, a header that was cravenly offside from a free kick. There is no VAR in the FA Cup until the fifth round, which meant United won 2-1, and Foxes' boss Ruud Van Nistelrooy lost it postgame.
I imagine those anti-VAR fans shrugging and mumbling something about how the assistant referee made a mistake, mistakes are part of life and let's move on. Sure, human error is part of life. Yet, weirdly, we try to limit human error when we fly planes, drive cars, perform surgery, install boilers, use calculators, and so on.
VAR isn't about achieving perfection. Mistakes will still be made. VAR officials are human, processes are imperfect and there's still going to be some sort of subjectivity on a whole range of incidents. But that doesn't mean VAR itself is bad. Or that we shouldn't try to improve and limit errors, just because we're not going to catch all of them.
QUICK HITS
10. Barcelona show a different dimension as they pull within two points of top spot in LaLiga: It's not that Barca are soft, it's just that most of their players don't have the look or demeanor of "foxhole guys" (Ronald Araújo excepted). Maybe that's why, in a spiky game at Sevilla that saw Barcelona 3-1 up after an hour (but with the opposition coming close several times), you sensed that when Fermín López got sent off, this match could go the way of the Celta game back in November. (That's when Barca, 2-0 up, had Marc Casadó sent off and gave up two goals in a classic late-game collapse.) Not here. They matched Sevilla's physicality in the first half and defended calmly and with purpose a man down. And they even got a fourth goal through Eric García, no less.
9. Atalanta's Mateo Retegui won't stop, as only Salah and Kane are ahead of him in Europe's Big Five leagues: OK, I'll admit it, I was a Retegui doubter. He's not the sort of striker who stands out or who has one (or more) obvious strengths other than finishing, of course, which is rather important for a centre-forward. He bagged four goals in Atalanta's 5-0 road drubbing of Verona on Saturday, taking his league total to 20: only Mohamed Salah and Harry Kane have more. It helps that he plays for a very attacking side and that he gets plenty of service; the rest is all him. Time will tell if he's a one-season wonder, but fans of Atalanta -- still third in Serie A -- might feel a little less stressed that Gianluca Scamacca, their "other" centre-forward, won't be fit for some time.
Steve Nicol reacts to Man City's comeback win against Leyton Orient in the FA Cup.
8. Man City's trip to Leyton Orient was always going to suck for them: Seriously, the best-case scenario was for Pep Guardiola to rest his stars, give the newcomers and youngsters a game and emerge with a convincing FA Cup fourth-round victory that would soon be forgotten because they're facing Real Madrid in the Champions League on Tuesday. Instead, he got to rest only some of his stars (he still had to press Bernardo Silva, John Stones, Kevin De Bruyne and Phil Foden into action, which he clearly did not want to do), the kids and newcomers weren't great and Nico Gonzalez's club debut lasted just 22 minutes before he limped off injured. Oh, and they came within 11 minutes of needing extra-time on a bad pitch against an opponent playing the game of their lives. The only saving grace of Guardiola's weekend? Liverpool going out means they're probably favourites to win the FA Cup though, to be fair, he already has two of those at home. City have bigger fish to fry.
7. Sérgio Conceição goes all-in and it pays off for Milan, as we see the good (and not-so-good) of Santiago Giménez: Conceicao's Milan remains a model of inconsistency, but you can say this for the guy: he's gutsy. A hideous first half away to Empoli (3 shots, 0.11 xG and Empoli hit the woodwork) resulted in him sending on Gimenez, Rafael Leão and Christian Pulisic in one go, and when Fikayo Tomori was sent off in the 55th minute, he didn't take off a striker for a defender (standard fare in this sport) for 15 minutes. The gamble worked, Pulisic served up a picture-perfect cross and Leao delivered one of those far-post Cristiano Ronaldo-esque headers to take the lead, before Gimenez added a second. Say this for the new centre-forward: he brings drive, quality and athleticism. He also has a bit of a dark side, as anyone who saw his clash with Luca Marianucci, which resulted in the Empoli defender getting sent off, will confirm. We don't need to see that from him.
6. Best-laid plans blow up in Xabi Alonso's face, but it's too easy to blame him: Hindsight is always 20/20, which means it's easy to bash Alonso for resting Edmond Tapsoba, Jeremie Frimpong, Patrik Schick and, especially, Florian Wirtz for the visit to Wolfsburg, which ended in a 0-0 draw. With the big clash against table-topping Bayern coming up next weekend (and 120 minutes of football in midweek), he evidently thought he could get away with it. Instead, Wolfsburg hit the woodwork and despite a flurry of late chances after Wirtz came on, it's most definitely two points dropped. Coaches have to go with their best judgment, and I'd think Alonso has enough credit in the bank with what he's achieved that most ought to be comfortable with his call. Yeah, I could have done without seeing Mario Hermoso out there, but Leverkusen did enough to win, and it was right to reward Victor Boniface, Aleix García, Nathan Tella and some of the others who did play.
Alejandro Moreno believes Bayer Leverkusen dropping points vs. Wolfsburg today could have handed the title to Bayern Munich.
5. Five goals in three games is a dream start for Kolo Muani at Juventus, but I'm not sold yet: At least not as Juve's long-term solution at centre-forward. Leaving aside the not insignificant fact that it's going to be very hard to keep him unless they can shift Dusan Vlahovic in the summer, Randal Kolo Muani's skills don't seem to fit a Thiago Motta system (or even a more traditional 4-3-3). He did notch both goals in Juventus' 2-1 win away at Como on Friday and while one was a penalty, the other showcased strength, speed and technique (really, the first of his five goals in three games that did that), which is encouraging. The question really shouldn't be about how much he scores, but whether he makes Juventus better. And right now, as they showed again on Friday, they have a long, long way to go.
4. Either Maresca is wrong or he's doing his job, which involves putting a brave face on Chelsea's crummy situation: On Friday, Chelsea boss Enzo Maresca talked about how there were "no regrets" that Chelsea hadn't brought in another forward in the January window. I wonder, if you looked closely, if you could see his nose grow. It inevitably became part of the narrative on Saturday, when the Blues -- without both Nico Jackson and Marc Guiu -- fell 2-1 to Brighton in the FA Cup. Truth be told, Chelsea were already short before the window opened and João Félix departed. Guiu has started one top-flight league game in his life: He is not a viable backup at this level. Christopher Nkunku, who started in Jackson's absence, is a fine player who probably deserves more minutes, but he's simply an entirely different profile to Guiu and Jackson and a guy who, before joining Chelsea, had never been asked to play as a lone striker. And while we're at it, with Felix gone and Mykhailo Mudryk suspended, they're probably short in the winger department too. I don't blame Maresca: It's the company line and all, plus 18 months ago he was an assistant coach, meaning it's not in his personality to clash with the club. But folks see through this.
3. Napoli are slowing down, and it's up to Antonio Conte to fix it: It's now two straight draws -- against a second-string Roma away, and Sunday at home to Udinese -- for Napoli, which equates to four points dropped. Conte says he doesn't see it that way, talking instead about how it was "another point towards our goal of qualifying for Europe." That's purely saying things for effect: Napoli's objective this season can't be Conference League qualification. Not with the season they're having, not with the players they have (and Conte handpicked), not with the reputation (and wages) of Conte himself. The fact is they didn't look sharp against Udinese and evidently, fatigue is a thing even when you play just once a week. There are two ways out of it. He can freshen up the squad and rotate a little more (his bench included Alessandro Buongiorno, Rafa Marín, Philip Billing, Billy Gilmour, Gio Simeone, Giacomo Raspadori and Noah Okafor: not exactly the Galacticos, but better than the starters of two-thirds of Serie A clubs) -- the options are there, despite the pleas of poverty you sometimes here. Or you find a different tactical solution, one that is less physically taxing, based more on quality and less on athleticism. That's an option too and if there's a guy with a vast tactical toolbox -- and the clout to implement it -- it's Conte.
2. A bitter Borussia Dortmund debut for Niko Kovac, but at least there was some fight: You can't really put too much of a positive spin on a home defeat and, against a tired Stuttgart side, it's more than reasonable to expect more -- a lot more -- from Borussia Dortmund, especially as the injury list has mostly dried up. They conceded little, giving up an unlucky own goal and an unmarked header (hey, it's still Dortmund) for an xG of 0.34, but they were chaotic and unimaginative going forward. Kovac was brought in to fix that and, while you can find plenty fault with this group of players, the effort wasn't lacking. You get one mulligan -- this was it. Now get them into that top-four spot, which just got that much more difficult given you lost a six-pointer to a direct opponent for the Champions League spaces.
Julien Laurens and Gab Marcotti were not impressed with Tottenham or Ange Postecoglou following their 2-1 defeat to Aston Villa in the FA Cup.
1. Postecoglou goes on the warpath as Tottenham are dumped from FA Cup by Aston Villa: Fine, Ange Postecoglou has a point. He has a dozen guys out, he played a League Cup semifinal at Anfield on Thursday, he's entitled to blow his top when somebody asks him why his team isn't attacking more. "Because they're tired mate," he said after Sunday's 2-1 defeat at Aston Villa. "Do you think they can press like [we would]?" He drew a parallel with Arne Slot rotating against Plymouth and added: "How did Liverpool do today? And they just did that for one game. Do that for 2 months. Any team. Do that for 2 months in multiple competitions. I don't care about me. People will judge me. But you can't judge this group of players on what's happened." He's right, and he might have added that with a better finish from an exhausted Son Heung-Min, this game could have taken a very different turn. But I think he's kind of missing the point. Fans aren't angry with the players and, while some are annoyed with him, the bulk of the anger is with the club and chairman Daniel Levy and the fact that after nearly a quarter-century in charge, he has delivered just one League Cup.
Williamson hails 'outstanding' Conway after record partnership
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"It was great to be out there and be a part of some important partnerships," Williamson said after the game. "Devon Conway was outstanding - he was at his best and got us off to a great start. We were able to put that partnership together that took us a long way into that chase. That was really valuable."
But after a steady opening partnership, Conway and Williamson put together a huge stand, taking advantage of some inexperienced South African bowling and a true pitch that only appeared to get better as the day aged. Williamson looked in the form of his life, and appeared to take no risks while continuing to score at a strike rate close to 140. He brought up his century in 72 balls, the second fastest ODI hundred he has scored. The two put on 187 runs off 154 balls for the second wicket, and by the time Conway sliced one to a fielder, the contest was effectively done and dusted.
"The pitch was definitely a better surface [to bat] today," he said. "For whatever reason, I'm not sure. That's part of some of the good learnings, really - different times of the day going into the evening. It came onto the bat quite nicely and it still took a little bit of turn. So it's quite interesting; it's the sort of wicket where if you're able to get breakthroughs, you can apply some pressure. But it was nice we were able to build those partnerships and break the back of the chase. For me, it's about trying to assess conditions and do the best job I can and then be a part of partnerships for the team in whatever role it is. It was tough going - kept quite low in that day time innings. But it did change a bit."
Williamson understands the value of getting some extra game time in with the Champions Trophy around the corner, but also has the experience of not reading too much into it. This game was played during the day - a timeslot that will not be in play for any game during the Champions Trophy. However, just as New Zealand were ruthless in defence of a total against Pakistan, they were equally clinical at hunting one down today.
"It helps us to try and get as familiar as you can with our roles and how we operate as a unit and also the conditions."
Kane Williamson
"Obviously playing one day cricket here when other teams haven't probably been playing a huge amount of one day cricket is nice," Williamson added. "It helps us to try and get as familiar as you can with our roles and how we operate as a unit and also the conditions. Having said that, we know that each game is a match in isolation. When you come to a tournament like Champions Trophy, the top eight teams on their day giving the conditions, anyone can beat anybody, so a really competitive tournament. That is exciting, I think, and a great prospect for viewers as well."
Today, though, a sizeable crowd, considering it was a weekday with two neutral teams, were not thinking of the Champions Trophy. Williamson was the man they had come to see, and as he pointed out, it was his side they seemed to support. And, as he has proved to fans on the other side of the world time and again, he showed Pakistan supporters what it felt to throw their support behind a cricketer who never seems to let anyone down.
"It was great to see a crowd here today," Williamson said. "Pakistan not a part of this match, but heard a few chants for the Kiwis which was nice as well. I suppose we have been here fairly often in recent years and that was great. So it's nice to get a bit of a crowd along to this match and certainly had an outstanding atmosphere in the first one and that was great to be a part of as well."
Danyal Rasool is ESPNcricinfo's Pakistan correspondent. @Danny61000
Torrent Group set to buy majority stake in Gujarat Titans
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Torrent Group, an Indian business conglomerate with headquarters in Ahmedabad, is set to buy a majority stake in 2022 IPL champions Gujarat Titans (GT). ESPNcricinfo has learned that Torrent will buy a 67% stake in GT from CVC Capital Partners (Irelia Company Pte Ltd), who bought the franchise in 2021.
At the moment, further details, including the valuation of the stake divested by CVC, could not be confirmed. It is understood the IPL is processing the paperwork before a final nod is given by the league's governing council. Subject to the final approval, GT's new owners could likely be involved from the 2025 season, which starts on March 21.
CVC, a global private equity fund, had paid INR 5625 crore (US$ 750 million approx.) in 2021 to buy GT, who won the IPL in their first season (2022), made the final the following year (2023) and finished eighth in 2024. GT's home base is the Narendra Modi Stadium, the world's largest cricket stadium with a capacity of over 100,000.
The bidders then could bid for six cities, which included Indore, Dharamsala, Guwahati and Cuttack along with Ahmedabad and Lucknow, the eventual winners. Torrent bid for Ahmedabad (INR 4653 cr) and Lucknow (INR 4356 cr). In 2023, Torrent bid unsuccessfully for three of the ten cities put up for bidding by the BCCI to start the five-team WPL.
As per the company's website, Torrent Group has a valuation of about INR 41,000 crore and is among one of the top multinational companies in India, spearheaded by two prominent subsidiaries: Torrent Power and Torrent Pharma. It is understood that Jinal Mehta, the son of the Torrent Group chairman emeritus Sudhir Mehta, will oversee the IPL investment.
GT are led by India batter Shubman Gill and also have Afghanistan spinner Rashid Khan, England white-ball captain Jos Buttler and India fast bowler Mohammed Siraj among others.
Irving to replace injured teammate AD as All-Star
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Dallas Mavericks guard Kyrie Irving has been added to the NBA's All-Star roster as an injury replacement for his new teammate Anthony Davis.
NBA commissioner Adam Silver made the selection; he also chose Hawks star Trae Young to replace injured Bucks star Giannis Antetokounmpo earlier Monday.
Irving, 32, makes his ninth All-Star team after averaging 24.1 points and 4.8 assists while shooting 47.5% from the field and 40.7% from 3-point range in 42 games.
Davis, who joined Irving on the Mavs in the trade last week that sent Luka Doncic to the Los Angeles Lakers, is out with a left adductor strain. He's expected to miss multiple weeks, sources told ESPN. Irving will replace Davis on Team Shaq, the eight-man squad drafted last week by TNT analyst Shaquille O'Neal.
The All-Star Game will take place on Sunday, Feb. 16 at Chase Center in San Francisco. The new four-team, three-game tournament will air at 8 p.m. ET.
KD shrugs off trade talk: 'Part of the business'
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PHOENIX -- Kevin Durant is still with the Phoenix Suns and ready to get back on the court after last week's eventful trade deadline full of speculation that the franchise was open to dealing the 15-time All-Star.
"It's just part of the business," Durant told reporters at practice Monday. "Everybody's bought and sold in this league. Anybody can be up for auction, so I understand that. It's just about getting back on the court and trying to go out and play the game that I love.
"It's part of the business though -- we've all got to understand that."
The Suns ended up having a relatively quiet trade deadline, dealing disgruntled center Jusuf Nurkic to the Charlotte Hornets but keeping the rest of their core intact. The team's big three of Durant, Devin Booker and Bradley Beal is still together as the franchise tries to gain ground in the standings.
Phoenix entered Monday night with a 26-26 record and tied with the Sacramento Kings for ninth place in the Western Conference.
Durant and Beal were the subject of rampant trade rumors before last week's deadline. Phoenix general manager James Jones didn't offer many clues to how seriously he considered moving either player when asked Friday.
"It always gets noisy when you're not winning," Jones said. "And we're not winning."
The 36-year-old Durant has sat out the past three games because of a sprained ankle but hopes to return for Tuesday's game against the Memphis Grizzlies. The Suns are just 2-11 this season when the 6-foot-11 forward is out of the lineup.
Durant is still one of the game's elite scorers, averaging nearly 26.9 points on 52.4% shooting. The veteran is under contract with the Suns next season and said his goal has always been to play out his deal.
"It's not a bad thing that people around the league want me to play for them," Durant said. "It's not a bad thing my organization here is fighting off people to keep me on the team or even dangle me in a trade.
"It's part of being in high demand."
Doncic upgraded to probable for game vs. Jazz
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Los Angeles Lakers superstar Luka Doncic was upgraded from questionable to probable for Monday night's home game against the Utah Jazz.
Doncic's much-anticipated debut since last week's stunning trade has been delayed as he rehabs from a left calf strain. Doncic last played on Dec. 25 and had been targeting a return before the All-Star break.
The Lakers, who are taking a five-game winning streak into the matchup with Utah, will be giving away Doncic's No. 77 jerseys at the arena. Doncic also announced Monday that his foundation will be donating $500,000 to help recovery efforts from the wildfires that ravaged L.A. last month.
A message from @luka7doncic to Los Angeles. pic.twitter.com/fhoa30nIjY
Luka Dončić Foundation (@LD77Foundation) February 10, 2025
Dalton Knecht, whom the Lakers sent to Charlotte as part of the Mark Williams trade that has since been rescinded, was also upgraded to probable for Monday night. Cam Reddish, who was also part of that trade, is listed as out due to personal reasons.
LeBron James is listed as probable with a left forearm strain.
Panel rules for Lore, A-Rod in Timberwolves sale
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In a split decision announced Monday, a three-person arbitration panel has sided with prospective Minnesota Timberwolves and Lynx owners Marc Lore and Alex Rodriguez in a sales contract dispute against current owner Glen Taylor, allowing them to continue the process to become the majority ownership group.
The ruling sets up a high-stakes vote among fellow NBA owners to decide control of the franchise. The board of governors vote is expected to be timed with the close of sale and final payments.
The arbitrators determined Taylor had violated terms of the sales agreement when he announced last March 28 that Lore and Rodriguez had missed a deadline for a $600 million payment that would've secured an 80% majority control of the teams. Taylor had agreed to sell to Lore and Rodriguez in 2021 for a $1.5 billion valuation with the purchase coming in three steps.
Lore and Rodriguez disputed Taylor's interpretation of the contract and believed they had the right to a 90-day extension, and the matter went to arbitration, which took place in a weeklong hearing in November. The investors had already bought about 36% of the team for more than $500 million in two previous transactions.
In documents since submitted to the NBA league office, Lore and Rodriguez showed they have raised an additional $950 million and placed it in an escrow account and are ready to finish the purchase and operate the teams, sources told ESPN. To help fund the deal, they have added billionaire former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg and former Google CEO Eric Schmidt as partners, among others.
However, no team can change hands until at least 23 of the 30 current governors approve a transfer. Usually a formality, this vital step would require the NBA's board of governors to weigh the unprecedented question of whether to approve a sale if the incumbent owner is against it.
Knowing this showdown was possibly coming, Lore and Rodriguez have met with dozens of team owners in recent months in an attempt to win support in the event of a vote, sources told ESPN. Taylor, meanwhile, has been a majority owner since 1994, has a long-standing relationship with NBA commissioner Adam Silver and is a past chairman of the board of governors.
"We are extremely pleased with today's decision," Lore and Rodriguez said in a statement. "We look forward to working with the NBA to complete the approval process and close this transaction so that we can turn our attention to winning championships in Minnesota for our incredible fans and the Twin Cities community."
In his statement, Taylor did not make it clear whether he would continue to fight a sale.
"[Wife] Becky and I were disappointed by this 2-1 decision by the panel," Taylor said. "We will review this decision thoroughly prior to making any further comment."
The $1.5 billion price that Taylor agreed to sell the team for in 2021 would now be considered below market value. Four teams have changed controlling shares and reset the market since then.
In 2023, the Phoenix Suns sold for $4 billion, and in 2024 the Dallas Mavericks sold for $3.5 billion. Closer in market size to the Wolves, the Charlotte Hornets sold in 2023 for $3 billion, and a co-controlling share of the Milwaukee Bucks sold in 2023 for a $3.5 billion valuation.
Taylor has twice before put the Wolves up for sale only to change his mind and withdraw them from the market. When announcing he was pulling his team off the market last year, Taylor didn't cite the valuation changes but instead the positive direction of the team.
"We've got a really good team, we've got a lot of good things going for us, I enjoy it and I'm healthy enough to do this," Taylor told The Associated Press. "I don't need the money, so I think I'll just keep running it and enjoy it."
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CINCINNATI -- The Cincinnati Reds will wear a No. 14 patch on the sleeve of their jersey this season to honor hometown star and career hits leader Pete Rose, the team announced Monday.
The Reds posted a photo of the patch on X with the message "14 on our side all season" and a heart emoji.
Rose, who died in September 2024 at the age of 83, played 19 of his 24 major league seasons with the Reds. He finished his playing career in 1986 with 4,256 hits.
The player known as "Charlie Hustle" was a 17-time All-Star and member of three World Series championship teams. He was National League MVP in 1973, and he won three batting titles and two Gold Gloves.
He also was a polarizing figure. Rose was found to have wagered on baseball, which prompted Major League Baseball to banish him in 1989. In 1991, the Baseball Hall of Fame adopted a rule making people on MLB's permanently ineligible list barred from consideration for election to the Hall.