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Postecoglou: Spurs had wrong mindset in AZ loss

Published in Soccer
Friday, 07 March 2025 02:12

Tottenham Hotspur manager Ange Postecoglou said his side did not have the right mindset for their Europa League round-of-16 match at AZ Alkmaar on Thursday and was glad to leave the Netherlands with only a 1-0 deficit to overturn.

An own goal in the first half by 19-year-old midfielder Lucas Bergvall gave AZ Alkmaar a narrow win, and while Spurs enjoyed the lion's share of possession they managed just one shot on target.

Chasing a first trophy since winning the Carabao Cup in 2008, the Europa League is Spurs' only hope of winning silverware this season. They are 13th in the Premier League and have been knocked out the FA Cup and League Cup.

"I don't think it's a matter of effort or attitude. I don't think it is going out there and not trying, but like I said we didn't really come to grips and have the right mindset to tackle an away fixture in Europe," Postecoglou said.

"It is always tough and we obviously conceded the goal, which was a disappointing set of events. But even after that we didn't really settle down into the game at all.

"You are going to face some pressure when you play away from home in Europe and weather the storm and get to grips with it, but we never really did so that was a disappointment.

"It's only 1-0 so I guess that's a positive in that we didn't let the game get away from us."

Striker Dominic Solanke was forced to come off with an injury in added time and Postecoglou was unsure of his availability for Sunday's Premier League game against Bournemouth.

"It looks like a knock but I haven't really seen it. Hopefully nothing too bad," Postecoglou said.

Nathan McSweeney would grab the opportunity to play county cricket if a chance arose as he pushes to try and win back a spot in Australia's side with one of the opening slots still to be locked in for the World Test Championship final against South Africa at Lord's in June.
McSweeney, 25, began the summer debuting as Australia's Test opener at the the start of the Border-Gavaskar series but was dropped after three Tests for Sam Konstas having run aground against Jasprit Bumrah, scoring just 72 runs in six innings.
He was taken on the tour of Sri Lanka but ran the drinks as the spare batter ahead of Konstas who was also left out and sent home to play in the Sheffield Shield with Travis Head moving up to open and Josh Inglis sliding into the middle-order.
Head will move back to No. 5 for the WTC final leaving a vacancy at the top of the order but Cameron Green's impending return as batter means Australia's selectors have a challenge in finding room for him while also finding an opener to partner Usman Khawaja.
McSweeney made a gritty 60 off 199 balls for South Australia against a Victoria attack featuring Scott Boland, who took four wickets on a green pitch at the Junction Oval on Friday. Speaking at the end of play, McSweeney was asked whether he felt like the opening spot in the WTC final was a way back into the Test team.

"I don't know," he said. "All I can do is make runs and get back to being a consistent run-scorer which is what got me the opportunity in the first place. So wherever my spot is, if the opportunity comes I'm happy to bat wherever. And I think my game is suited to that. All I can focus on now is trying to punch out some runs. Hopefully that means South Australia in a Shield final,"

He will get a second innings in this game before South Australia host Queensland in the final round of the season. That game and a possible final will be his only playing opportunities before the WTC final unless an opportunity in England presented itself.

"I'd love to get over and play some county cricket but at this stage I'm just staying in Adelaide," McSweeney said. "I haven't looked too much past the next couple of weeks for us. It's massive for South Australia. So hopefully we can nail the end of this game and the next couple of weeks leading into hopefully a Shield final. But post that I'd love to head overseas and keep working on my game."

McSweeney's 60 was a welcome return to some run-scoring form. It was just his third first-class innings since being dropped from the Test side in mid-December having scored 20 and 7 in South Australia's last game against Tasmania. But he had also registered scores of 28, 8 and 7 in South Australia's final three 50-over games in the Dean Jones Trophy, which they won in emphatic style thanks in part to his role with the ball in the final.

"It was nice to spend some time middle," McSweeney said. "It's been a little bit of a stop start season for me, I guess, and I haven't played heaps of cricket. Not the score I would have liked. But it's nice to spend some time out there and face plenty of balls and hopefully I can get make use of that in the second innings and really come out and hopefully score a bit more freely."

The selectors were pleased with what he showed technically and temperamentally in his first three Test matches but there were concerns over his scoring limitations, which ultimately was the reason why they opted to omit him. His innings at the Junction Oval perfectly incapsulated both the positives and the negatives of his game.

He showed outstanding defensive skill and decision-making to withstand Test-quality spells from Boland but struggled to rotate the strike, particularly in the evening session on day one when he was 9 off 52 balls and the morning session on day two. He got busier and more proactive as the innings wore on before nicking a good delivery from Victoria seamer Fergus O'Neill who also probed with unerring accuracy all innings to claim five wickets.

McSweeney's brief taste of Test cricket has shown him that he needs to keep trusting the foundations of his game but add some different scoring options.

"A little bit of both," McSweeney said. "I think I know a method that works in Shield cricket for me, but you're also trying to keep learning, keep getting better. And from my experiences in Test cricket, there's definitely some learnings to try and add and scenarios where I can tinker with my game to hopefully be better for it.

"I think it's also important to know what worked for me leading into that and what makes me a good player. So it's been an enjoyable last couple of months, a challenging one, no doubt, but I definitely like to think I'm better for it."

McSweeney confirmed that in-form wicketkeeper-batter Alex Carey would return to South Australia's line-up for the Shield final if they get there but confirmed that Head would be unavailable due to IPL duties.

Tearful Kyrgios retires injured in Indian Wells

Published in Tennis
Thursday, 06 March 2025 23:18

A tearful Nick Kyrgios was forced to retire from his first-round Indian Wells match with a wrist injury as his tennis return suffered another setback.

The Australian, playing his first match since January's Australian Open, trailed Botic van de Zandschulp 7-6 (9-7) 3-0 before ending the match early.

Kyrgios became visibly upset when speaking to the trainer about his right wrist, which he had surgery on in September 2023.

The 29-year-old also struggled with knee and foot injuries over an 18-month period before making his return at the start of the year.

"No-one in the sport has had a wrist reconstruction and tried to play after that," Kyrgios said.

"There's been players that have had wrist surgeries and nowhere near as bad as what I had.

"It's all an experiment at this point. I was told I was arguably maybe not ever playing tennis again.

"I feel I'm like right there, I feel like I can compete."

Raducanu stalking incident 'not a security failure'

Published in Tennis
Thursday, 06 March 2025 23:40

Archer also addressed the suspension of Stefano Vukov, the former coach of 2022 Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina.

The Czech has been banned for an undisclosed period by the WTA following an independent investigation into his behaviour towards the player.

Vukov, who is currently unable to access accredited areas at tournaments, has denied any wrongdoing.

Rybakina has said she was never mistreated by the Croat and would like him to be able to resume full coaching duties.

"We are able to offer support and advice to Elena," Archer said.

"Our responsibility is to Elena as well as to the hundreds of other WTA players and it's really important that we keep our environment safe.

"This is the workplace of my staff, our athletes and it is a place where fans come to enjoy our sport.

"That is what is at the forefront of my mind - we have to keep our environment safe.

"In doing so we are certainly providing resources to the affected individuals within our community, like Elena in this case, to the extent that's necessary and desired."

Baxter questions viability of Championship clubs in cup

Published in Rugby
Friday, 07 March 2025 00:13

Exeter Chiefs boss Rob Baxter says a Premiership Rugby Cup made up solely of top-flight teams would be better commercially for the country's leading clubs.

Reports have cast doubt on the future participation of Championship clubs in the competition, which plays its semi-finals this weekend.

Second tier sides have been part of the event for two seasons.

Reigning Championship champions Ealing reached the semi-finals last year and face Exeter at Sandy Park on Saturday for a place in the final.

Two Premiership and two Championship sides faced each other home and away in each pool this season - with second-tier sides often having their biggest gates against their Premiership opponents.

But Baxter says Exeter's lowest crowds this season have been in the cup - where they faced Gloucester, Hartpury and Cornish Pirates in the pool stage.

"The game is needing to develop more money not less, and if the key element to that at the moment is revenue through the gate, through people coming and buying tickets, then ultimately that's the one Premiership clubs have to look at," he told BBC Sport.

"I don't need to explain my position on playing Championship rugby, I captained Exeter Chiefs in the Championship for eight years.

"For me, all these grounds we've been going to I've played numerous times at with Exeter, I enjoyed that time doing that, you don't need me to champion Championship clubs, I've done enough of that.

"But that is, at this stage, not the point. The point is making these competitions commercially viable and I think that's what's ruling the way."

The 'special' duel at the heart of Ireland v France

Published in Rugby
Thursday, 06 March 2025 22:40

Peruse Ireland and France's line-ups for Saturday's potential Six Nations title decider and you'll find no shortage of instantly compelling head-to-head battles.

Caelan Doris v Gregory Alldritt pits two of the world's best number eights against one another, Andrew Porter v Uini Atonio will be an engrossing scrum-time tussle, while powerhouse Irish centre Bundee Aki will meet his match in Yoram Moefana.

But naturally, most eyes are drawn to the battle of the scrum-halves.

In Antoine Dupont, France have a generational talent. A world player of the year in both the 15s and sevens codes, an Olympic gold medallist and a poster boy for his sport, Dupont has gleefully exhausted superlatives in recent years.

His otherworldly gifts even moved his Toulouse team-mates to refer to him as 'the Martian', Emmanuel Meafou revealed last year.

Dupont's worthy adversary on Saturday is Jamison Gibson-Park. 'Jamo' to his team-mates, he is Ireland's unflappable metronome and the frontrunner to wear nine for the British and Irish Lions in Australia this summer.

"Yeah, it will be interesting," said Ireland interim head coach Simon Easterby.

"Two fabulous players at the peak of their game. There are a number of individual battles across the teams, but that one will be pretty special."

This will not be the first time Gibson-Park and Dupont have crossed paths, of course. They have twice met in the Champions Cup, including last year's final when Dupont's Toulouse beat Gibson-Park's Leinster in extra time.

They have met three times in the Six Nations, although not since 2022 (Gibson-Park was injured in 2023 while Dupont skipped last year's championship).

This time, the stakes are suitably sky-high.

Oilers pick up Sharks' Walman for 1st-round pick

Published in Hockey
Friday, 07 March 2025 00:16

The Edmonton Oilers added defenseman Jake Walman to their blueline in a deal with the San Jose Sharks ahead of Friday's NHL trade deadline.

The Sharks get AHL forward Carl Berglund and a conditional 2026 first-round draft pick in the deal with Edmonton.

The pick is top-12 protected. If the selection is in the top 12, Edmonton might choose to transfer its 2027 first-round selection to San Jose instead. Should the Oilers do so before the 2026 NHL trade deadline, their 2026 first-round selection will transfer to San Jose, unconditionally.

Walman is having the most productive season of his six-year NHL career. The defenseman has 6 goals and 26 assists in 50 games for the Sharks, skating to only a minus-1 on the NHL's worst defensive team. He skated a career-high 23 minutes, 11 seconds per game.

Walman is signed through the 2025-26 season with a $3.4 million cap hit.

The trade was a stellar bit of asset management by Sharks general manager Mike Grier. He acquired Walman and a second-round pick from the Detroit Red Wings in 2024 for yet to be defined "future considerations." He has now turned Walman into a first-round pick.

Berglund, a UMass-Lowell product, has played with Bakersfield for the past three seasons. He has 12 points in 45 games this season.

The Sharks have been busy ahead of the deadline, trading goalie Vitek Vanecek and forward Nico Sturm to the Florida Panthers in separate transactions.

The Oilers made a splash this week when they acquired center Trent Frederic from the Boston Bruins, adding another key role player to a team trying to make the Stanley Cup Final for a second straight season.

Victoria 285 & 46 for 0 (Kellaway 23*, Harris 17*) lead South Australia 283 (McSweeney 60, O'Neill 5-51, Boland 4-53) by 48 runs

Nathan McSweeney showcased why he remains firmly in Test calculations with a gritty half-century in the face of some phenomenal seam bowling from Scott Boland and Fergus O'Neill who took nine wickets between them to leave Victoria and South Australia locked in a tight arm wrestle after two days at the Junction Oval.

O'Neill took his fifth career five-wicket haul to maintain his outstanding Sheffield Shield record, while Boland claimed 4 for 53 with spells that were every bit the equal of the best he has shown at Test level, to bowl South Australia out for 283 and give Victoria a narrow two-run first innings lead. That advantage swelled to 48 as Campbell Kellaway and Marcus Harris batted impressively in the final hour of the day.

Victory is crucial for Victoria if they are to maintain a realistic chance of making the Shield final.

Their lead would have been more without McSweeney's 199-ball 60 in very challenging batting conditions. He only struck six boundaries and had to defend and leave stoutly in the face of some high-quality bowling from O'Neill and Boland who delivered 38.4 of the 67.4 overs he was out there for.

He began the day on 9 off 52 balls and was unable to gain any fluency early after Jason Sangha was adjudged lbw not offering a shot to O'Neill for 19.

Jake Lehmann helped break the shackles with a breezy 40 off 43 balls that included two thunderous drives down the ground. O'Neill switched ends to break the 54-run stand, nipping one back from around the wicket to pin Lehmann lbw.

McSweeney started to flow from there despite the loss of Liam Scott, who was also trapped plumb infront by an excellent Xavier Crone yorker. Scott's front foot slid from under him to leave him on all fours as the finger was raised.

McSweeney kept accumulating with the help of Harry Nielsen. But O'Neill's accuracy was unrelenting. McSweeney eventually nicked a good length delivery on off stump to Blake Macdonald at slip who held the low chance.

Nielsen and Ben Manenti then counterattacked against the old ball as Boland and O'Neill rested before the new one was due. The pair added 61 for the seventh wicket before Boland returned to remove them both in quick succession.

Manenti flashed a drive against the second new ball and nicked to Macdonald at first slip. Boland then nipped one back through Nielsen's gate from around the wicket to splay off stump in almost identical fashion to Conor McInerney's dismissal on the first evening. But Nielsen's 45 was vital in the context of the match.

Brendan Doggett and Henry Thornton combined to frustrate Victoria, adding 34 for the ninth wicket before O'Neill switched ends again to take the final two wickets. He took a sharp return catch to remove Doggett for 19 before clean bowling Jordan Buckingham.

It set up a tricky 16-over period in the evening session for Kellaway and Harris to negotiate. But the pair left and defended well against the new ball while rotating the strike impressively to give Victoria the chance to build a significant lead on day three.

If Henry cannot play, New Zealand have right-arm seamer Jacob Duffy in their squad. Duffy has not played any of New Zealand's four matches in the tournament, but did have an outing against Pakistan in the pre-tournament tri-series that had been played there. He took 1 for 48 in seven overs in that game.

Neser's six-wicket burst leaves Queensland in command

Published in Cricket
Friday, 07 March 2025 00:00

Tasmania 161 (Weatherald 55, Neser 6-37) and 70 for 1 trail Queensland 425 for 9 dec (Khawaja 127, Hearne 74) by 194 runs

Michael Neser, the forgotten man of the Australian Test pace attack, reminded everyone of his capabilities at Tasmania's expense.

He ripped through the home team's top order in their Sheffield Shield match on Friday, taking the first six wickets of the Tasmania first innings in a devastating nine-over spell after lunch - all the wickets coming in the space of 39 balls.

Replying to Queensland's first innings of 425 for 9 declared, Tasmania collapsed after lunch from 86 without loss and were dismissed for 161 at Bellerive Oval. Tasmania followed on and were still 194 runs behind with two days left.

While Queensland and Tasmania started this penultimate round as the bottom two teams, a big win would keep one of them in the hunt to make the final against SA.

Following Usman Khawaja's century on Thursday, Neser's command performance confirmed Queensland have the game by the throat.

He snared 6 for 37 from 15 overs. It is his third Shield game back after a hamstring injury in November while playing for Australia A cruelled his hopes of a Test return this summer.

The 34-year-old has played only two Tests, most recently against the West Indies in late 2022. Neser has had to bide his time, stuck in Australia's pace-bowling queue behind Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Scott Boland.

Neser bowled Weatherald for a top score of 55 and took a wicket in each of his next three overs. When he trapped Radhakrishnan lbw for 39 and bowled Beau Webster, Tasmania were 122 for 6 and Queensland were in the box seat.

Mark Steketee had Radhakrishnan caught behind for 24 late on day two, with Weatherald unbeaten on 39.

Gabe Bell and Webster took three wickets apiece in Queensland's first innings.

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