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Latham and Young centuries hand New Zealand thumping victory

Published in Cricket
Wednesday, 19 February 2025 09:49

New Zealand 320 for 5 (Latham 118*, Young 107, Phillips 61, Naseem 2-63) beat Pakistan260 (Khushdil 69, Babar 64, O'Rourke 3-47, Santner 3-66) by 60 runs

Pakistan had to wait for nearly three decades for a global tournament to return to their country, but New Zealand spoiled their party on the opening day of the Champions Trophy, handing the co-hosts a 60-run loss in Karachi. In a short, sharp tournament, where each team plays just three group-stage games, a defeat like this might jeopardise Pakistan's chances of making the semi-finals. Will Young and Tom Latham were the architects of their team's victory, both batters scoring outstanding hundreds to set up the dominance that followed but there was also a little bit of luck.
Two balls into the game, Fakhar Zaman suffered an injury while chasing a cover drive from Young and was forced off the field for large parts of the first innings. As result of the time spent off the field, Fakhar, whose big hitting is exactly what was necessary for a big chase, could not open the batting in their pursuit of 321. And when he came out to bat at No. 4 - Pakistan were 22 for 2 in ten overs at the time - he was visibly hampered while running between the wickets. New Zealand's offspinners, Michael Bracewell and Glenn Phillips, kept hiding the ball away from his reach and made life even more difficult for him. Fakhar's tortured stay eventually ended when Bracewell bowled him with a non-turner for 24 off 41 balls.

Just like Fakhar, most of the Pakistan batters failed to get out first gear, including Babar Azam who needed 81 balls for his fifty. New Zealand's attack was depleted by the injuries to Lockie Ferguson and Ben Sears, but their spinners made up for that on a pitch that offered turn and variable bounce. The spinners were so good that New Zealand didn't need Nathan Smith, their third seamer, until the 31st over. By then Pakistan's asking rate had almost touched ten an over.

New Zealand were also depleted by the injury-enforced absence of Rachin Ravindra, but Young and Latham scored tone-setting hundreds before Glenn Phillips provided an electric finish. In all, New Zealand plundered 113 off their last ten overs to finish with 320.

That total, however, had looked so far away when New Zealand were reduced to 40 for 2 in the ninth over and then 73 for 3 in the 17th over. That's when Young got together with Latham to repair the early damage and then boss the middle overs.

Young has spent much of his international career on the fringes. He might not have played this game had Ravindra been fit and despite his maiden international hundred away from home, he might make way for Ravindra once the allrounder recovers. In Kane Williamson's absence, Young had emerged as the Player of the Series in New Zealand's historic 3-0 sweep of India in India but was left out for Williamson in New Zealand's very next Test against England at home. However, whenever Young gets an opportunity, he's ready to take it, like he demonstrated once again on Wednesday.
After Devon Conway was undone by a carrom ball from mystery spinner Abrar Ahmed for 10 and Williamson fell for his first single-digit ODI score in six years, in the next over, Young reined himself in and saw off challenging spells from Abrar and Naseem Shah.

Young brought up his third fifty-plus score in nine innings in Pakistan and converted it into a century. He got there in 107 balls in the 35th over, with Ravindra warmly applauding him from the dressing room.

As for Latham, he rattled off his own hundred off 95 balls and remained unbeaten on 118 off 104 balls. It capped a remarkable turnaround for him after he had come into the tri-series final on the back of three ducks, stretching back to the Auckland ODI against Sri Lanka in January. After being assisted by multiple reprieves on his way to 56 in the tri-series final against Pakistan, Latham reminded the world of his full range. He played a variety of sweeps, including the reverse, off a variety of lengths to disrupt Pakistan's spinners. Fifty-two of his 118 runs came square or behind square on the leg side.

After Young holed out for 107, Latham forged 125-run partnership with Phillips for the fifth wicket off just 74 balls. Having been on 10 off 18 balls, Phillips surged to his fifty off his next 16 balls. He had launched Shaheen for back-to-back sixes and then when he shaped to ramp Haris Rauf over short third, he ended up toe-ending it to the fielder for 61 off 39.

Phillips wasn't done though. He produced the play of the day when he leapt to his left from point, stuck out one hand above his head and held onto a screamer to dismiss Mohammad Rizwan for 3 off 14 balls on the last ball of the first powerplay. Will O'Rourke had already dismissed Saud Shakeel, the makeshift opener in place of Fakhar, for 6 in the fourth over. Matt Henry, who had missed the tri-series final with a knee niggle, also kept it tight in the first powerplay, which yielded Pakistan only 22 for 2.
It was Pakistan's lowest score in the first ten overs since March 2019 and third lowest in the history of the Champions Trophy. There would be no way back for them, despite late blows from Khushdil Shah, who hit 69 off 49 balls, and the lower order. Pakistan were ultimately bowled out for 260 in the 48th over.

In his first match at a global event as New Zealand captain, Santner came away with three wickets though he took some tap at the end. For the third time in a space of two weeks, New Zealand put Pakistan away with ruthless efficiency and embellished their status as title contenders.

Sutherland, Kapp hold nerve to keep sloppy Warriorz winless

Published in Cricket
Wednesday, 19 February 2025 10:21

Delhi Capitals 167 for 3 (Lanning 69, Sutherland 41*) beat UP Warriorz 166 for 7 (Navgire 51, Sehrawat 37, Henry 33*, Sutherland 2-26) by seven wickets

The Delhi Capitals middle order stepped up for the first time in this WPL and didn't squander the blazing start provided by their prolific opening pair of Shafali Verma and Meg Lanning to consign UP Warriorz to their second straight loss. Capitals' seven-wicket win ended the Vadodara leg of the tournament with the chasing team winning all six games, before the action moves to Bengaluru, and then Lucknow and Mumbai.
It was not all smooth and easy for Capitals though. Once Lanning fell for 69, they needed a tricky 48 off 32 on a pitch that was keeping low. The ever-dependable Marizanne Kapp tilted the game in their favour with consecutive fours off Sophie Ecclestone when the equation read 31 off 17 and Annabel Sutherland all but sealed the chase in the last over - off which they needed 11 - by handing similar treatment to Grace Harris. This was also the highest total chased by Capitals in WPL.
Warriorz's fielding lapses of three dropped chances and misfields in the last over cost them the game, after their own middle order was unable to capitalise on the rapid start given by Kiran Navgire's 51 off 27.

Navgire's big hits against the big names

Navgire put all the doubts around Warriorz's inexperienced top order to bed by taking on the big names in Captilas' attack. She got going from ball one, smacking Kapp for back-to-back fours with a pull and straight loft. In the next over she repeated the act by making room against Shikha Pandey's inswingers with glorious drives. She upped the level further when she walloped Kapp and Jess Jonassen for two sixes and a one-bounce four all within the space of three balls to race to 35 off 13. With a straight six off Pandey at the start of the fifth over, Navgire brought up Warriorz's fastest team fifty, off 25 balls, and then brought up her own fifty off 24 balls, the joint-fastest by a Warriorz batter.

Sutherland sends Warriorz 'scrambling'

After starting this WPL with a three-for last week, Sutherland showed her bowling smarts again by sending down short balls with scrambled seams and the bigger boundary on the leg side. Both Vrinda Dinesh and Navgire couldn't clear the rope and Warriorz went from 66 for 0 to 73 for 2.

The Capitals spinners stepped up from the other end. Jonassen fired one outside off to have Tahlia McGrath stumped and Deepti Sharma suffered the same fate when she couldn't connect against the drift and turn of offspinner Minnu Mani. In a matter of 23 balls, Warriotz had lost 4 for 16 that eventually cost them the match.

Henry shines on WPL debut

Warriorz were headed towards more misery when Harris miscued an offcutter for 12 and they were reeling at 118 for 5. But with five overs to go, it was WPL debutant Chinelle Henry who struck the big hits as Shweta Sehrawat also showed her hitting skills with 37 off 33. Henry, who had scored 61 in her last game at the same ground for West Indies, lifted Warriorz from 128 to 150 single-handedly by smashing Pandey all around the park for three sixes and a four in four balls for a 23-run 17th over. Capitals, however, bounced back to concede just 16 runs in the last three as Jonassen varied her pace and Arundhati Reddy and Kapp took the pace off.

Lanning and Shafali pepper the boundaries, again

That Lanning and Shafali brought up their second fifty stand in three games was nothing new in the WPL, but this time it was with Lanning looking far more confident. Following two scratchy innings, she led her team for nearly three-fourths of the chase with a solid 69 off 49 after Shafali's 26 off 16 deflated UPW in the powerplay. Shafali punished Kranti Goud in the first over, Lanning dabbed Sophie Ecclestone for two fours in the second, they went after Rajeshwari Gayakwad and Goud together in the third and fifth, and with three fours off Henry's two overs, Capitals had 59 in the powerplay and the batting pair had their tenth 50-plus opening stand in WPL, the most by a distance.

Sutherland, Kapp see Capitals home after a stutter

Warriorz put down their first chance when Henry dropped Shafali on 25 at deep midwicket although it didn't cost them much because the batter pulled again to Henry four balls later on 26. It became two wickets in five balls when Jemimah Rodrigues paddled to short fine leg for her third duck in WPL. Once the wickets slowed things down briefly, Lanning's nifty footwork fetched her three fours in two overs to pull things back while a steady Sutherland kept going at run a ball.

Once Ecclestone and Harris sent down two boundary-less overs to bring the equation from 57 off 42 to 47 off 30 along with the wicket of Lanning, Warriorz were clawing back in the game. But Eccelstone put down a sitter of Sutherland and Kapp reeled off boundaries with placement and power to bring Capitals back and she also got a life in the penultimate over.

With 11 needed from six, Warriorz conceded two fours that could have been stopped in the outfield and McGrath failed to collect the ball at the bowler's end from mid-on which could have led to a run-out but turned out to be the winning run.

Vishal Dikshit is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo

Glenn Phillips finds secret to his success

Published in Cricket
Wednesday, 19 February 2025 12:21
Since landing in Pakistan a couple of weeks ago, Glenn Phillips has played four ODIs, scored 215 runs off 162 balls, and been dismissed only once. That dismissal came today, in New Zealand's Champions Trophy opener against the hosts, but not before Phillips has thumped 61 from 39 to take his side well past 300 on a tricky pitch where run-scoring was hard especially early on.

What's his secret? "I'm just really clear at the moment, I'm seeing the ball really well and I guess being still at the point of contact and I think that goes a long way in being able to be a hitter," Phillips said after New Zealand's 60-run win in Karachi. "I haven't always got it right in the past, but I've got a little bit of a feel for it for the moment."

He had scores of 106 not out, 28 not out and 20 not out in the preceding tri-series against Pakistan and South Africa that served as final preparation for the Champions Trophy. Today, he came in at 191 for 4 in the 38th over, joining a well-set Tom Latham, with New Zealand's run rate at that point hovering at around five to the over. The pair went on to ransack 125 from 74, New Zealand finishing with 113 from the last 10 which was the second-most by any team in the last ten overs (41-50) of a Champions Trophy innings.

What was it that held batters back before this partnership? "I think we've played a different pitch and it's played a different way every time we've been here [Karachi].

"The pacers I think were definitely harder to play in the day when the ball was going up and down a lot. The way Matt Henry and Will O'Rourke bowled [in the chase], it was a testament to how good they did but I think during the day the way the Pakistan boys bowled, especially at the top, made it quite tough for us to get away early on.

"I think we've been really adaptable to different styles of pitches, and it was nice to see some turn out there in the evening."

New Zealand's next game is against Bangladesh in Rawalpindi on February 24, before they fly to Dubai to take on India on March 2. They will have to keep adapting for a while more to make the semi-finals and beyond, but this was a fine start in that direction.

After hat trick, Mbappé to 'define an era' at Real

Published in Breaking News
Wednesday, 19 February 2025 16:55

Kylian Mbappé said he wants to "define an era" at Real Madrid after scoring a hat trick in their 3-1 Champions League win over Manchester City on Wednesday, but insisted his season should be judged on trophies, not goals.

Mbappé opened the scoring in the fourth minute at the Santiago Bernabéu before adding a second 30 minutes later.

His third goal, after an hour, ended the tie as a contest, before Nico Gonzalez scored a late consolation for City, as Madrid progressed to the round of 16, 6-3 on aggregate.

"I didn't want to come here to play badly," Mbappé told Movistar, when asked how he'd turned his season around after a slow start. "Fulfilling my dream was one thing, but I wanted to play well, I wanted to define an era, to make history at Real Madrid.

"I had to play with personality."

Despite a trophy-filled career, Mbappé has never won the Champions League, losing in the 2020 final with Paris Saint-Germain.

"The most important thing is winning trophies," he said, when asked if he'd set a goal target for this season. "I've scored a lot of goals in my career, but let's see if it's all for nothing, because we didn't always win trophies. If I score a lot of goals and win trophies, I'll sign for that in blood."

Mbappé -- who has now scored 28 goals in all competitions this season -- added he'd favour a last-16 derby with Atlético Madrid, rather than facing the alternative, Xabi Alonso's Bayer Leverkusen, after Friday's draw.

"They're two great teams," Mbappé said. "Playing against Atlético or Leverkusen is very difficult. For me, Atlético would be better, because then we don't travel! We travel a lot. The two games will be difficult, so it's better to have a difficult game without travelling."

Mbappé's teammate Jude Bellingham, who started the move that led to Madrid's second goal, could only marvel at the France World Cup winner's dominance.

"You go into games knowing he's going to affect games," Bellingham said. "You can give him the ball. Our job behind is to try to put the front three -- and myself -- into the best positions possible. You know when Kylian gets the ball in areas that he likes, he's going to be dangerous.

"It's incredible what he's done in his career. I know he had a slow start, and he was getting used to life here, but now he's just flying and it's a pleasure to watch."

Madrid manager Carlo Ancelotti put Mbappé's name alongside Bernabeu royalty after the game, saying he could reach the heights of club legend Cristiano Ronaldo if he continues on this trajectory.

"He has the quality to reach the level of Cristiano [Ronaldo]," Ancelotti said. "He has to work. Cristiano set the bar very high. He's started his career at this club now. I think with his quality, and the excitement he has about playing here, he can reach Cristiano's level, but it won't be easy. He'll have to work at it."

Quinn Hughes won't join U.S. for 4 Nations final

Published in Breaking News
Wednesday, 19 February 2025 16:55

Defenseman Quinn Hughes will not travel to Boston to join the United States team as an injury replacement option for its 4 Nations Face-Off championship game against Canada, his agent confirmed to ESPN on Wednesday.

Sources told ESPN that the Americans will have Buffalo Sabres center Tage Thompson and New Jersey Devils defenseman Brett Pesce as injury insurance for Thursday night's 4 Nations final.

Hughes, 25, was expected to join the Americans for the 4 Nations Face-Off championship game after defenseman Charlie McAvoy was lost for the tournament. McAvoy was hospitalized Monday with an infection in his right shoulder and a significant injury to his AC joint.

Hughes initially made Team USA's roster but had to back out because of an oblique injury. He still hasn't been officially cleared by the Vancouver Canucks to return to play, having been out of action since Jan. 31. He wore a red noncontact jersey in Canucks practice Tuesday before being cleared for contact for Wednesday's practice.

Sources told ESPN that Hughes recently flew across the country back to Vancouver from the East Coast. To fly to Boston, and then to Las Vegas for the Canucks' next game Saturday, would have been a taxing travel week for him.

Tournament rules state that if a team loses two players at forward or on defense to injury or illness, it can bring on a non-roster player as an emergency injury replacement. Team Canada, for example, called up Dallas Stars defenseman Thomas Harley after it lost Vegas Golden Knights defenseman Shea Theodore to injury and Colorado Avalanche defenseman Cale Makar was unable to play against the U.S.

"The rules are the rules. I can't play unless anyone else gets injured, and I obviously don't want to see anyone get injured," Hughes said Tuesday. "If they had to do it over again, I think they'd allow teams to bring a couple extra players."

The Hughes decision ends two days of intense speculation that one of the NHL's best players could make a surprise comeback in the championship game. He won the Norris Trophy as the NHL's top defenseman last season. He has 14 goals and 59 points to lead the Canucks and is averaging more than 25:18 in ice time this season.

On Tuesday, U.S. coach Mike Sullivan said "Quinn Hughes is coming" when asked about the Americans bringing in a defenseman from outside of their roster. After Wednesday's morning skate, Sullivan acknowledged that Hughes was not yet on his way from Vancouver and said Team USA GM Bill Guerin and his assistants were continuing to work to bring him to the 4 Nations final.

U.S. players anticipated the possibility that Hughes could join them in Boston, if not appear in the game.

"I know he's been watching every game," said his brother Jack Hughes of the Devils, who plays in Team USA's top line. "I know he is definitely frustrated. He wishes he could be a part of this, and a lot of great players that were injured and couldn't play a couple of them, so he's one of them and we're missing him big-time. But I know he was really looking forward to this and coming down the road here at the Olympics and World Cup of Hockey coming up, I know he'll be really excited for those events."

Jack Hughes said the drama surrounding his brother's Team USA status has been "just a tough situation for everyone" involved.

Quinn Hughes said the initial decision not to play was "extremely hard" for him.

"I gotta thank Bill Guerin for how patient he was with me, not only 10 days ago but even last night and the last 24 hours. He understood how much I wanted to play and also what my obligations were to the Canucks. Really what it came down to, I just wasn't healthy enough where I wasn't sure it couldn't get worse," he said. "If there's a positive, I should be healthy enough to go next game against Vegas."

Team USA will face Canada for the 4 Nations championship Thursday night at TD Garden. It's a rematch of their emotional battle in Montreal on Saturday night that featured three fights in the opening nine seconds of the game and that the Americans won 3-1.

ESPN's Emily Kaplan contributed to this report.

Commissioners agree CFP seeding needs change

Published in Breaking News
Wednesday, 19 February 2025 16:55

NEW ORLEANS -- Following a joint meeting between athletic directors representing their respective conferences on Wednesday, SEC commissioner Greg Sankey and Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti said they agreed that the way teams are seeded in the 12-team College Football Playoff should change this fall.

While the voices of the two wealthiest and most powerful conferences certainly carry weight, any changes for the 2025 season have to be unanimously agreed upon by the 10 FBS commissioners and Notre Dame athletic director Pete Bevacqua.

"I'm prepared to vote for seeding change, but it has to be unanimous," Sankey said.

This past season, the four highest-ranked conference champions earned the top four seeds and a first-round bye. It was one of the most controversial facets of the format because it allowed for ninth-ranked Boise State, which won the Mountain West Conference, to earn the No. 3 seed and for 12th-ranked Arizona State to earn the No. 4 seed. Third-ranked Texas and fourth-ranked Penn State were runners-up in their respective conferences, but they couldn't be seeded higher than Nos. 5 and 6 because the top four seeds were reserved for conference champions.

A popular suggestion to change the seeding for this fall -- which Petitti said he favored -- has been to use the selection committee's ranking for the seeding while still making room for the five highest-ranked conference champions. In that model, the committee's top four teams would earn the top four seeds and first-round byes, regardless of whether they were conference champions. That would also open the door for Notre Dame, which can't win a conference title as an independent, to earn a first-round bye as a top-four seed.

"We're in favor of going to a straight seeding, where there's no difference between rankings and seeding like we had this year," Petitti said. "We're in support of that for next year."

The joint meeting between the Big Ten and SEC came less than a week before both Petitti and Sankey will meet in Dallas with their fellow FBS commissioners and Bevacqua to begin a thorough review of the inaugural 12-team playoff.

The SEC and Big Ten have the bulk of control over what the CFP will look like when the new contract with ESPN begins following the 2025 season. That power was part of the negotiation process that also included guaranteed access for conference champions and certain protections for Notre Dame.

When asked directly what their respective conferences would like the playoff to look like in 2026 and beyond, Sankey declined to get into specifics.

"That's something we owe our colleagues first," he said, referring to his fellow FBS commissioners. "I think I've been consistent in that observation."

For almost a year, multiple sources in both leagues have indicated a strong preference for expanding the field to 14 teams in 2026 and beyond. Sources in the SEC and the Big Ten have also favored a certain number of automatic playoff spots for each league, but even within each league there remain varying opinions.

Sources in the Big Ten seem more aligned in their desire for automatic qualifiers. A popular model includes four guaranteed teams each from the Big Ten and SEC, two teams each from the Big 12 and ACC, one spot for the highest-ranked Group of 5 champion, and one at-large spot, which could go to Notre Dame if the Irish were ranked high enough for inclusion.

While Sankey declined to speak directly about automatic qualifiers, he said the leagues have talked about everything regarding format and will continue to.

"This is not a new issue," Sankey said.

Petitti said that because of the way the power is divided, eventually both leagues need to come to a consensus on what they want it to look like moving forward -- but there are no restrictions on where ideas can come from moving forward.

"The process going forward if we decide to make changes contemplates that the structure of that is led by the SEC and the Big Ten, so it requires us to get to a consensus to make a meaningful recommendation, if any, to our colleagues in other leagues, and it also requires us to give them an opportunity to weigh in on whatever it is that we're thinking about," he said.

Sankey said the 2026 season is a "pretty small part" of the agenda for next week's CFP meeting in Dallas, during which much of the time is expected to focus on 2025. This week was an opportunity, though, for both conferences to start in-person discussions about the future.

"I think we both individually owe our colleagues an update on our thinking," Sankey said. "Is it alignment? I'm not going to use that word. We've got our issues to work through. Our regular-season scheduling issue ... can we compare notes? Absolutely, but I'd be cautious about using the word 'alignment' at this point."

Sankey said he still wants a stronger understanding of the selection committee's decision-making process over the past few years. He pointed to inconsistencies in the value of conference championship games and strength of schedule.

"We entrust them with that work, but there are domino effects from those selection decisions," Sankey said. "I'm not forming the agenda [for next week], but I'm identifying things that are regularly a part of our conversation."

Petitti echoed what former selection committee chair and Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel said, which was that the committee did what was required of them according to the system designed by the commissioners.

"I believe the committee was doing the work that was set in place," Petitti said. "... Overall, that system that is taking place is part of the ideas we're raising about the process for next year because that would give the committee more flexibility to do the job in a way that's much clearer for fans."

On Monday, SEC coaches met with the league's athletic directors, and the ADs met again separately on Tuesday here as part of their regularly scheduled meetings before the Big Ten joined them. Sankey said considerations for a nine-game league schedule remain a part of their consideration, but no decisions have been made yet.

"I think there's a lot of interest," Sankey said. "People change, positions change ... understanding the selection committee's perspective and how the criteria is applied is an important element."

As expected, Wednesday's meeting also included discussions about the House vs. NCAA settlement and future NCAA governance. Attorneys for both leagues were present to avoid anything that might be construed as collusion. Petitti said that while the Big Ten and SEC are leading the future format decisions of the CFP, the NCAA governance conversations have been "incredibly collaborative and involves everybody."

"People are working together," Petitti said. "... The work that's been down around the settlement among the conferences is probably unprecedented in terms of the amount of collaboration that's required to get this right."

As far as the CFP conversations, Sankey said the Big Ten and SEC have "deployed leadership in a responsible way."

"Moving forward, Tony described a methodology that was agreed to by everyone a year ago for how decisions will be made by everyone -- not dictated by us -- agreed to by everyone," he said. "We have a responsibility to use that wisely."

Wemby (illness) doubtful to face Suns in Austin

Published in Basketball
Wednesday, 19 February 2025 16:41

AUSTIN, Texas -- All-Star center Victor Wembanyama is listed as doubtful for the San Antonio Spurs' game Thursday because of an illness.

The Spurs play the Phoenix Suns at the Moody Center on the campus of the University of Texas, where Kevin Durant starred during his lone college season.

It's the first game of a back-to-back that the Spurs will play in Austin, which is about 75 miles northeast of San Antonio. It marks the third consecutive season that the Spurs will play a pair of home games in Austin, which the franchise considers part of its region.

The Spurs play the Detroit Pistons at the Moody Center on Friday.

Wembanyama, the reigning Rookie of the Year and a first-time All-Star, has averaged 24.3 points, 11.0 rebounds, 3.7 assists and a league-leading 3.8 blocks in 46 games for the 23-29 Spurs.

Gang's selfies used to solve athlete break-ins case

Published in Basketball
Wednesday, 19 February 2025 16:41

According to the FBI, burglars who recently targeted famous athletes such as Patrick Mahomes, Travis Kelce and Joe Burrow bounced from city to city using cars they'd rented with fake IDs. They ditched the cars as needed, along with the burner phones they used to coordinate with each other.

They'd hide in woods while monitoring the patterns of security guards, then break into the homes of wealthy athletes by breaking small windows or prying open sliding doors before converting jewel-encrusted watches, designer bags, gold chains and rings into cash, using loot launderers far from their victims.

Their booty had an estimated value of about $3 million, taken from some of America's best-known athletes.

But the seven Chilean burglars who targeted the star athletes over three months late last year also made some rookie mistakes that allowed law enforcement to eventually catch up, as detailed in a 20-page criminal information sheet released by the FBI on Wednesday.

In the document, the FBI lays out how the gang members were undone by allegedly posting photos for co-conspirators to see via an iCloud site.

Images obtained and released by the FBI show three of the alleged burglars, along with an unidentified fourth man, posing with watches apparently stolen from the home of Milwaukee Bucks forward Bobby Portis Jr. Largely because of the images, the men are in federal custody and were charged Tuesday with conspiracy to commit interstate transportation of stolen property. They could face up to 10 years in prison.

The Chilean gang "is known to travel throughout the United States and burglarize residences belonging to popular and well-known professional athletes" from the NFL, NBA and NHL, the complaint says. The gang "is responsible for stealing jewelry, expensive brand watches, United States currency, and other high-value merchandise."

Methods of the gang involved dividing "responsibilities to each member such as renting vehicles, obtaining hotels or short-stay rentals, acquiring fraudulent identification and contacting 'fences' (buyers) of the stolen merchandise," the FBI complaint states.

Police closed in on a New York pawn shop, allegedly connected to the ring, earlier this month.

Key to the burglars' success, up to now, has been an ability to monitor not only their victims' schedules but also the activities of police investigators and security teams watching over the athletes' homes, the FBI document says.

The FBI hasn't identified the athletes by name, but the dates and locations listed in the criminal complaint coincide with well-publicized burglaries at the Kansas City-area homes of Mahomes and Kelce, as well as the homes of Portis in Milwaukee and Burrow in Anderson Township, Ohio. The complaint also lists two unidentified athletes, one from the Memphis Grizzlies and another from the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Mahomes and Kelce were the first known victims, in early October, one of them during the Oct. 7 "Monday Night Football" game against the Saints at Arrowhead. The unnamed Bucs player was targeted on Oct. 21 during a game against the Ravens. Portis' home was struck Nov. 2 in Milwaukee during a game against the Cavaliers. Burrow's home in the Cincinnati-area was burglarized during a Dec. 9 game at the Cowboys. And the unnamed Grizzlies player was hit during a Dec. 19 home game against Golden State.

No information is provided regarding possible NHL victims identified by the FBI, or additional NBA victims, but close to the time of the Kansas City burglaries, the Dallas Stars' Tyler Seguin reported a home break-in, with watches valued at $500,000 reportedly taken. In December, an estimated $23,000 in jewelry was stolen from Luka Doncic's Dallas home before a trade sent the Mavericks star to Los Angeles. It's not clear if authorities believe the Chilean gang is behind the Seguin and Doncic heists.

Attached to the Jan. 30 federal complaint in Florida is an affidavit by an FBI agent whose name is blacked out. The agent ascribes high levels of sophistication to the seven defendants for the way they identified their targets, found vulnerabilities in home security systems and figured out how to convert the high-value loot into cash through "fences." The men allegedly used fake IDs, multiple rental cars and burner phones to keep from being tracked as they traveled across the country between burglaries.

At the same time, the agent identified a series of blunders that helped law enforcers identify the culprits and, crucially, connect them directly to many of the stolen items. The mistakes included a series of selfies that the alleged burglars, according to the complaint, apparently shared with others as if to advertise their exploits. The problem was, they uploaded the photos to a secure Apple iCloud account that the FBI was able to access with a search warrant.

In one particularly lucrative burglary, apparently the one at Portis' home, gang members broke open a safe "containing several watches, chains, personal items, jewelry, and cash. Also stolen was a Louis Vuitton suitcase and designer bags." The total value of the items exceeded $1.48 million, the complaint says, identifying the victim only as "Athlete 4."

On Nov. 3, Portis posted on X: "I consider Milwaukee my home. Last night, while I was at work, my home was burglarized, and many of my prized possessions were stolen. If you have any tips or info, please send them to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Rewards for info leading to recovery or arrests!"

Referring to the Nov. 2 burglary, the FBI complaint includes a color selfie photo of four men, one wearing a Chiefs jersey, inside what appears to be a hotel room. On the floor is a broken-open safe, along with an array of eight watches, plus a bejeweled watch that one of the suspects, the selfie photographer, is wearing.

The face of one person is blacked out because the FBI has yet to identify him. In a second photo, the selfie photographer prominently displays the watch on his left wrist along with various luxury items arrayed on a bed. Also on the bed is a yellow crowbar.

That same burglary also was notable for the security camera video that Portis posted online showing two men at the house's front door, with their heads and faces covered. They hesitate while one speaks on a cellphone. Then he says to the other in Spanish, "Go for it." The second one kneels and uses a power tool on a panel near the base of the door.

On Feb. 5, a federal grand jury in Ohio indicted three men in connection with the Nov. 2 burglary. "The individuals seem to be the alleged tip of the iceberg" in a string of crimes, the U.S. Attorney's Office in the southern district of Ohio stated.

In the Dec. 19 burglary in Memphis, the defendants allegedly netted an estimated $1 million in unidentified items from the home of a person identified only as "Athlete 6."

The case of the Bengals' Burrow drew particular attention after the burglary of his home on Dec. 9. "My privacy has been violated in more ways than one," Burrow told reporters at the time.

The FBI complaint, identifying Burrow only as "Athlete 5," listed the value of items stolen at around $300,000. Some of those items were identified recently at a New York City pawn shop, and both the shop owner and an employee have been charged with conspiring to receive stolen property.

In late January, some of the suspects were halted in their Florida rental car by police on an Ohio highway. Body cam video from the Ohio Highway Patrol showed one of the men wearing a Bengals stocking cap. The men didn't speak English, so when an officer asked them in Spanish where they were headed, they answered, "Orlando."

"Wrong direction," the officer responded. A person in the back seat then changed his destination to New York, then back to Florida. During a search of the car, an officer found a pouch hidden behind the glove box, and inside were two tools that another officer later identified as "window punches." They also found a yellow crowbar.

They were arrested shortly afterward.

Burrow had employed a security team to patrol his house while the Bengals were in Texas, but the complaint describes the burglars as having tracked not only the athlete's movements but also those of his home security team. The defendants allegedly monitored the times when shift changes occurred and when the security personnel would move between the back and front of the home.

The complaint describes the burglars as being bold enough to stealthily enter the back of the house without breaking any windows while the security detail was standing in the driveway. The defendants allegedly monitored the detail's movements "from a wooded area where no security cameras were located," the complaint states.

The FBI agent describes using a number of high-tech tactics to zero in on the alleged burglars, including license-plate reader data from local police at various locations on the defendants' routes. They also used cell-phone tower data to co-locate one or more defendants' phones with their rental vehicles. The same rental vehicle was identified as having been in Cincinnati and Jeffersonville, Indiana, before being abandoned at a McDonald's in Miami.

The seven defendants are identified as Pablo Zunigo Cartes, Ignacio Zuniga Cartes, Bastian Jimenez Freraut, Alexander Huiaguil Chavez, Jordan Quiroga Sanchez, Bastian Orellano Morales, Sergio Ortega Cabello. The latter three, all identified in the selfie photo released with the complaint, also were named in the Feb. 5 indictment in Ohio.

ESPN researcher John Mastroberardino contributed to this report.

Luka likely off minutes limit as Lakers return

Published in Basketball
Wednesday, 19 February 2025 16:41

LOS ANGELES -- Luka Doncic is going back to work with the Los Angeles Lakers, and he's likely back to full speed as well.

Coach JJ Redick says Doncic probably won't have a minutes restriction this week after his deliberate start to his Lakers tenure before the All-Star break.

When the Lakers host Charlotte on Wednesday night, Doncic will play in his third game back following a 6 1/2-week absence due to a strained left calf suffered on Christmas while playing for the Dallas Mavericks.

The Slovenian superstar played in both of the Lakers' final two games before the All-Star break, but he logged only 47 total minutes while the Lakers eased him back into competition. Doncic then got several days of recovery while the rest of the NBA's top players convened in San Francisco for the All-Star Game.

"He'll be fine," Redick told reporters Tuesday night after the Lakers' first practice back following the break. "That extra five, six days of All-Star break was good for him. His minutes will be up [Wednesday], and I don't think that there's going to be any sort of restrictions going forward."

The Lakers acquired Doncic from the Mavs on Feb. 2 in a seismic trade that sent Anthony Davis to Dallas.

LeBron James is listed as questionable to face the Hornets after he missed the final game before the All-Star break and then sat out the midseason exhibition, ending his 20-year run of All-Star participation. James, 40, is dealing with a sore left foot and ankle.

The Lakers and Hornets are returning from the break earlier than every other NBA team because they are playing a game that was rescheduled last month because of the catastrophic wildfires that ravaged the Los Angeles area. Redick and his family lost their home in the Pacific Palisades fires.

Los Angeles returns from the break with three games in three cities over four days, playing in Portland on Thursday and Denver on Saturday.

Sources: Green eyes Cavs move after Pels buyout

Published in Basketball
Wednesday, 19 February 2025 16:41

New Orleans Pelicans forward Javonte Green has agreed to a contract buyout and intends to sign with the Cleveland Cavaliers upon clearing waivers, sources told ESPN on Wednesday.

The expected deal provides additional wing depth for the Eastern Conference-best Cavaliers, and it comes after they landed forward De'Andre Hunter from the Atlanta Hawks in a trade for Caris LeVert, Georges Niang, future second-round picks and pick swaps at the deadline.

The buyout comes after Green played a season-high 34 minutes for the Pelicans in their final game before the All-Star break. Green started in place of a resting Zion Williamson and had nine points, seven rebounds, five steals and two assists in an overtime win over the Sacramento Kings on Thursday.

Green joined the Pelicans as a free agent in August and has averaged 5.8 points, 3.6 rebounds and 1.1 steals per game this season.

The Cavaliers would be the fourth team for Green in his sixth NBA season. He is averaging 5.5 points and 3.2 rebounds per game in his career.

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