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Humphreys spins Ireland to a hat-trick of Test wins

Published in Cricket
Monday, 10 February 2025 01:25

Ireland 260 (McBrine 90*, Adair 78, Muzarabani 7-58, Ngarava 2-65) and 298 (Balbirnie 66 Tucker 58, Ngarava 4-55, Gwandu 2-28, Madhevere 2-48) beat Zimbabwe 267 (Welch 90, Muzarabani 47, McCarthy 4-75, McBrine 3-59) and 228 (Madhevere 84, Bennett 45, Humphreys 6-57, McCarthy 2-22) by 63 runs

Rain was the biggest threat Ireland faced, when they came into the Queens Sports Club on day five, but in 18.3 overs wrapped up the only Test against Zimbabwe with a 63-run win. They needed to create seven chances for the last three wickets, and in the process completed their first hat-trick of Test wins in their ten-match history. It is the earliest point any team has earned a hat-trick of Test wins, bettering South Africa, who needed 14 matches.
Matthew Humphreys converted his four-for into a career-best 6 for 57, with Andy McBrine - his spin-bowling partner - closing out the game by knocking over Richard Ngarava with the new ball.
Wessly Madhevere, Zimbabwe's last ray of hope, batted 195 balls for his 84. When his outside edge was beaten and stumps rattled by a quicker length ball from Humphreys, he could not drag himself out of the field, covering his face with his bat in despondence as the game was effectively done.

Eyes on Konstas after Renshaw's ton leaves NSW big chase

Published in Cricket
Monday, 10 February 2025 01:25

New South Wales 259 (Edwards 108, Gilkes 66, Bartlett 4-54) and 11 for 1 need 407 more runs to beat Queensland 387 and 289 for 3 dec (Renshaw 125*, Clayton 76 ret hurt)

Queensland will hunt a vital Sheffield Shield win at the Gabba after Matt Renshaw's unbeaten century kept them in the box seat against NSW.

The opener cruised to 125 before the hosts declared at 289 for 3 and left NSW a target of 418 for an unlikely victory in Brisbane.

NSW were 11 for 1 at stumps on Monday, Nic Maddinson out without scoring after shouldering arms to a straight Michael Neser delivery. Sam Konstas was unbeaten on 9, while nightwatchman Ross Pawson survived 26 balls for one run in the shadows of stumps.
Earlier Renshaw and Jack Clayton consolidated Queensland's advantage after NSW captain Jack Edwards had done his best to keep NSW in the conversation.

Clayton, fresh off 134 in the first innings, seemed destined for twin hundreds in the match before he pulled up with a hamstring complaint and retired hurt.

Renshaw pushed on, accelerating into triple figures and finding a friend in Jimmy Peirson. Former Test opener Renshaw began the Shield season slowly and was overlooked for a berth against India. But he found form later in the year and now has two red-ball centuries either side of some dominant one-day and BBL innings.

"I had a really good bit of momentum in the last two, three Shield games after that first hundred," Renshaw said. "I wanted to keep that momentum going ... and today kept it nice and simple.I back our bowlers to do the job. It might be at 5pm, might be at 3pm."

NSW made 259 thanks to Edwards, but still conceded a 128-run lead after winning the toss and opting to bowl first.

Sent home ahead of Australia's second Test in Sri Lanka, Konstas will have his chance under pressure in what is his first match at the venue.

Queensland have just one win and three draws from six matches this season, but could jump fourth-placed NSW with a victory and remain in the hunt for a top-two finish with three games remaining.

Following the crushing first Test loss to India in Perth in November, there was a moment when Australia's Test team looked as though they may have reached a cliff much sooner than predicted.

Ten weeks, five Test wins and two significant series victories later, that seismic defeat in Perth feels like nothing but a bump in the road, with the horizon looking even better than expected.

Australia finish a seven-Test home and away summer with five wins, a loss and a draw. It is a worse record than the six wins from seven they produced in 2023-24, but the performances were far more impressive.

Last summer they used just 12 players across seven Tests home and away, playing three of them without a single player under the age of 29, and produced less than convincing series wins over Pakistan and New Zealand whilst drawing with West Indies at home in between.

This summer they played 18, with Cameron Green missing all seven through injury, Josh Hazlewood playing just two and Pat Cummins missing two, winning two series with two completely different XIs.
Three players under 25 debuted, including two under 21. Two stars of the Sheffield Shield in Beau Webster and Josh Inglis came in and performed like the ready made players that they are. A new baggy green was handed out in four straight Tests, something that hadn't happened for 27 years.

It was a summer where Australia showed versatility and adaptability in both decision-making and execution across a vast spectrum of conditions and opponents.

The team and the selectors wore the criticism of running a closed shop after the defeat in Perth, instead opting to calmly stay the course and make just one injury-forced change in Adelaide. But they made bold calls when it was least expected. Having won in Adelaide and dominated four of five rainy days in Brisbane, they made the brave decision to pick the 19-year-old Sam Konstas in Melbourne.
After winning in Melbourne, there was an expectation that nothing would change in Sydney. But their best player from the previous summer, and arguably the most popular player in the dressing room, Mitchell Marsh was dropped after scoring just 73 runs in seven innings and replaced by the Shield's best allrounder in Webster.
In Sri Lanka, Australia's long-standing tradition of valuing incumbency over innovation was thrown into the Indian Ocean and the result was a 2-0 sweep that left locals wondering which team was the home side.
Across their last four Tests in Asia, including the last two Tests in India in 2023, they have found a blueprint for success under stand-in captain Steven Smith. With Travis Head opening, picking one fast bowler and playing three spinners, or a third spinning allrounder, Australia have won three Tests and drawn one, their best four-Test stretch of results on the subcontinent since 2004.
Australia's finger spin stocks have hardly ever been deeper, with Matthew Kuhnemann starring in Sri Lanka alongside Nathan Lyon while Todd Murphy continues to impress despite limited opportunities.

Reports of Smith's decline as a Test batter were greatly exaggerated, as were fears of Australia's batting depth overall.

Smith plundered four centuries in five Tests against peak Jasprit Bumrah in Brisbane and Melbourne, and against two of the most successful spinners to ever bowl in Galle, to zoom past 10000 Test runs and nudge his Test average back towards 57, while looking every inch the batting savant he was six years ago.

The performance of Inglis and Webster, although he didn't make a century, and the looming return of Green means Australia is now flush with options ahead of the World Test Championship final which will create a selection squeeze.

There will undoubtedly be pressure on Marnus Labuschagne after a summer where he averaged just 25.63 without a century. It is worth noting though that he and Head were the only Australia batters to pass 50 three times against Bumrah.
Amid the optimism of a batting cupboard that is chockablock, it is also worth acknowledging that seven of Australia's centuries were scored by the usual suspects in Smith, Head and Usman Khawaja, while the other two were made by the wicketkeeper Alex Carey and his understudy Inglis who was playing as a batter. Inglis is the only one of those five who is under the age of 31.

The treatment of the two youngsters in Konstas and Nathan McSweeney rankled many, with the latter felt to be set up for failure as an opener after earning his place through middle-order Shield form, while the former captured the nation's hearts only to be cast aside based on the conditions in Sri Lanka.

A quick glance, however, at the top 10 Australian Test run-scorers shows a litany of examples of players given a taste of Test cricket at a young age, losing their place and then returning to dominate at the highest level.

Smith himself was dropped after making 77 in his second Test as a 21-year-old, recalled five Tests later, then dropped again for two full years before becoming Australia's best since Bradman.

The early gamble on Cooper Connolly, which was widely queried, may also bear fruit years down the line whilst costing nothing in the here and now.

Australia will still experience some pain whenever Smith and Khawaja finish, but the future looks brighter than it did 10 weeks ago.

One area that is of greater uncertainty is the fast-bowling depth. Once known as Australia's endless natural resource, there are some concerns that have emerged from the summer. Hazlewood's injuries are chief among them. Cummins' ankle has still not recovered from five brutal Tests against India, while the iron-man Mitchell Starc has just turned 35. Scott Boland continued to prove how valuable a back-up he is and could well force his way into the WTC final even if the big three get through the IPL unscathed. But he too is 35 and has his workloads carefully managed while Michael Neser, 34, was unavailable all summer due to a hamstring injury.
The management of Jhye Richardson, 28, is proof of concerns around the quality of the next rung. Richardson was called into the Test squad for Melbourne after playing one first-class game in 12 months in which he dislocated his shoulder high-fiving a team-mate. He is now rehabbing from a third surgery on that shoulder in a bid to be fit for the Ashes.

That next rung of Sean Abbott, Brendan Doggett and Nathan McAndrew are all performing well at first-class level but all are over the age of 30. Replacing two ageing generational batters out of six in the short to medium term looks far easier than replacing three generational quicks out of three.

For now, Australia march to a second consecutive WTC final with enough depth and confidence that any of whatever 15 they choose in their squad could play a role in the final. Thereafter they play three Tests in the West Indies, where the performance in Sri Lanka might have more bearing on how they set up than how they play at Lord's, before a date with England for a home Ashes. Perth feels a long time ago.

Bangladesh are cramming extra training sessions into their schedule in a bid to shift their mindset from T20Is to ODIs ahead of the Champions Trophy. Head coach Phil Simmons is confident that the players can get themselves accustomed to the format despite not playing an ODI since December.

The BPL ended on February 7, and the following day, some of the players turned up at a training camp at the Shere Bangla National Stadium in Dhaka. These were mainly cricketers whose BPL teams had been knocked out before the final. The team will train in Dhaka till February 12, after which they leave for the Champions Trophy - their first match is against India in Dubai on February 20.

"I agree that it is not the best preparation, but they were playing white-ball cricket, which means that they are sharp skills-wise," Simmons said. "We have to get their minds up to 50-over cricket in the next six or seven days. They have the skills. They are performing. It is about getting to that 50-over mentality now. We will have double practice sessions in the next couple of days. We bat and bowl in the morning, and then do the same under the lights.

"We are getting ourselves prepared to bat for 50 overs. The first part of the preparation is about Dubai. Once we can get ourselves in the right frame of mind, and work on the right things for Dubai, I think we can start [preparations for] the rest the competition as well. We will get familiar conditions in Pakistan after that."

Captain Najmul Hossain Shanto is a worry, particularly because he hasn't played a lot in the last couple of months. Shanto missed the tour of the West Indies owing to a hamstring injury. His last international outing was in November last year. He returned with the National Cricket League T20s, and then played five games for Fortune Barishal in the BPL.

"He was working very hard all of those days when he wasn't playing," Simmons said. "We are going to need a strong mental attitude from everyone in the team. I think he possesses that, so I look forward to him continuing his work."

"I think you prepare as best as you could when you go into a tournament. On that day, you play your best games. That's what I look to do, on every occasion"

Phil Simmons

Simmons admitted that Nahid Rana's drop in pace towards the back-end of the BPL was a concern, but he was relieved since Rana has upped his pace in the training sessions.

"He has looked slower than normal in the last couple of games. The run-up was less than normal approaching the wicket," Simmons said. "They [Rangpur Riders] got knocked out early so he had a bit of rest. He looked sharp in training yesterday. The pace was coming back. The run-up was as quick as it was in the Caribbean."

This is Simmons' last assignment in his current contract, and there are questions about the future. But Simmons wasn't giving any clues.

"I won't be here if I didn't believe [that we can win]," he said. "I think you prepare as best as you could when you go into a tournament. On that day, you play your best games. That's what I look to do, on every occasion. I think we have made a lot of strides in the Caribbean. I think we have a good chance once we play to the best of our ability."

If India feel Bumrah is unlikely to play any part in the Champions Trophy, they could replace him with Harshit Rana, who played the first two ODIs against England. But if there is a chance Bumrah could be available in the later stages of the tournament, India could choose to keep him in the 15 and replace him later subject to ICC approvals. After February 11, any replacement needs the approval of the tournament's technical committee.

Chiefs' three-peat talk 'definitely' fired up Eagles

Published in Breaking News
Sunday, 09 February 2025 22:52

NEW ORLEANS -- Multiple Eagles defensive players said they used the Kansas City Chiefs' talk of a three-peat as incentive in Philadelphia's dominant Super Bowl LIX performance on Sunday night.

"That was motivation because it was kind of a slap to us," Eagles veteran defensive end Brandon Graham said. "It was like, they ain't seen us yet. So, we heard that all week. And when the game came, execution was on point and together."

The Chiefs were trying to become the first team to win three consecutive Super Bowls. News came out last week that the Chiefs and Miami Heat president Pat Riley came to an agreement allowing the Chiefs to use the trademarked "Three-Peat" phrase without issue if they did win.

"Definitely," said Philadelphia defensive tackle Milton Williams, when asked if he was fueled by that chatter. "They were talking about getting the copyright and all that B.S. Throw that s--- in the trash."

The Eagles' defensive front dominated the game, sacking Patrick Mahomes six times while registering 11 quarterback hits in a 40-22 win.

Philadelphia did not send a single blitz against Mahomes yet still managed to get pressure on 16 of his 42 dropbacks (38%).

Mahomes appeared to feel the effects. He threw a pair of interceptions -- including a pick-six to rookie cornerback Cooper DeJean -- and finished with a QBR of 11.4, the second lowest in a Super Bowl since the rating began being used in 2006.

Josh Sweat (2.5) and Williams (2) had multiple sacks in the game, becoming just the third Super Bowl tandem to post two-plus sacks.

"We didn't change the game plan or anything," said Sweat, who was among those Eagles players who said they shut out the three-peat talk and other distractions to stay focused. "We just rush and cover together, and whoever made the play made it.

"[Defensive coordinator] Vic [Fangio] just made the calls, and we executed. He always puts us in the right position to make the plays, and it worked out."

The picturesque Swiss town of Montreux will become the epicentre of European table tennis for the seventh consecutive time from 20-23 February, as the CCB Europe Top 16 Cup promises an electrifying tournament where semifinalists will secure ITTF Singles World Cup Macao 2025 spots. 

Representing the incredible depth and diversity of European table tennis, the tournament will showcase players from across the continent from the traditional powerhouses of Sweden, Germany, and France to emerging talents from all corners of the region. With no limit on players per country, the field promises an unprecedented level of competition, making the title truly up for grabs. Player list can be found here.

Defending champions Darko Jorgić and Jia Nan Yuan return with remarkable stories to continue. Jorgić, who achieved a historic hat-trick in 2024, and Yuan, the first French woman to claim the title, will headline a tournament featuring some of Europes most dynamic and skilled players. 

The 2025 edition introduces an innovative format that amplifies the competitive drama. Qualification rounds will feature players ranked 15-21, with a special spot reserved for a Swiss player. The tournament will unfold over four days, with matches progressing from qualification rounds to the ultimate showdown of semi-finals and finals. 

A significant change this year removes the previous two-player-per-nation limitation, ensuring that Europes absolute best players will compete. All matches will be played in a best-of-5 format, adding to the tournaments intensity and unpredictability. 

The Salle Omnisport du Pierrier has been meticulously prepared, featuring a newly homologated floor colour exclusive to this event. Enhanced spectator experiences include an additional grandstand, private company boxes, and VIP seating directly alongside the playing field. 

Semifinalists will secure direct qualification spots for the ITTF Singles World Cup in Macao, raising the stakes of every single point and rally. 

Event Essentials: 

  • Date: 20-23 February 2025 
  • Venue: Salle Omnisport du Pierrier, Montreux, Switzerland 

Watch as former England international and Six Nations winner Chris Ashton analyses Sam Prendergast's "confident" performance for Ireland in their Six Nations victory against Scotland.

WATCH MORE: Dominant Ireland beat disappointing Scotland at Murrayfield

Watch Six Nations Rugby Special on BBC iPlayer.

Available to UK users only.

Watch the best moments from week two of the Six Nations including Elliot Daly's winning try for England against France at the Allianz Stadium.

WATCH MORE: Late Daly try secures dramatic England victory against France

Watch highlights on Six Nations Rugby Special on BBC iPlayer.

Available to UK users only.

Talking points from Six Nations round two

Published in Rugby
Sunday, 09 February 2025 22:27

Wales' 22-15 defeat by Italy in Rome made it a record-extending 14 losses in a row for a team that has now fallen below Georgia to 12th in the world rankings.

Former Wales international James Hook said on the BBC's Rugby Union Weekly podcast: "The scoreline definitely flattered Wales. Italy were completely dominant and Wales were second in pretty much every facet of the game.

"The frustration from Welsh supporters is that we've not seen any progression either. If you see some sort of development and something to be optimistic about, you think 'OK, we are actually developing'. But we haven't really improved."

Warren Gatland wants to fight on as head coach but, with another Wooden Spoon potentially looming, what positives can Wales take from their final three games against Ireland, Scotland and England?

Ex-captain Sam Warburton said on BBC One: "All I want to see is some players - there won't be 10 of them - but we need three, four or five, on top of people like Jac Morgan and Tomos Williams, to say: 'I'm an international-class player and this is going to be my shirt for the next five to 10 years'.

"We need guys to step up and own that shirt."

Questions, of course, are being asked about what can be done to arrest the national team's decline and Jones, like many other pundits and journalists, believes the problems are deep-rooted.

"It goes back 10-15 years," he said. "It's about management, finances, pathways - there is so much to fix and it's a depressing situation when you think what a great rugby nation this is."

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