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Kuhnemann 'never doubted' his bowling action, looks to the future

"I am very grateful for all the support I have received from my family, friends and team-mates, and to Cricket Australia who stood by me throughout the process," he said in a statement issued through Cricket Australia. "It was a disappointing way to finish what was such a successful Test series for Australia. I've never doubted my bowling action throughout my career and I'm always looking to improve the art of spin bowling in different conditions.
"I thought the process itself was quite fair and I appreciated the professional manner in which testing was explained to me and then conducted."
Kuhnemann, who had never previously had his action questioned in a career dating back to 2017, could have continued to play domestic cricket while the testing process took place but sat out the previous round of the Sheffield Shield to manage the thumb injury he bowled with through the Sri Lanka series. But he suggested he could return before the end of the season with two rounds of the Shield remaining.
"I'm looking forward to finishing the season with Tasmania once my thumb has fully healed and then getting into my off-field preparations," he said.
Kuhnemann is a likely inclusion for the three-match Test series in the West Indies in June-July where conditions at some of the venues may be conducive to two spinners, and he shapes as a key figure for Australia's next subcontinent Test series, against India in early 2027.
"We are pleased for Matt that this matter is now resolved," Ben Oliver, CA executive general manager national teams, said. "It has been a challenging period for Matt, however he has carried himself exceptionally well.
"He has had the full support of Australian cricket and he can now move forward to the next phase of his international career with great confidence."
During the series in Sri Lanka, Kuhnemann was termed Australia's best bowler by Nathan Lyon, while stand-in captain Steven Smith had voiced his surprise at Kuhnemann having been reported.
India spinner R Ashwin has previously spoken about how Kuhnemann's wrist action when he delivers can create an optical illusion about the action.
"An interesting feature of his action is his loading," Ashwin said on his YouTube channel during Kuhnemann's debut Test series against India in 2023. "For Kuhnemann, his wrist breaks during his loading. So sometimes it will look like there is an elbow extension. There is nothing like that in his action. But there is wrist involvement, for sure."
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Azmatullah Omarzai emerges as 'the perfect utility allrounder for Afghanistan'

Root was slow on the upper cut. That doesn't happen a lot. It almost seemed like he was expecting the offcutter again. He had been deceived by one earlier in the over, but still managed to hit it for a boundary. And he might have been setting up for another, with short fine and short third up, but was caught completely off guard. Being unpredictable is a vital asset for a fast bowler in the back end of an innings. Omarzai couldn't be lined up. Not even by a member of the Fab Four.
"To outfox somebody of the calibre of Joe at the position of the game, batting well across a hundred, when he had the measure of the other bowlers, that is what [sets him apart]," Mumtaz said.
Omarzai had provided Afghanistan with their first wicket as well, taking out the hard-hitting Phil Salt in just the fourth over of a chase of 326. He compensated for Rashid Khan having an off night with the wicket of Jos Buttler through the middle overs. An equation of 110 off 79 balls got that bit harder because England had only two recognised batters left - Overton and Liam Livingstone and - he knocked over one of them to drag a game with plenty of twists and turns back in Afghanistan's favour.
"He picked up Salt, he picked up Buttler, and he picked up Overton as well," Mumtaz said, "All four of those wickets crucial, obviously in the end finished with a five-for, [with Adil] Rahid['s wicket] as well. He broke the game open not once but on three different occasions. I thought Root, Buttler and Overton, given the position of the game was quite spectacular.
"Afghanistan just held the nerve and I think that is the biggest transition for this side, that they now know how to win key moments in games and they know how to win against better-ranked sides in the international circuit. The crowd, obviously the England support was outnumbered 99 to 1%. The roar was magnificent, and I think a true victory celebration. They are one for the big events now, the Afghanistan side."
"Yet they're very competitive. You think of the trajectory that Afghanistan cricket has been on, perhaps the pioneer, you might say, has been Rashid Khan. He's been a huge influence, but now you think of the other players that are making immense contributions in major competitions."
USWNT loses to Japan in 1st defeat of Hayes era

Japan beat the United States 2-1 at the SheBelieves Cup in San Diego on Wednesday to end the Americans' streak of five straight trophies at the annual tournament and hand manager Emma Hayes her first defeat since taking charge of the USWNT.
The result was a measure of revenge for first-time winner Japan, which lost 1-0 to the U.S. in the quarterfinals of the 2024 Olympics as Hayes led the team to the gold medal in Paris.
Japan got off to a dream start in the second minute when U.S. keeper Jane Campbell collided with one of her defenders in front of goal and Yuka Momiki gathered the ball and fired it into an open net for the early lead.
The U.S. regrouped under heavy pressure from Japan and quickly tied the game when Ally Sentnor -- who scored her first goal for the Americans on Thursday against Colombia -- picked up a through ball from Catarina Macario and calmly curled a shot past Ayaka Yamashita to make it 1-1 just before the 15-minute mark.
Japan started the second half just like it did the first: with an early goal. Campbell kept out a great free kick by Japan, but her save fell right to the feet of Toko Koga, who slotted home the rebound to give her team a second lead of the game.
Despite numerous second-half changes, the USWNT couldn't find a way back into the game as Japan saw out a convincing win to make it 3-for-3 after victories over Australia and Colombia in its first two games of the tournament.
The USWNT finished the tournament with two wins and one loss.
Prior to the loss to Japan, Hayes had won 15 and drawn two of the first 17 matches she coached since her tenure as U.S. manager started in June 2024.
The U.S. team was playing in the tournament without the trio of Mallory Swanson, Trinity Rodman and Sophia (Smith) Wilson. Rodman is rehabbing a back injury, Smith was not yet in game form and Swanson was out for personal commitments.
Japan was coming off a 4-1 victory over Colombia on Sunday. Mina Tanaka, who plays for the Utah Royals in the National Women's Soccer League, led all players with four goals and three assists.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this story.
MSU wins on Holloman's half-court buzzer-beater

COLLEGE PARK, Md. -- Tre Holloman hadn't even reached the "M" logo at midcourt when he jumped off one foot and let the ball fly Wednesday night.
Somehow, it stayed on line before dropping through the hoop with a swish that reverberated across the Big Ten.
If Michigan State and coach Tom Izzo win yet another conference title, Holloman's buzzer-beater might be the reason.
"Every day at home, the night before a game, that last practice, we have the guys go around. Everybody gets a shot at a half-court shot. The last two games, Tre has made two of them. He's made one [before] each game," Izzo said. "I thought that thing was in when it left. I really did."
The Spartans might practice shooting from midcourt, but when Holloman left the ground on this game winner, he was closer to his own 3-point line -- some 65 feet from the hoop. The shot gave No. 8 Michigan State a 58-55 win over No. 16 Maryland, plus a half-game lead over Michigan atop the Big Ten. It was a sensational finish to a game that was high on intensity but low on artistry.
"I felt we deserved to win the game," Izzo said. "I don't think it was a lucky shot at the end. I thought we played inspired basketball."
It was Michigan State's first game-winning buzzer-beater since Korie Lucious hit a 3 off a Draymond Green pass in the round of 32 in the 2010 NCAA tournament -- also against Maryland.
If the game had gone to overtime, Holloman would have been largely to blame. With the Spartans up by two, his pass in the backcourt was intercepted, and then he quickly fouled Ja'Kobi Gillespie, whose two free throws with 42.1 seconds left tied it at 55. Then Jaxon Kohler missed for Michigan State, giving the Terrapins a chance to win with the shot clock off.
Gillespie missed a 3-pointer, and there was just enough time for Kohler to rebound and flip the ball to Holloman, who was 2-of-11 from the field at that point and 0-for-3 from 3-point range.
"Holloman hadn't made a shot all night, so once he released it, I knew the thing was going in," Maryland coach Kevin Willard said.
Willard wasn't too hard on Gillespie after his missed 3 left Michigan State time for a final heave.
"Maybe if he waits, he doesn't get an open look. I trust Kobi. He's been great all year," Willard said. "At the end of the day, the kid still had to hit a 60-footer to beat you. So, yes, do you want him to take the last shot? Absolutely. But it's not like he took it at six seconds and Holloman was able to dribble up and get a layup."
For Holloman, it was a chance to prove that shooting from midcourt isn't just a way to goof around at practice.
"I knew that it was good," Holloman said. "We practice those."
And when it did go in?
"I just remember zeroes, and that we up."
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
NFL mulls changes to OT, adds first-down tracking

INDIANAPOLIS -- The NFL is considering changing overtime rules in the regular season to decrease the advantage for teams that win the coin toss.
"It's time to rethink the overtime rule," league executive Troy Vincent said Wednesday at the NFL scouting combine.
Vincent said the competition committee agrees overtime rules need to be addressed. Receiving the ball first has become more of an advantage than pre-2011 when overtime was a sudden-death period. Receiving teams won 56.8% of games in overtime from 2017 to 2024, up from 55.4% from 2001 to 2011.
Current rules give both teams an opportunity to possess the ball in overtime unless a touchdown is scored on the first possession.
The rules are different in the playoffs. Both teams get a chance to have a possession even if the offense scores a touchdown on the opening drive. That postseason change came after the Buffalo Bills lost to the Kansas City Chiefs in a divisional round game in January 2022.
Making the overtime rules the same in the regular season is a possible solution, along with extending the period to 15 minutes.
Among other changes, the NFL plans to use its virtual measuring system to determine first downs in 2025. This wouldn't eliminate the officials who manually spot the ball and use chains to mark the line to gain. The optimal tracking system notifies officiating instantly if a first down was gained after the ball is spotted by hand.
"We used this in the background last season," said Kimberly Fields, the NFL's senior vice president of football operations. "The goal for 2025 is to continue to train our techs, who are the ones who will be utilizing the technology, finalizing all of our officiating processes and procedures around virtual measurements and testing the graphics for the broadcast and in-stadium, so fans in the stadium and fans watching on television can see what we're doing. The chain crew will still be there as backup."
The competition committee also will review expansion of the replay assist to include more fouls, but Vincent said "there was no appetite" from the committee to use video replay to throw a flag.
A team could still propose a rule change to do that. For now, if officials miss an obvious penalty such as a face mask, replay assist can't throw a flag.
Replay assist was used in 2024 to pick up flags thrown for roughing the passer (contact with head/neck), unnecessary roughness (runner out of bounds), intentional grounding and ineligible player downfield.
Expansion under consideration for 2025 would include roughing the passer (hit below the knee), unnecessary roughness (defenseless receiver/player), face mask (contact of hand with face mask), tripping, illegal crackback block and horse-collar tackle, among others.
Vincent said the league wanted to find a way to bring back onside kicks while also installing a permanent kickoff rule after a one-year trial with what was called the dynamic kickoff.
The trial made kickoffs more exciting with higher rate of returns. Vincent said he anticipated the spot of the touchback on kickoffs being moved from the 30- to the 35-yard line.
But the changes affected the onside kick. Teams were 3 for 50, the lowest recovery rate since 2001.
"Universal consensus that we know we need to do something with this play," Vincent said.
He added there wasn't much conversation around a fourth-and-long option to keep possession, though those discussions could occur next month.
The tush push play mastered by the Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles has been a hot topic this week because the Green Bay Packers proposed banning it. Some opponents have argued the play is dangerous, but Vincent said the league found no injuries on the play in 2024.
Potential top pick Carter might need foot surgery

Potential No. 1 NFL draft pick Abdul Carter has a stress reaction in his right foot, tests revealed Wednesday, and the Penn State standout will need to decide soon whether to have surgery, agent Drew Rosenhaus told ESPN.
"There are mixed opinions on whether he needs surgery, and we will figure that out in the near future," Rosenhaus said Wednesday night in Indianapolis, site of this week's NFL's scouting combine.
According to Rosenhaus, Carter has two options:
One, he could have preemptive surgery, have a screw inserted in his right foot, and return to working out and running in about eight weeks.
Two, he could bypass the surgery, conduct his pro day at Penn State on March 28 and prove to NFL teams that he doesn't need a procedure.
Carter, his family and agents Rosenhaus and Robert Bailey spent Wednesday consulting with doctors to gather more information. A decision about what Carter will do is expected this week, Rosenhaus said.
"Either way, worst-case scenario, we don't expect this to impact where he is drafted," Rosenhaus said. "After visiting with teams this week, I believe he's going to be the No. 1 overall pick."
Carter already wasn't expected to work out at this week's combine, but that was because of a shoulder injury that he suffered against Boise State in the College Football Playoff quarterfinals in December.
The star pass rusher instead was scheduled to undergo medical exams and participate in interviews with teams in Indianapolis. Defensive linemen and linebackers were among the first players to arrive at the combine, and those players started their team interviews Monday, with medical exams scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday, and on-field workouts set for Thursday at Lucas Oil Stadium.
Carter met with reporters Wednesday morning and made his case for being picked No. 1 in April's draft.
"I feel like I'm the best player in the country and the best player should be picked first," he said. "It's the work I put in with my dad, who trained me, and all the sacrifices I made, I know I'm the best."
He was asked about his health overall, saying he's "probably about 90% right now," but nothing specifically about his foot came up during the session.
Carter is the No. 2-rated prospect on ESPN draft analyst Mel Kiper Jr.'s latest big board, the No. 1 prospect in ESPN draft analyst Matt Miller's latest rankings and No. 2 in ESPN draft analyst Jordan Reid's rankings.
Pistons beat Celtics by 20, run win streak to 8

DETROIT -- Malik Beasley scored 26 points, Cade Cunningham had 21 points and 11 assists and the Detroit Pistons beat the Boston Celtics 117-97 on Wednesday night in a matchup of two of the NBA's hottest teams.
The Pistons (33-26) won their eighth straight and ended a 12-game losing streak against Boston, two nights after stopping a 10-game skid against the LA Clippers.
Detroit's eight-game run is tied with the Cleveland Cavaliers for the longest active streak in the NBA. The Pistons have won eight consecutive contests in a season for the first time since a 10-game streak from Jan. 23 to Feb. 13, 2008.
Boston (42-17) had won six straight and 10 of 11. The Celtics' 20-point loss was their second largest of the season, only one point shy of their largest.
Jayson Tatum scored 27 points for Boston, and Derrick White and Payton Pritchard each had 18. Tatum, White and Pritchard combined to shoot 14-of-22 from the floor in the first half, going 11-of-15 on 3-pointers.
It was the Celtics' 19th game this season with 20 or more made 3-pointers, tied with the 2022-23 Golden State Warriors for the most in a season in NBA history. Boston entered the day 17-1 in games in which it made 20-plus 3-pointers this season and 32-1 over the past two seasons.
Jalen Duren added 13 points and 11 rebounds for Detroit. The Pistons had a 49-33 rebounding edge.
The Pistons led 90-79 going into the fourth, then scored the first eight points of the quarter to take a 19-point advantage.
Boston's winning streak against the Pistons dated to Feb. 16, 2022. It was its longest active streak against any opponent and tied the third-longest active win streak against a single opponent in the NBA.
Tied at 55 at halftime, Detroit took control by outscoring the Celtics 35-24 in the third quarter.
ESPN Research and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Sharpe wows with one-handed slam: 'Incredible'

WASHINGTON -- Shaedon Sharpe has been one of the NBA's most gifted young dunk artists since he was selected seventh by the Portland Trail Blazers in the 2022 NBA draft. But he reached a new level Wednesday night -- literally.
Sharpe's vicious one-handed slam over Justin Champagnie was immediately hailed as one of the best in the NBA this season. He called it the best of his career, and it was part of an all-around career night in Portland's 129-121 win over Washington Wizards.
"I just started like laughing, like, 'Wow, man. Poor kid up under him,'" Portland coach Chauncey Billups said of the slam. "That was pretty incredible."
Sharpe, 21, led Portland with a career-high 36 points, shot 13 of 26 from the floor and sank 7 of 10 free throws, including four in a row down the stretch.
And his signature moment originated with an alert defensive play when he swiped Champagnie's pass beyond the 3-point arc. Sharpe then took one dribble into the paint and launched so high into the air that even his teammates were in disbelief.
"I don't know where he got it from," Blazers forward Deni Avdija said. "I asked him on the bench, 'If I'm going to work as hard as I can, will I be able to jump like you?' I don't know, it's just genes."
Such was the force of his slam that Sharpe crashed briefly to the court after flushing the ball through the net.
"I seen the dude in the way," Sharpe explained, "so I just jumped and tried to dunk it. And it went in."
In 33 minutes, Sharpe also had eight rebounds -- one shy of another career high -- and five assists.
"His offense was incredible," Billups said. "I mean it really was. On all three levels he was incredible the entire time. I thought the defense was high-level as well. I really did. And his rebounding, he got some really, really big rebounds for us."