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BPL gets a boost from arrival of eliminated ILT20 players

Published in Cricket
Monday, 03 February 2025 00:48
The inclusion of these T20 A-listers will give the tournament some legitimacy. But the swift player transfer highlights the absurdity of the T20 market where a player gets to play more franchise leagues in the same window if his team is eliminated earlier than others. Vince has played in the Big Bash League, before making it to the ILT20 and now have arrived for the BPL.

The ITTF-Oceania Cup 2025 is set to transform Melbournes LOOPS Table Tennis venue into a critical battleground for table tennis players on 15-16 February. This two-day tournament represents a pivotal qualification event that will determine Oceanias representatives for the prestigious ITTF Singles World Cup, to be held from 14-21 April 2025. 

The tournament will feature the Mens Singles and Womens Singles events. For the Main Singles Events, the qualification system is designed to test the players skill and consistency. The tournament begins with two round-robin groups of four players. This initial stage will be crucial, as only three players from each group will advance to the knockout stage.  

Group winners will earn a significant advantage, receiving a direct bye to the semifinals. Meanwhile, the second and third-place finishers will battle it out in quarterfinal matches, adding an extra layer of excitement and unpredictability. The semifinals and subsequent medal matches will not only crown continental champions but also determine ITTF Singles World Cup qualification. To add to the drama, all matches will be played in a best-of-seven format.

Players from Australia, Fiji, French Polynesia, New Caledonia, New Zealand, and Vanuatu will compete, representing the diverse table tennis talent of the Oceania region. Defending champions Finn Luu (Mens Singles) and Yangzi Liu (Womens Singles) will be among the top contenders fighting for ITTF Singles World Cup qualification. 

Admission is free, and fans can catch all the action live on the ITTF-Oceania YouTube channel. With ITTF Singles World Cup spots on the line, every match promises intense competition and high-stakes drama. 

Event Details: 

  • Date: 15-16 February 2025 
  • Venue: LOOPS Table Tennis, Melbourne, Australia 
  • Admission: Free for all spectators 

Five talking points from opening Six Nations games

Published in Rugby
Sunday, 02 February 2025 22:49

Ireland are aiming to become the first team to win three successive men's titles since Italy joined the expanded Six Nations tournament in 2000.

Under interim head coach Simon Easterby, with Andy Farrell preparing to lead the British and Irish Lions in Australia this summer, they produced a fine second-half display to ensure that quest began with a victory.

"If I'm Ireland, I'm probably quite enjoying everyone saying we're maybe past our peak," said Barclay. "It was 27-10 realistically, England came away and scored a couple of [late] tries.

"Ireland weren't at their best either and they won convincingly, that's the reality.

"They've got serious quality coming back in so if you write Ireland off at this stage, do it at your peril."

Ireland face Scotland away next, and Bowe said: "Murrayfield is a difficult place to go, it's always really confrontational. If Scotland can get parity up front to unleash the backs they have, they are really dangerous.

"But I'm really excited about this Irish team, particularly their performance in the second half - to weather the storm from England, to be put under the cosh, maybe question themselves at times, and to be able to find a way out."

From Last To Near Victory For Ryan Blaney

Published in Racing
Sunday, 02 February 2025 20:20

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. Racing on a tight, quarter-mile oval almost guarantees every race car in the NASCAR Cup Series field is bound to have its fair share of battle scars.

However, that wasnt the case for Ryan Blaney for much of the 200-lap Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium.

Despite starting shotgun on the field, the Team Penske driver methodically climbed his way to 10th by the races halftime break with little to no damage to his race car.

While hed endure contact in the second half of the race, much like every driver in the 23-car feature field did, the driver of the No. 12 Ford again climbed to the runner-up spot as he hounded the rear bumper of leader Chase Elliott.


Despite constant pressure, Blaney was forced to settle for second.

I got to 10th before the break and I kind of got to the top five relatively quick a couple of restarts went my way and by the time I got to second I saved a pretty good bit even to get to second because I knew it might go the whole way, and then it was just kind of like a game between the 9 (Elliott) and myself like who can save more right-rear tire, Blaney said.

I just didnt quite have enough to lean on there at the end. I started pushing like with 25 to go and I just didnt have enough. I was like, Uh oh. I needed some help by lappers and I just never really could get there.

I kind of just didnt have enough to lean on, but it was fun coming from the back and just not quite having enough, but its always fun when you can move forward like that.

While the Clash certainly had its chaotic moments, Blaney enjoyed the combination of tight racing and stadium-like atmosphere.

From the crowd yesterday that hung out for three hours from the modifieds to when we first got out on the track is a lot of commitment, and there was a lot of energy on the frontstretch before we got going there and thats what its all about, Blaney said.

It was really, really cool to be here and Im happy that it was a good show for everybody. Im looking forward to hopefully coming back next year.

I dont see why you wouldnt come back, so I hope everyone had a good time.

Elliott Dominates For Bowman Gray Clash Score

Published in Racing
Sunday, 02 February 2025 20:36

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. Pole winner Chase Elliott held off a dramatic charge from Ryan Blaney to win Sunday nights Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium in front of a teeming, vociferous sellout crowd at the historic quarter-mile.

Adroitly working lapped traffic in the closing stages of the 200-lap season-opening exhibition race, Elliott crossed the finish line 1.333 seconds ahead of Blaney, who started last among the 23 competitors on a driver points provisional.

Elliott claimed his first victory in the Clash, which came to Bowman Gray after a three-year stint in the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. The driver of the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet reveled in the NASCAR Cup Series return to the iconic short track after an absence of 54 years.


This environment is special, said Elliott, who led 171 laps, including the first 96 before surrendering the lead to eventual third-place finisher Denny Hamlin. This is a place that has a deep history in NASCAR. I think they deserve this event, truthfully.

I hope we didnt disappoint. It was fun for me at least, and well hopefully come back here one day.

Hamlin led twice for 28 laps, but faded after Elliott retook the top spot from him on Lap 126. And when Blaney slipped past Hamlins Toyota on Lap 147, it became a two-driver race.

But Blaneys car tightened up in the late going, preventing the driver of the No. 12 Team Penske Ford from challenging for the win. Blaney thought better of making an overly aggressive move on the series seven-time most popular driver.

Im not going to bulldog into him and get chased out of here with pitchforks, Blaney quipped I just didnt quite have enough right rear at the end to make a move on him.

Joey Logano finished fourth, followed by Bubba Wallace, who advanced from his 14th-place starting position. Ross Chastain, Austin Cindric, Tyler Reddick, Shane van Gisbergen and Chris Buescher completed the top 10.


Hamlin rued the final restart on Lap 121, after the seventh caution for Brad Keselowskis spin off Wallaces bumper.

I just didnt do very well on that restart there, and kind of lost the bottom, and Chase took advantage of it, Hamlin said. Once you get the lead, its a lot easier to hang on to it.

I thought that they were just a little better that second half than we were, along with the 12 (Blaney) was as well. We just have to get a little bit better, but overall, a good day for our Sport Clips Toyota.

In the last chance qualifier that determined positions 21 and 22 in the main event, Kyle Larson charged from the 10th starting position and survived nine cautions to win the 75-lap event and advance to the Clash.

On Lap 72, Larson grabbed the lead from Josh Berry, who was making his first competitive start for Wood Brothers Racing at the track where team patriarch and NASCAR Hall of Famer Glen Wood secured all four of his Cup Series victories.

Larson took the top spot for the first time on Lap 30 and led a race-high 36 circuits en route to the win. However, Larsons No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet sustained damage after he surrendered the lead to Erik Jones for a restart on Lap 65.

In a melee moments after racing resumed, Jones spun in a three-wide mishap with Berry and Larson and dropped out of contention.

My car was way better than it was yesterday, said Larson, whose eighth-place finish in his Saturday heat relegated him to the last chance qualifier. That was fun. I was able to get to the front without really getting into too many people.

But then after that long break (for local champion Burt Myers hard wreck on Lap 61), I cycled really tight for that restart and allowed Erik to get in front of me and just kind of lost control of the race at that point. Then, the next restart, it got crazy, and I got a bunch of damage.

Berry, who started 13th, held second to secure the 22nd spot in the Clash. Berry and Larson finished 13th and 17th, respectively, in the main event.

It got pretty rough, Berry said. You hate that it comes to that, but it is what it isits the Madhouse, its Bowman Gray Stadium, its a tight race track, and youre going to run into each other.

Sellout crowds at all six venues and summer vibes (except for the three matches rained off) have already signalled season three of the SA20 as a success. There's also the prospect of at least one new finalist, with both Pretoria Capitals and Durban's Super Giants knocked out, and bottom-feeders of the last two tournaments, MI Cape Town, have done a complete 180 and finished as log leaders. So, the narratives are strong, but has the cricket always matched it?

One metric that can be used to answer that question is to judge the number of close games, which we'll define as matches that were won by 10 or fewer runs of with six or fewer balls to spare. In the 30 group stage matches in 2025, there have been six tight matches, including one which was DLS affected. In 2024, there were 10 and 2023, nine. Similarly, this season, the number of matches won by a margin of more than 30 runs or six wickets is 20, the same as last year but seven more matches than the 13 in 2023.

A second means of analysis is to examine what has emerged as the most common concern from the group stage: that batting has been tougher than usual. Almost every team has said so at some stage of the campaign and the numbers support the view. Teams have scored 120 or less 10 times this season compared to seven in 2024 and six in 2023. The 2025 tournament has also had the lowest run-rate of the league stage: 7.91. That's down from 8.71 last season, which was higher than the 8.18 in the first edition. In real terms, that's a difference of 16 runs an innings between this season and last.

Word from those who have had bat in hand is that pitches are more challenging because they are slower, lower and have turned more than usual. Considering that the competition takes place at the same time - early January to early February - every year, it's puzzled many that the surfaces are behaving like it's much later in the summer and explanations have been hard to come by.

Evan Flint, the former head groundsman at both Newlands and the Wanderers, believes the age and continual use of the surfaces across the country is starting to show. "Ideally a pitch should be relaid every 10 to 15 years, however with increasing content it's impossible to do," he told ESPNcricinfo "A new pitch takes 12 to 18 months before it can be used again, so this puts too much strain on the other three or four central pitches."

For this reason, Cricket South Africa is embarking on an ambitious plan to use drop-in pitches for the 2027 World Cup. A prototype is currently being created at the Wanderers and with no home internationals next season, they feel there is enough time to test the drop-ins and avoid the rushed situation that saw the Nassau County pitches that were used for the 2024 T20 World Cup rated unsatisfactory.

That could mean that this season proves be an outlier, with the tired surfaces on their last legs, following what has also been a heavy international load. Before the SA20, there were Tests at four of the six venues (last season there were only Tests at two) and white-ball internationals at all six. "A lot of the central pitches were used before the tournament started and used surfaces often get slower over the course of the season," Flint said.

In addition, heavy rain everywhere except the Western Cape added to the challenges at the start of the competition, especially for inexperienced groundsmen. There is a new curator at Kingsmead, and, since Flint left, fairly new curators at the Wanderers and Newlands, which means that there's a lot of learning that takes place on the job and occasionally even those who have been around for a long time, don't get it right. "It's also a difficult job, so even with all the experience it can sometimes go wrong," Flint said.

And while a lot can be said about surfaces, the coaches don't believe they are the only reason for the slower run-scoring. "Conditions have been challenging, but I feel sometimes as batters you can limit yourself a little bit. You have to find ways to put big totals on the board," Robin Peterson, MICT's coach said after their win over Capitals in their last home game on Sunday.
The same thoughts were first mooted by Stephen Fleming, Joburg Super Kings' coach. "It's a little bit of a trend of the tournament that batting first seems to be a bit of a challenge, not just because of conditions but maybe a little bit of players mindset and then ability to work their way out of tough situations," he said after his team were held to 99 for 9 by Capitals at Centurion on January 28. "Unfortunately, the trend of the modern day players, if it's too hard, they don't find a method for long enough. And they're very keen to hit their way out of trouble."

And that just has not worked as well. The 2025 league phase has seen the lowest percentage of runs scored in boundaries: 53.8%. In 2024, almost 60% of runs came in boundaries and in 2023 it was 56.8%. Fleming also mooted the idea that they may be due to when the games are played.

"One of the things I'm learning from being here a few years is that the starting time is a little bit of a challenge," he said. "A lot of domestic cricket is played through the evening hours where the wickets have played quite well. We've found there's quite a distinct difference between the last part of the day and then moving into the evening, even if the wicket's dry."

Most SA20 games start at 5.30pm local time, which is daylight in the Western Cape, where the sun sets at 8pm in peak summer, twilight in Gqeberha and on the Highveld and just about sunset in Durban. That means some matches are played as mostly day games, others as day-night and the rest as night games.

On double header days, the early match is entirely a day game, starting at 1pm, and on Sundays, the matches start at 3.30pm and end just after sunset. Under lights, the ball tends to come on quicker and there perhaps isn't as much of that as there could be, but match times are set at what's best for broadcasters, not batters and that may sum up how we should actually measure the SA20.

On screens, it is seen as the tournament with some of the best vibes: the crowds are diverse and engaged and have gotten behind their teams, some of the world's biggest names have smiles on their faces when they're playing, and even when they're losing.

In the aftermath of Capitals' 95-run defeat in their final game, the players gathered on the outfield with the families and their former captain Wayne Parnell, had a hit about with Parnell's two young children and looked on as MICT set up a net on the field so they could train for their week in the playoffs.

Capitals felt no need to send either their new coach, Jonathan Trott, or their new captain Kyle Verreynne, to explain their dismal season and instead put up their rookie Keagan Lion-Cachet to the press afterwards. He was all smiles in defeat and "couldn't have asked for anything else," other than to be part of the tournament that has brought cricket in South Africa back to life.

"I've learned so much more than what I knew in the beginning, and cricket is a game where the more you learn the better you get," he said. "The more people share their own experiences and skills with you, the more you learn."

And one thing about the SA20 in its early years, is that it's a tournament that will keep learning.

Firdose Moonda is ESPNcricinfo's correspondent for South Africa and women's cricket

UP Warriorz (UPW) have acquired Chinelle Henry as an injury replacement for Alyssa Healy for WPL 2025 after the Australia and UPW captain was ruled out of the tournament because of a stress injury in her right foot. Meanwhile, defending champions Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) have brought in Heather Graham and Kim Garth in place of Sophie Devine and Kate Cross; Devine is taking a break from the game, while Cross hasn't played since December owing to a back injury. All three players have been picked at INR 30 lakh.
Healy missed the T20I leg of the women's Ashes, which Australia won 16-0 over England, and passed a late fitness test to play the series-ending Test match as a middle-order batter. She got through the match without any obvious discomfort, scoring 34 in Australia's only innings, but said later that she would not play in the WPL and would also miss the three-match T20I series against New Zealand that starts just two days after the WPL final on March 15.
Henry, the 29-year-old West Indies middle-order batter and handy quick bowler, hasn't played in the WPL before, but comes into the tournament with form behind her. She hit a 16-ball 43 in the last T20I on West Indies' tour of India late last year, and followed it up with a 72-ball 61 in the third ODI of the same series. Overall, she has played 62 T20Is, scoring 473 runs in 53 innings at a strike rate of 91.13. She also has 22 wickets from 44 bowling innings.

Garth, who has turned out for Gujarat Giants (GG) in the past, was a big part of Australia's Ashes campaign, playing all three ODIs, two T20Is and the one-off Test, picking up nine wickets overall. A 28-year-old bowling allrounder who started out with her native Ireland before moving to Australia, Garth has 49 wickets from 59 T20Is to go with 764 runs.

Graham, also 28, has been a part of the WPL in the past, with Mumbai Indians (MI), but hasn't played a game in the tournament. And though highly rated in Australia, where she has been a part of Hobart Hurricanes and Perth Scorchers in the WBBL, she has only played one ODI and five T20Is in an international career that started in 2019. She has eight wickets in T20Is.

The third edition of the WPL will kick off on February 14 with a match between RCB and GG in Vadodara.

Finch keen for BBL auction, Maxwell questions power surge

Published in Cricket
Sunday, 02 February 2025 22:00
Former Australia captain Aaron Finch would like a full player auction to be brought into the BBL while Glenn Maxwell believes the power surge should be removed as it doesn't replicate international playing conditions.

Currently, overseas players are selected through the draft - with clubs now able to pre-sign one name before that event - while a trade window, that is currently open, has been introduced for the first time this season, but Finch has said the majority of domestic players should also be included in a process more aligned with how the IPL operates.

"I'd like to see an auction come in," Finch told the Powerplay on ESPN's Around The Wicket. "Each team potentially has the ability to retain maybe four of their players and then you say everybody else in the country, you're into an auction. I think that that would create a great spectacle.

"We see it in the IPL, it's brilliant, creates evenness across the board I think. What it does give you as well is it gives you what the players are worth. So at times, depending on what your team needs, you might have to overpay for someone. But if it's an auction, that's generally what the price of a player is."

Maxwell, though, was uncertain about the idea, raising concern about clubs losing an identity with established names. "You've still got to have a way to keep your homegrown players in your home state, [to] still have that relevance," he said.

The BBL continues to be challenged on retaining overseas players with a number leaving in early January for either the SA20 or ILT20.

Meanwhile, when asked what he would change about the tournament, Maxwell argued that while he could see the appeal of the power surge - the two overs of fielding restrictions that can be taken by the batting side after the 10th over - he felt it skewed the skills that were required away from how the rest of T20 is played.

"I'd get rid of the power surge," Maxwell said. "I think unless the power surge was introduced in international cricket, I think it's sort of probably lost its relevance. As a player, I think it probably misrepresents middle-order batting.

"When you get picked for your country, you don't have that luxury of having those two overs in the back ten to boost your strike rate, boost your score. It's lost on the art of middle order batting to be able to find your way through those last ten overs. I know it's great for broadcasters. I know it's great for fans. But until it's made an international rule, I don't think we should have it."

Finch acknowledged he had held a similar view when he was a player, but having now retired from the game saw the value the power surge brings.

"I think that it provides entertainment right through an innings," he said. "It keeps games alive. Like if a team needs 15 and over, with a power surge up your sleeve, there's still half a chance."

Lyon: Australia 'not there yet' in journey to greatness

Published in Cricket
Sunday, 02 February 2025 22:51
Nathan Lyon has warned Australia could still be years away from Test greatness, despite continuing their blistering summer with a record-breaking rout of Sri Lanka.

The Border-Gavaskar Trophy triumph confirmed Australia's spot in a second consecutive World Test Championship (WTC) final, with the ICC's top-ranked side winning more Test matches in the past cycle than any other team.

Elder statesman Lyon saw signs of greatness in the win in Galle, where Australian appeared in control from a first over that featured three fours off Travis Head's bat. But Lyon does not feel the current crop of Australian players can yet lay claim to being a truly great side.

"We want to become a great Australian team. We're on that journey, we're not there yet. That's our end goal," he said. "Part of that journey is making sure that when we close the window, we nail it shut. It's all about being ruthless and doing our best thing for long periods of time."

The win in Galle ensured Australia would continue to hold every bilateral trophy for which they are eligible, alongside the ODI World Cup and the WTC trophy.

But Lyon was quick to point out that Australia had drawn and not won the past two Ashes series played in England, last winning outright on the road in 2001. Australia have also not won the Border-Gavaskar Trophy in India since Ricky Ponting's side took out the four-match series 2-1 in 2004.

"There's a few things [Australia needs to achieve]," said 37-year-old Lyon. "This is only me and my thoughts as well. We've got some great players within that change-room, there's no point hiding behind that. "

Australia will have to wait until 2027 for chances at away series wins in India and England. The country's greatest ever offspinner, Lyon said he "100 percent" hoped to play on that next trip to spin-friendly India as a 39-year-old.

Sri Lanka may be the last time before then that Lyon has the chance to bowl in tandem with fellow offspinners Todd Murphy and Matt Kuhnemann.

The trio took 17 of Australia's 20 wickets in Galle, but the team does not have a subcontinent Test tour planned between the ongoing two-match series and India in 2027.

"We're going okay, but I still feel like we've got a lot of improvement to do. That's about being ruthless," Lyon said of the offspinning trio. "We're three totally different bowlers with three totally different mindsets as well. I feel like I'm learning off Todd and Matt, and I feel like they're pushing me to try and get better as well. Hopefully I'm passing on a little bit of knowledge here and there."

Lyon is mostly free of a left hip injury he suffered in the summer, though he is still in pain if he falls on the area.

"But I didn't have to land on it today, so all good," said Lyon, who took match figures of 7 for 135 in Galle. "Apparently I ripped the deep tissue off the fascia [hip muscle], whatever that means. Apparently there was a bit of excess blood or something in there. Not ideal, but all good now."

Injured Shields seals undisputed heavyweight title

Published in Breaking News
Sunday, 02 February 2025 21:24

FLINT, Mich. -- Claressa Shields has entered a league of her own.

The undefeated world champion boxer captured the undisputed heavyweight title with a unanimous decision victory over previously unbeaten Danielle Perkins on Sunday night.

She dropped Perkins (5-1, 2 KOs) with a right hook in the final seconds of the 10th and final round to secure the victory, but the fight almost didn't happen.

Shields (16-0, 3 KOs) pushed through a shoulder injury entering the match and couldn't lift her left arm for two or three days.

"I actually think I'm going to have to have surgery on my left arm. I tore my labrum last week, so the fight almost didn't happen," Shields said. "I didn't want to let Flint down, but I really couldn't use my jab the way that I wanted to, but I didn't the best that I could. I iced it, I did therapy and now I think I'm going to have a shoulder surgery."

Shields still managed to connect on 29% of her punches, and 36% of her power punches, according to CompuBox Stats while Perkins only landed 19% of her punches. The judges scored the fight 97-92, 99-90, and 100-89 all for Shields.

With the win, she became the first boxer, male or female, in the four-belt era to become the undisputed champion in three different weight classes (junior middle, middle and heavyweight).

She holds the WBC, WBA, IBF and WBO heavyweight titles. For women's boxing, the heavyweight division is considered 175 pounds and up.

In her heavyweight debut on July 27 in Detroit, she also scored a second-round TKO victory over Vanessa Lepage-Joanisse with Perkins on the undercard.

"I felt strong in there, but I know Danielle Perkins felt stronger. That girl was strong as hell," Shields said. "She was strong, she was definitely a problem. My experience and my skills got me over it and also, I've been in plenty of street fights with bigger people and I had to use some of my skills in that today, too. So, when I dropped her in the last round, it's because she got greedy."

She scored the bout's lone knockdown in waning seconds of the tenth round, but she also wobbled Perkins during the third round with an overhand right while connecting on some big right hooks as well. The crowd chanted "Whoop that trick" from the Hustle & Flow soundtrack as Shields landed those big shots.

"Flint is a different type of place. I can tell you that the people that we have here, they are fight fans for one. They're so supportive and they take you for who you are," Shields said. "So, them even saying, 'Whoop that trick,' you will never hear that in no other women's boxing match ever in history because it's just not even something that people even accept coming from women.

"People accept that from me here, coming from Flint and they understand me, and they know that I'm just as hood, just as street, but I'm also business and savvy and I'm very smart so they accept me for the full package, and I just love them so much for that."

Shields said she passed on an opportunity to fight at Barclays Center in New York so she could return to Michigan for a homecoming bout at the Dort Financial Center in Flint. During her ring entrance, she was joined by rapper Papoose and fellow undisputed champion Terence Crawford was among those in attendance.

Crawford said he was happy to support Shields in making history as the first-ever undisputed women's heavyweight champion of the world.

"I think it was a great fight. Perkins came to fight, she put up a good fight. She was big, she was strong. Claressa had the speed, timing and experience," Crawford told ESPN. "And at times, when she had to dig deep and make it a dog fight, I felt like she won that transaction as well. The whole turnout was a good night."

Shields, 29, is ESPN's No. 1-ranked heavyweight and No. 1 pound-for-pound fighter but said the fire still burns inside her to cement her place in history, even as she has been dubbing herself the "G.W.O.A.T" -- Greatest Woman of All-Time.

Sunday's bout also marked Shields' first time entering the ring since the December launch of her biopic, "The Fire Inside."

"It ain't enough. That's how I think. I think that I didn't get my flowers for so many years so even though I'm getting them now, it's like that's not enough," Shields said. "I deserve more than that. I'm fighting for a million dollars. So. I'm supposed to be getting paid five. This ain't it. So, for me, that's where the fire comes from."

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