Trent Alexander-Arnold in line for Liverpool reunion as Real Madrid confirm lengthy injury for Dani Carvajal

Trent Alexander-Arnold's return to fitness could not have come at a more important time for Real Madrid, following the loss of Dani Carvajal to injury. It comes just a week before Los Blancos are due to face Liverpool in the Champions League at Anfield, only five months after Alexander-Arnold decided to end a 20-year association with his boyhood team.

Carvajal medical report revealed

On Tuesday, Real Madrid gave an official statement confirming that Carvajal has had knee surgery – he had earlier been "diagnosed with a loose joint in his right knee" following tests that had taken place on Monday. He didn't start El Clasico against Barcelona and felt discomfort after coming on.

"Our captain, Dani Carvajal, underwent successful arthroscopic surgery on his right knee today," it read. "The operation was performed by Dr. Manuel Leyes under the supervision of Real Madrid's Medical Services. Carvajal will begin recovery work in the coming days."

While there is no timeframe from the club on his return, early estimates suggest the right-back could be sidelined for most of the rest of the calendar while he recovers. It suggests he could be back in action at some point in December, or perhaps even after Real Madrid are back from Spain's winter break in early January.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesBoost for Alexander-Arnold ahead of Anfield return

Alexander-Arnold was struck down by a hamstring injury just five minutes into last month's Champions League win over Marseille, but was back in the matchday squad for Sunday's Barcelona clash for the first time since then. He didn't get on the pitch, with Carvajal going on to grab headlines for the way he angrily confronted Lamine Yamal at the final whistle, accusing the teenager of running his mouth in the build-up. But it points to a return to fitness, at least, for someone who hasn't naturally flourished since joining the club in June.

The former Liverpool defender was forced to share game time with Carvajal prior to getting injured, getting the nod against Osasuna and Mallorca but having to make do with late substitute appearances when Madrid faced Real Oviedo and Real Sociedad. Marseille was the next match after Real Sociedad, so it made sense for Trent to return to Xabi Alonso's XI, only for him to get injured straightaway.

But with Carvajal competition for the place now not a factor for the foreseeable future, Alexander-Arnold suddenly has a great chance of starting against Liverpool. There is no other senior recognised right-back in the first-team squad, although midfielder Federico Valverde has often filled in when needed – as was the case against Barcelona – and would be an option if Alexander-Arnold is viewed to be short on match fitness.

Liverpool's poor form without homegrown right-back

For Real Madrid, this feels like a good time to play what was, on paper at the time the league phase draw was conducted, their hardest fixture. While Alonso's side have won five straight games across all competitions since a surprisingly heavy defeat to city rivals Atletico a month ago, Liverpool have five of their last six outings – including four in a row in the Premier League to slide down the table.

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AFPHostile reception for Alexander-Arnold

Whether he starts at Anfield or not, Alexander-Arnold could find himself in for a hostile reception from the fans who used to consider him one of their own. Trent's decision to run down his Liverpool contract, ensuring the Reds could only command a negligible transfer fee due to the uniqueness of the mini-transfer window before the summer's Club World Cup, did not sit well with supporters. Alexander-Arnold was audibly booed by some Liverpool fans in the final weeks of last season and openly accused of betraying the club with homemade signs displayed in the area around Anfield. When he did eventually reach his last game for Liverpool, Alexander-Arnold was more warmly received inside the stadium, but that feeling may not last if he is lining up for an opponent he seemingly considered to be a bigger club.

How India's senior pro Shafali Verma is still learning at the Under-19 level

From captaincy to bowling, she’s picking up a lot in her U-19 stint – and now has the chance to snatch World Cup glory three years on from her MCG heartbreak

Raunak Kapoor28-Jan-20232:40

Shafali Verma: ‘The only birthday gift I want is the trophy’

Shafali Verma was distraught.She had just been dismissed on the third ball of India’s run chase in the final of the Women’s T20 World Cup on March 8, 2020. Even though she’d had a tournament any 16-year-old would have dreamt of, finishing as India’s highest run-scorer, in that moment India’s chances of beating Australia were all but gone and Shafali was inconsolable.Soon after their loss, the world changed as the Covid-19 pandemic hit. Three years on, ahead of another Women’s T20 World Cup final, albeit at the Under-19 level, so has Shafali.She turns 19 on the eve of the final of this tournament, which she has in many ways been the face of. With 74 international caps, she is, by some distance, the player with the most experience and highest profile among all 16 teams, but her selection has been the subject of some debate. Did India really need to pick her? Could they not win without her?Related

  • 'We've been waiting for this feeling for very long'

At least one person agreed with the call to select Shafali as captain for this event: two-time World Cup winner and coach Julia Price. “It’s great for her, for the competition and for women’s cricket. It’s good for her to be the senior player. She’s getting to work on player management, captaincy, interactions, difficult decisions, potentially even selections – all the things that she might not have to do when she’s with the senior team,” Price said. “It’s a different way of her seeing the game and experiencing the game.”Shafali herself confirmed that being captain has taken up more headspace than usual for her and showed her the importance of being a good team player, whether you’re the leader or not. “You end up being a lot more involved in the match, your mind is constantly at work, you’re always learning something or the other. I’m even learning things from the girls in this team,” she said. “Everyone here listens. And for me as a captain it reminds me of how important it is to listen to your captain. At times once you’re done with your job, either bat or ball, you tend to switch off, but it’s so important to remain focused with what the plan of the day is. You’ve got to focus on so many things beyond yourself when you’re the captain.”Specifically, she has also gained an understanding of team selection. India have made as many six changes from one game to the next and changed the balance of their bowling attack even after wins. “You now know why someone gets picked regularly or why someone is dropped. That’s something I’ve learned being here because I’m sitting with the head coach [Nooshin Al Khadeer] daily and taking these calls and making playing XIs,” Shafali said. “I’ve learned that if a player is unable to identify and perform a specific role set for them that could cost them a place in the side, even if they’re batting or bowling isn’t bad per se. So that’s been an experience.”Shafali Verma was all smiles on the eve of the final, which happened to be her 19th birthday•ICC/Getty ImagesLeadership aside, Shafali’s primary job at this event is still to score runs, perhaps more so than at senior level because “she’s the strongest player in the team, she’s the best player here and needs to step up and perform”, as Price put it.She did that in the first two games, where she scored 45 and 78 against South Africa and UAE respectively. Since then, she has only managed 34 runs in four innings, which has been a wake-up call. “Its important to realise that it’s not like just because it’s a Women’s U-19 tournament that there is no thought to the bowling or that the quality is considerably low. Under-19 players for instance are much faster when they run than the senior teams. So there’s a lot to learn from even playing at this level,” she said. “It’s not like there are only slow bowlers here. You have to still work really hard for your runs.”That lesson is something former Pakistan allrounder Marina Iqbal thinks will also stand Shafali in good stead ahead of the senior T20 World Cup that starts next month. “I saw the frustration on her in the game against Scotland when she got out early, whereas in the senior side, she feels a certain level of comfort even if she is dismissed early. She’ll learn better here, with her kind of game, how to build an innings,” Iqbal said. “She doesn’t need to work much here on things like technique because she’s already played at the highest level. Here you want her to go through this confidence and exposure and get her form back in international cricket.”

“Everyone here listens. And for me as a captain it reminds me of how important it is to listen to your captain. At times once you’re done with your job, either bat or ball, you tend to switch off, but it’s so important to remain focused on the plan.”Shafali Verma

Shafali is coming off a mixed run at senior level, where she has scored two fifties in her last nine T20I innings, after crossing 20 only four times in 18 innings before that, and has only bowled 11 times in her 51 T20Is. At the U-19 World Cup, she has bowled in all but one match and has had an impact in pressure situations. She made two important strikes against South Africa in the opening game after their openers got off to a flying start, and then produced figured of 1 for 7 off 4 overs in the semi-final against New Zealand.She hopes this can translate to senior level too. “I never bowled much earlier and it makes such a difference when you bowl compared to when you’re just in the field,” she said. “Today I feel confident bowling. I have bowled when I was a kid, as my father insisted that I [have a working knowledge of] everything. Once I joined the senior team, I started bowling again, thanks to Harman [Harmanpreet Kaur]. She showed the confidence in me to bowl at the international level. And that’s a confidence that helps me in this tournament that, yes, I can take matters in my own hands in a game situation.”With Shafali in the driving seat, there’s a level of expectation that India could achieve something incredible this weekend, something she has spent the last three years waiting for. Back in 2020, she didn’t have a reference point for defeat in a World Cup final. This time, she may not need one.

Buttler, Bethell and Jacks set to miss IPL playoffs

England players set to return home in time to feature in ODI series against West Indies

Matt Roller13-May-2025 • Updated on 26-May-20256:13

Chopra: RCB were smart in picking players for right slots

Jos Buttler, Jacob Bethell and Will Jacks appear set to miss the rearranged IPL 2025 playoffs after they were named in England’s squad for a home ODI series against West Indies.*England’s players left the IPL when the tournament was suspended last week following cross-border tensions between India and Pakistan, but are expected to return ahead of the league’s resumption on Saturday. But the new dates leave Buttler (GT), Bethell (RCB) and Jacks (MI) facing a clash between their franchise commitments and international duty.ESPNcricinfo has learned that Bethell will return to India for RCB’s next two fixtures, but will fly home before their final group match in Lucknow and report to Birmingham ahead of the first ODI at Edgbaston. Jacks will be available for MI’s final two group fixtures before travelling home. Buttler is returning to India and is also expected to return ahead of the ODI series.Related

Kusal Mendis to replace Buttler at GT for IPL playoffs

Bethell 'destined for greatness' as IPL stint trumps Zimbabwe Test call-up

IPL 2025 scenarios: GT and RCB one win away from playoffs, MI in control of their fate

Russell and Narine to rejoin KKR ahead of must-win match against RCB

Cummins, Head likely to rejoin SRH for remainder of IPL 2025

The ECB made a commitment before November’s mega auction that centrally contracted England players would be fully available for the IPL in 2025, which meant Bethell was not included in their Test squad to face Zimbabwe from May 22. But that commitment covered the IPL’s original dates, and the final has now been pushed back to June 3.England named a 16-man squad on Tuesday for their three-match ODI series against West Indies, which starts on May 29. The IPL’s group stage now runs until May 27, with the playoffs starting on May 29 and running until the final on June 3. GT, RCB and MI are all well-placed to qualify for the final stages.The ECB did not provide a definitive answer when contacted on Tuesday night. “No Objection Certificates have been granted based on the original IPL dates, so we’ll need to review any potential extensions, particularly in relation to any clash with the final white-ball squad,” an ECB spokesperson said when the squad was announced.”We’re keen to support the IPL and the BCCI in getting the schedule up and running, and to facilitate players’ return should they choose to go back. We’ll continue to work closely with the BCCI and the IPL as the situation develops.”Jofra Archer (RR) and Jamie Overton (CSK) have also been named in the ODI squad, with their franchises already knocked out of contention for the IPL’s knockout stages. ESPNcricinfo has learned that Overton will not be returning to the IPL this season.

While Bethell’s absence is a blow for RCB, their two other English players, Liam Livingstone and Phil Salt, are set to be available for the rest of the IPL after they were dropped from England’s ODI squad. Salt has been included for the T20I series which starts on June 6, three days after the IPL final, while Livingstone has been left out entirely.There are two players in the West Indies ODI squad likely to be affected by the clash of dates: Romario Shepherd (RCB) and Sherfane Rutherford (GT). Shamar Joseph is also involved in both the ODI squad and the IPL, though his team, Lucknow Super Giants (LSG), are outsiders to qualify for the playoffs.Shepherd and Rutherford were both expected to miss West Indies’ ODIs against Ireland from May 21-25, and ESPNcricinfo understands that they will likely be allowed to stay at the IPL until their respective franchises’ seasons are over. CWI has been contacted for comment and is expected to issue a statement this week.England and West Indies have regularly fielded weakened sides in their recent meetings, but this ODI series takes on unusual importance with both teams battling to reach the 2027 World Cup. Co-hosts South Africa, Namibia and Zimbabwe will qualify automatically along with the next eight highest-ranked teams, and England and West Indies sit eighth and ninth respectively.The series is also Harry Brook’s first since assuming the captaincy from Buttler on a permanent basis following their abject results earlier this year, losing 10 out of 11 white-ball matches across a tour to India and the Champions Trophy in Pakistan.

£35 million defender wants to join Maresca as Chelsea eye new priority

A £35 million player, who will be representing his country at Euro 2024, is keen on making the move to Chelsea this summer – and he's apparently a new priority target for the west Londoners.

Chelsea set for busy summer as Boehly targets multiple defenders

After sealing the free transfer of Tosin Adarabioyo from Fulham, the consensus is that Chelsea could still bring in another defender.

Another forward could now join Chelsea as well as £42 million Jhon Duran

The west Londoners could apparently bring in multiple players up front this summer.

ByEmilio Galantini Jun 13, 2024

Veteran and fan favourite Thiago Silva departed Stamford Bridge on a Bosman deal to boyhood club Fluminese, and while Tosin's arrival will do wonders to make up for it, Fabrizio Romano states that an additional defensive ace could come in during a busy summer window.

Appearances

132

Goals

5

Assists

2

Bookings

10

Red cards

1

Minutes played

11,376

"It will continue to be a busy summer at Chelsea," said Romano on Chelsea's transfer plans after bringing in Enzo Maresca to replace Pochettino.

"It won’t be completely crazy but they will try to make smart things happen, including a new goalkeeper and I expect them to try for at least one new centre-back, but it could be two."

Apart from West Ham, Chelsea conceded more Premier League goals than any other side in the top ten last season, and there defensive fragilities were on display for all to see in certain games.

Doubts also surround the futures of both defender Ben Chilwell and Marc Cucurella. Indeed, GiveMeSport claimed this week that Chelsea could opt to sell either one of the pair, as they also plan to bring in a new full-back who would replace them.

Bournemouth defender Milos Kerkez, who will don the Hungarian jersey at Euro 2024, which is set to kick off on Friday, has been linked as an option for Maresca's side. The 20-year-old starlet made 28 league appearances for Bournemouth last season, attracting attention from England's elite, and it is believed Chelsea chiefs have been talking about signing Kerkez behind-the-scenes.

Kerkez wants to join Chelsea after emerging as priority target

GiveMeSport have an update on this from the last 48 hours, and they claim that Kerkez is keen on joining Maresca at Chelsea.

They also state that the full-back has emerged as a priority target for them, amid claims that he could cost around £35 million to prise away from the Vitality Stadium. Kerkez has a growing reputation and carried himself very well last season, despite still being a very young player operating at the highest level.

"Milos is a great boy. A crazy dude, in a good way. He is always positive and smiling,” said former teammate Mat Ryan.

“Hopefully he can develop even further in England and become even more mature. He is aggressive, powerful and has so many qualities. A unique skill set. Bournemouth is going to get stronger because of him. Milos still has a great career ahead of him.”

Deadly duos

Cricket is a game of partnerships. Here are five that can go down in history

George Dobell14-Dec-2011Herbert Sutcliffe and Jack HobbsOther opening pairs – notably the wonderful Bajan partnership of Greenidge and Haynes – have scored more runs, while of those who came in a little later, the record of Dravid and Tendulkar, who have added almost 7000 Test runs together, with 19 century stands, is little short of staggering.But the record of Sutcliffe and Hobbs passes the test of time. Between 1924 and 1930 they opened England’s innings on 38 occasions in Test cricket and registered 15 century partnerships. In all they amassed 3249 runs together at the remarkable average of 87.81. No other regulation combination can come close to matching those figures.To make that record all the more impressive, those runs were made in an era of uncovered wickets. Indeed, the pair seemed to reserve their finest performances for the most testing circumstances: The Oval in 1926 and Melbourne in 1929 spring to mind. On both occasions they defied fine bowling, a treacherous pitch and a demanding position to help England secure the Ashes.They added 136 in their first innings together and 268 in their second. Twice they posted three successive century opening stands, and only six times did they post fewer than 20 runs together. Perhaps the most remarkable statistic, however, is that the pair recorded a scarcely believable 350 first-class centuries between them.Dennis Lillee and Rod MarshTest cricket’s most successful bowler-fielder combination of all: the duo from Western Australia combined to claim 95 victims (all caught Marsh, bowled Lillee) in the 69 Tests they played together. It speaks volumes for the record that, of current players, the closest rivals to the Lillee-Marsh partnership is the pairing of Kallis and Boucher. It has, to date, taken the South Africans 132 Tests to claim 68 dismissals.As ever, though, the statistics only tell part of the story. Marsh and Lillee also typified the aggressive spirit of the Australian team of the time. With their bristling moustaches, their barely buttoned shirts and their fiery temperaments, they embodied the ferocious seventies unit and the era of World Series Cricket.Lillee’s excellence as a fast bowler requires little reiteration. Suffice it to say that many judges rate him as the finest quick in the history of the game, and when named its “Cricketers of the [20th] century”, Lillee was rated sixth. He was also the highest-placed specialist fast bowler.Marsh, however, does not always gain the respect his record deserves. He held, for a while, the record for the most Test victims by a wicketkeeper – it was, naturally, a catch off the bowling of Lillee that took him to the milestone – while his tally of 28 dismissals in the 1982-83 Ashes remains the record for any wicketkeeper in any series. Athletic, brave, and as tough as the land where he was born, Marsh kept with skill to the Lillee-Thomson attack – arguably the fastest in the history of the game – and often seemed as indestructible and permanent as Uluru.It was fitting that, after 14 years together, they bowed out of Test cricket on the same day.Sourav Ganguly and Sachin TendulkarThe most prolific pairing in the history of ODI cricket. The two hold the record for the most partnership runs by a pair (8227; nearly 3000 more than their closest rivals); the most partnership runs by a pair of openers (6609; nearly 1300 more than their nearest rivals) and the most century partnerships by a pair (26; 10 more than their nearest rivals). It is, by any accounts, an astonishing record.Tendulkar’s genius requires no elaboration here, but Ganguly, it seems, will always divide opinions. Few would deny, however, that during his reign as captain, India discovered a pride and strength that eventually saw them win a World Twenty20 title, a World Cup, and be rated as the No. 1 Test team. Ganguly may have moved on by the time those successes came, but all but the most trenchant critics would accept that he helped build the foundations of a formidable team.Viv Richards and Joel GarnerA surprising choice, perhaps, but Richards and Garner embody the unity of the West Indies team during the 1970s and ’80s, and exemplify the formidable individual talents that merged to form one of the most outstanding sides of any era.Although hailing from different countries – Richards was from Antigua and Garner from Barbados – the two combined for West Indies and Somerset for almost a decade to create a period of unprecedented success for both teams. The towering Garner, employing those horrid lifters and searing yorkers with devastating effect, was one of several giant fast bowlers from the Caribbean at the time. Richards was, by any standard and in any age, a genius. Together they set West Indies on a run that saw them undefeated in a Test series for 15 years and, in 1984, win a then record 11 Tests in a row.Cricket lovers in England were blessed when the two came together for the best part of a decade at Taunton from 1977. Before then, Somerset had never won a trophy in their history. With Richards and Garner together, they won five trophies in five years. Since their departure, 25 years ago, Somerset have won just two more.There’s one even more one obscure statistic that says a great deal for the pair’s ability to raise their game on the big occasion. In Garner’s limited-overs career – both domestic and international – he claimed five five-wicket hauls, all in finals or knockout games. Three of those instances occurred in Lord’s finals – one a World Cup final – yet in none did Garner win a Man-of-the-Match award. Why? Because Richards plundered centuries of such sublime skill in each that Garner’s excellence was overlooked.West Indies produced many outstanding players in this period, but these two perhaps embody the spirit and the skill that made them such a magnificent team.Waqar Younis and Wasim AkramThere have been many great fast bowling duos: Larwood-Voce, Lindwall-Miller, Trueman-Statham, Ambrose- Walsh, Lillee-Thomson, Donald-Pollock, Garner-Marshall to name but a few. In many ways, arguing that any one pair was better than any other is fatuous. All were superb.But the pair of opening bowlers with the most wickets when bowling in tandem is Waqar and Wasim. In partnership they claimed 476 Test wickets in games when they took the new ball together (Ambrose and Walsh are the only other new-ball bowlers with more than 400 Test wickets when bowling in tandem), with a strike rate of just 46.05 balls per wicket. Highlights included a one-wicket win over Australia in Karachi in 1994, when they took 15 wickets between them, and an eight-wicket win over a strong West Indies side on the same ground in 1990. Their bowling on the tour to England in 1992 was also sensational.Both were blessed with sharp pace, sublime skill and an ability to swing the ball, new or old, in any conditions apparently, and complemented each other with their left-arm, right-arm combination. Waqar boasts, at present, the best strike rate (43.4 balls per wicket) of any bowler with more than 250 Test wickets and the best strike rate of any ODI bowler with 400 wickets (30.5 balls per wicket), while Wasim, with 414 Test wickets and 502 in ODIs might well be the best left-arm fast bowler in the history of the game.

Finally, the moment of truth

Everyone involved in the World Cup final cannot escape the passing thought about how everything that they have done till now – picking up a bat or a ball, their first century, their first five-for – has telescoped into these hours

Sharda Ugra in Mumbai01-Apr-2011. Across India and Sri Lanka, separated by a stretch of water and a well-concealed rivalry, the word carries with it the forceful belief of possibility, shared between men and women, board room and assembly line, students and teachers, cops and crooks. The players, in their hotel rooms next to the Gateway of India, tussle against the idea of tomorrow, constantly reminding themselves to keep everything light: food, conversation, thoughts.In a long, corkscrewing, exhausting World Cup, this suddenly becomes the best of times. Everyone involved in the World Cup final cannot escape the passing thought about how everything that they have done till now – picking up a bat or a ball, their first century, their first five-for – has telescoped into these hours. When it’s done late on Saturday night, the champion will be swept away by adrenaline, the loser by regret.Today, though, before it all begins, they will all feel like winners.Just around noon on Friday, MS Dhoni and Kumar Sangakkara descended from staircases, on either side of the sightscreen at the pavilion end of the Wankhede Stadium, to come together for an official photograph. They will walk down the same staircases for the toss on Saturday, knotted inside, their sang-froid a mere mask. On Friday, though, they were at ease; relaxed; Sri Lankan and Indian, lean and brawny, joking during the photo shoot, together hanging on to an 11kg silver and gold trophy that only one of them will be entitled to lift tomorrow. Maybe even the trophy was relieved; there were rumours it had been detained by Mumbai customs upon arrival.Sangakkara spoke of a state of “controlled excitement” in the Sri Lankan dressing room, but he could have been speaking for everyone. Dhoni, usually glib, and often on auto-pilot with his media-conference replies, did have his Captain Cool cape on, but even he seemed a bit respectful of where he finds himself, “20 or 14 hours before the start of the game.” Like he has always done, he will stay away from the bowlers meeting on Friday night, saying it helps him formulate his own alternative plans, if the bowling begins to fray on the field the next day.He is happy that India have had a short and sharp two-day gap between the semi-finals and the final, saying it “helps you to not think too much.” In the packed media conference room where both captains’ press conferences were held, Dhoni and Sangakkara accepted that the contest had a greater meaning than the cliched “normal match”. No matter what the price of the final tickets or how small the stadium, Dhoni said he knew every Indian would be watching. Sangakkara said victory would bring joy to a troubled nation, remembering those “who had down their lives for our country.”Dhoni reminded a foreign reporter of the truths of Indian cricket, telling him he had been swapping channels and saw footage of celebrations outside his house after the semi-final. “Not to forget that was the very house where in 2007 a few other things also happened, but that’s what happens in India, so it’s better to be at your best,” he said alluding to the attack on his house after India’s last World Cup campaign ended in disappointment.India’s best in this World Cup has slowly gained strength in the knockout rounds in contrast to how comfortably the Sri Lankans have gone. The lack of anxiety en route to the finals has not made Sangakkara anxious though. “It is hard to say which one of them is better for us [winning comfortably or through tough games]. We are happy that we are here. We have had to win games; we didn’t get any walkovers in our journey here. We are pretty confident of the fact that we have been one of the best sides of the tournament.”The rivalry between India and Sri Lanka is neither as old as England-Australia, nor as fervent as India-Pakistan. Its ferocity lies not in its history, nor in the actual contest, but among its fans and the growing animosity among its diaspora. In the past three years, the India v Sri Lanka fixture has been repeated so often that it can leave the most diligent of watchers wondering, in jest, about what on earth could make this an occasion.It was Sangakkara who spelt it out, saying the subcontinent, and the teams that represent it, is the “best place” to play cricket. “No other place can match the buzz, the hype, the excitement around the game. When you play a tournament of this magnitude here, it kind of lifts the entire occasion, makes that occasion a lot more glorious.”ICC chief Haroon Lorgat, in his enthusiasm, may have over-anticipated the moment of possibility, when before India’s quarter-final on March 24, he asked a dumbstruck press corps, “How about this scenario of Sachin Tendulkar scoring his 100th century at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai in the final?” The Sri Lankans will not be amused, but they may be happy to be seen as invisible. When Mahela Jayawardene ran into an acquaintance at the ICC awards six months ago, he was told that his team were one of the strongest contenders for the trophy. He held up his hands and laughed, “Keep it quiet, keep it quiet.”It can be kept quiet no longer. In reply to a question in Sinhala, Sangakkara reminded his countryman that since 1992, the World Cup final had always featured one Asian team. Now there are two, and the comfort in home conditions has played a big role in them getting there. At the same time, India and Sri Lanka deserve credit for their admirable endurance of the public expectation they move around with; something other teams didn’t have to face.South Asia’s World Cup has been everything for everyone. It has dimmed the horrors and failures of 2007, reinvigorated the 50-over game, and kept a six-week marathon around three countries and 13 venues alive. The cricket has been entertaining, the sub-continent has struck one back for the bowlers so much so that an event mournfully advertised as the “batsman’s” World Cup with “par scores above 300” has actually been a gritty contest between bat and ball. Only three times have there been 300-plus first innings scores in games featuring two Test playing nations in this tournament. The Cup’s top ten wicket-takers are equally split between the spinners and the fast bowlers. Still there have so far been 254 sixes and 1850 fours in the tournament.On Friday evening, the sun went into the sea on the west, and Mumbai’s famous local commuter trains clattered away every few minutes to the east of the Wankhede, carrying thousands home to a night of dreaming. Out in the centre, a machine called the Toro Greensmaster rumbled, trimming the outfield to make it faster, and a man carrying a vat full of chemicals hosed over it to prevent the onset of dew.Advertising hoardings were being painted and swept by a broom. In this new-look, newfangled ground, men were still needed to clamber over a 25-foot high bamboo framework that made up the temporary sightscreen for net practice. Of all Indian grounds at the World Cup, it was only in Mumbai that the players could train on either side of the centre wicket.While waiting for their to turn to bat or bowl, both India and Sri Lanka’s players would have looked over at the strip – bare, brown, like a piece of land close to cracking with drought – and thought about their tomorrows. The batsmen on both sides went skyward during practice, trying to marry elevation with distance. They hit the boundary boards, scattered balls into the stands like stones, and looped them over the sightscreens. The bowlers tossed the ball up, lips curling into disdain when the batsman was entrapped into hurrying, miscuing or mistiming the ball into areas that are expected to be manned. If Toro Greensmaster has his way, fielding is not going to be the happiest part of the warm-ups on Saturday.The World Cup doesn’t do those lovely photographs any more, of all the participating teams lined up behind their captains and looking at a photographer high in the sky, be it at Lord’s or Eden Gardens, in front of Sydney Opera House or on a South African ice-breaking naval ship. It is the only time the cricket world can actually stand together, but it doesn’t happen anymore. Tomorrow, symbolically, again they will have a chance.So, when the two umpires shake hands with each other and walk out, they will represent the rest of the cricketing world who have returned home, all defeated, some disappointed, some optimistic. It will be Australian Simon Taufel’s first chance to stand in a World Cup final. His partner Pakistani Aleem Dar will look up to the sky and make a familiar gesture: touch his heart and then the ground. He does this in memory of the daughter he lost when officiating in the 2003 World Cup, a reminder that man comes from and returns to the earth. It is both a remembrance and a reminder that in the manic few hours before a World Cup final, it will help everyone in cricket – those on the field and those watching outside – to always stay grounded.At 9pm, the trains rattled and the floodlights at the Wankhede shut down, one tower at a time. They won’t come on until sunset on Saturday.Tomorrow, then.

Higher honours, big pay day on the cards for Hurricanes hero

A day before the BBL started, Mitch Owen said he wasn’t sure where he’d be batting – or at all – for Hobart Hurricanes this season.After a record-breaking knock to win the competition for his home-town side, Owen, also the top run-scorer for the league, can start to lift his sights higher. The 23-year-old is set to earn life-changing amounts of money in franchise cricket, potentially starting with a replacement deal at the Indian Premier League.Related

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  • 'It's super special, it's a childhood dream' – Owen on Hurricanes' 'surreal' night

Owen’s manager confirmed to ESPNcricinfo that he is available as a replacement player for the IPL, having registered for the auction longlist late last year before failing to make the shortlist. The Pakistan Super League, which virtually runs concurrently with the IPL in April and May, could be another option for him.Owen’s mighty knock of 108 off just 42 balls – the equal-fastest ton in competition history off 39 deliveries – had the sellout crowd chanting his name and won Hobart their first BBL title.”I feel a bit awkward in these situations. I don’t really know how to take it,” Owen said of the adoration. “It’s super special… the most special thing is hearing everyone in the crowd enjoying it. And I’m so grateful, I’m so proud that we could bring this trophy to Tassie.”Owen had played just six matches in the previous two seasons for Hurricanes, for a total of 42 runs. Previously a middle-order hitter, Owen said a decision that he would be batting in the top order came “probably one day, to be honest” out from their tournament opener.Ricky Ponting, Hurricanes’ head of strategy, said he was “amongst that” decision. Declining to elaborate on his role in that move, the Test great happily talked up Owen’s future, saying discussion of him representing Australia in next year’s World Cup was “inevitable”.Mitchell Owen made the equal fastest century in BBL history off 39 balls•Getty Images

“There’s not many players in the world that can do that,” he told AAP of Owen’s heroics in the final. “He’s done it pretty consistently through the tournament… some of his 30s and 40s that he’s got have actually won and set up games for the Hurricanes. And then he ended up getting a hundred in 30-odd balls and the game’s over.”Hurricanes team-mate and 2021 T20 World Cup winner Matthew Wade agreed Owen “would be there or thereabouts” when it came to squad selection for the 2026 tournament.”He can be anything… no stage really worries him too much. It was phenomenal,” Wade told AAP.Owen said he “absolutely” wanted to work towards the squad for the India-Sri Lanka-hosted tournament, which begins in February 2026.However, David Warner suggested such talk was premature. The losing Thunder captain said the Australian team didn’t need a shake-up.”No, no. You’ve got the guys that are there at the moment,” he said. “You can earn your stripes… we can’t be just picking blokes and chopping and changing when the guys that are there have won World Cups.”It will be difficult top order to break into, with Travis Head, Matt Short, Jake Fraser-McGurk and T20 captain Mitch Marsh having claims on those spots.Steven Smith, left out of last year’s underwhelming T20 World Cup campaign, also has to be considered after starring for the Sydney Sixers in the past two seasons when he has played as an opener in between international duties.But Warner was certainly happy to credit Owen with a “phenomenal knock” that meant his side came up short after posting 97 without loss after 10 overs.”We got beat by one player tonight, plain and simple,” he said.0815 GMT – This story was updated to reflect Owen’s availability as an IPL replacement player.

Ben Cutting leaves Brisbane Heat for Sydney Thunder: 'We probably didn't see eye to eye on a few things'

The allrounder has signed a two-year deal with his new club after being an original Heat player

Andrew McGlashan24-Sep-2020

Ben Cutting goes big•Getty Images

Differences of opinion on various issues with the Brisbane Heat was one of the reasons for allrounder Ben Cutting ending a nine-year association with the BBL club to move to the Sydney Thunder on a two-year deal.Although the Heat kept themselves in the hunt towards the end of the 2019-2020 regular season their campaign was studded with a number of poor batting displays, notably consecutive matches against the Adelaide Strikers and Melbourne Renegades when they were bundled out for 100 and 120 – the latter when they had been 0 for 84 after the Powerplay.Cutting said he had been told he would open the batting throughout the season but that did not occur, instead he did it on just two occasions, so coupled with the desire to to spend more time with partner Erin Holland, the TV presenter, who works a lot in Sydney he took it upon himself to seek a new challenge*. Cutting suggested his departure may not be the last significant change to the Heat’s list, although insisted there was no bitterness to his original BBL club.”There’s probably a couple of reasons [for the move], we probably didn’t see eye to eye on a few things,” he said. “It’s a tough one to comment on because there’s been a lot of loyalty both ways for a number of years, but from my end I was told I was opening the batting every single game – that was one of things among a few others. I understand where they are coming from as well, it’s been a couple of lean years so they are looking to make a few changes and I’m sure I’m not the only one.”

The move to the Thunder will enable him to play alongside his best man Usman Khawaja – although his wedding has now been moved three times due to the challenges thrown up this year – and brings him back together with coach Shane Bond who he has previously worked with at the Heat and Mumbai Indians.”It’s playing alongside good people, most of the guys I’ve come across and played a lot of cricket against or with around the world,” he said. “Guys like Callum Ferguson, Chris Green, Usman Khawaja, one of my best mates, then not having to face the Daniel Sams’ slower ball so happy to be on the same team as him.””Shane Bond was a very big factor in my move,” he added. “I know him really well and he knows me – and my game – really well. He knows how to get the best out of me. He’s very diligent, which is what I like, very professional and very diligent but he’s someone who has a lot of fun in coaching as well which is what the Big Bash is all about.”Bond said the all-round skills that Cutting brings – a batting average of 22.16 with a strike-rate of 149.37, plus his pace bowling that has claimed 123 wickets – ticked a lot of boxes for the Thunder.”We were looking to bring in some experience. If you want to be there at the business end you need those experienced players, and we were also looking for players that can bring a unique skillset.”There aren’t too many players in the Big Bash who can come in at six and strike the ball and score as fast as Ben can. He’s the best in the competition at doing that, I think. To have him come across to us to fill that role is massive.””His bowling on our wicket at Sydney Showground Stadium and his fielding is a bonus. He’s just a pro. He always looks after himself and is always prepared. We’ve got a really strong relationship and I think he’ll fit in brilliantly at our club. He’s going to fill a vital role for us.”*4.00pm AEST, September 24: The story was amended to reflect Ben Cutting was referring to last season

موعد والقناة الناقلة لمباراة البرتغال واسكتلندا اليوم في دوري الأمم الأوروبية.. والمعلق

يخوض منتخب البرتغال، مساء اليوم الثلاثاء، مباراة في إطار منافسات بطولة دوري الأمم الأوروبية، وذلك في نسختها الجارية.

ويلتقي منتخب البرتغال مع نظيره منتخب اسكتلندا، في الجولة الرابعة من بطولة دوري الأمم الأوروبية، على ملعب “هامبدن بارك”.

ويحتل منتخب البرتغال حاليًا صدارة المجموعة الأولى، المستوى الأول، برصيد 9 نقاط، محققًا العلامة الكاملة.

في حين أن منتخب اسكتلندا يتذيل المجموعة نفسها، بدون نقاط، حيث لم يفز في أي مباراة. موعد مباراة البرتغال واسكتلندا اليوم في دوري الأمم الأوروبية

تنطلق المباراة في تمام الساعة 9:45 مساءً بتوقيت القاهرة والسعودية. القناة الناقلة لمباراة البرتغال واسكتلندا اليوم في دوري الأمم الأوروبية

تُذاع المباراة عبر قناة beIN Sports HD 6. معلق مباراة البرتغال واسكتلندا اليوم في دوري الأمم الأوروبية

سيعلق نوفل باشي على أحداث المباراة.

ويُمكنكم متابعة أحداث مباريات اليوم لحظة بلحظة من مركز المباريات من هنـــــا.

Erling Haaland in PFA Player of the Year award hunt again – but faces competition from Man City team-mates Phil Foden & Rodri, Arsenal captain Martin Odegaard & Chelsea talisman Cole Palmer

Erling Haaland is in the hunt for back-to-back PFA Player of the Year awards, but faces competition from Phil Foden, Rodri and Martin Odegaard.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

Norwegian striker out to defend crownClub colleagues looking to wrestle it awayGunners, Blues & Villa also representedWHO ARE THE NOMINEES?

Manchester City are well represented on the six-man shortlist for 2023-24 after claiming a historic fourth successive Premier League title. Haaland landed another Golden Boot, Foden thrived in a playmaking role and Rodri remains a destructive influence in the middle of the park.

Odegaard helped to keep Arsenal in contention for a top-flight crown, before falling narrowly short, and will be determined to right those wrongs heading forward – allowing him to follow in the footsteps of fellow Gunners captains Tony Adams and Patrick Vieira by lifting the most sought-after of trophies.

Elsewhere, Cole Palmer has become a talismanic presence for Chelsea – with a stunning debut campaign at Stamford Bridge enjoyed by the England international – while Ollie Watkins remains a regular source of goals for Aston Villa.

All of the above are in the running for the PFA Player of the Year award – which will be handed out on August 20 at a glitzy ceremony in Manchester – and you can find out more about the six contenders below…

AdvertisementGetty ImagesErling Haaland| Club: Manchester City | Nationality: Norway

The prolific Norwegian may have dipped slightly from 36 Premier League goals to 27 in 2023-24, but he finished with another top-scorer prize to his name and a second title. Arguably the most fearsome No.9 in world football, Haaland can look unplayable when performing at the peak of his powers.

GettyPhil Foden | Club: Manchester City | Nationality: England

A two-time PFA Young Player of the Year who is now looking to land the senior prize. Foden enjoyed a career-best campaign last time out, with 27 goals recorded across all competitions. He is, at 24 years of age, the youngest player to win six Premier League titles and is also a key part of England’s long-term plans.

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GettyMartin Odegaard | Club: Arsenal | Nationality: Norway

The Gunners skipper has been recognised by his peers with back-to-back PFA Player of the Year nods. The classy midfielder makes Mikel Arteta’s side tick with his ability to pick a pass and unlock opposition defences, with eight goals and 10 assists added to his tally in 2023-24.

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