Three Premier League stars on Real Madrid's radar as Xabi Alonso demands new centre-back & left-back ahead of his impending arrival as club's new manager

Xabi Alonso has already started preparing for life at Real Madrid, with his demands for two new defensive reinforcements approved by the club.

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  • Alonso to join Madrid at end of the season
  • Demanded Los Blancos sign a centre-back and left-back
  • Club's management approve Leverkusen boss' demands
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    It is now all but confirmed that Alonso will be joining Real Madrid next month, after it was confirmed he'd be leaving his post as Bayer Leverkusen head coach. The Spaniard has already begun preparing for life with Los Blancos, with transfer guru Fabrizio Romano reporting that Madrid management has accepted Alonso's demands to sign a new centre-back and a left-back before the Club World Cup begins in June.

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    Madrid have been overwhelmed by an unrelenting defensive crisis this season, which saw them lose both Dani Carvajal and Eder Militao to ACL injuries. In fact, for the Clasico that was played against Barcelona on May 11, Carlo Ancelotti was without Antonio Rudiger, Ferland Mendy and David Alaba, in addition to Carvajal and Militao.

    Given that Alonso's system, a 3-4-2-1, relies on having three centre-backs, reinforcing the squad with new defenders is a must. According to a report from Madrid have shortlisted three centre-backs – Dean Huijsen, Ibrahima Konate, and Piero Hincapie – as potential signings this summer. After initially cooling interest in Huijsen, Madrid have reportedly reignited their pursuit of the Bournemouth sensation, especially after deeming William Saliba's €100 million (ÂŁ86m/$113m) price tag too expensive.

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    Madrid will be arriving at the Club World Cup with Carvajal, who's nearing full recovery, and new signing Trent Alexander-Arnold covering the right-back spot. However, the left side of the defence needs bolstering. Currently, Madrid have Mendy and Fran Garcia as options for that area, with Eduardo Camavinga occasionally operating in a makeshift role.

    The futures of both Garcia and Mendy are uncertain, even though the latter reportedly signed a renewal last summer. Madrid have already been linked with Huijsen's partner in Milos Kerkez, with club scouts attending Bournemouth's game against Arsenal earlier this month to further evaluate the left-back's potential.

    Other names such as Benfica's Alvaro Carreras, AC Milan's Theo Hernandez, and Barcelona-linked Alejandro Grimaldo have also been put forward by the Spanish media.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR REAL MADRID?

    The 4-3 loss against Barcelona on Sunday means that Ancelotti's men likely squandered their final chance of defending their Liga crown. While Madrid are still mathematically alive in the title race, Barcelona need just one more win from their remaining three games to regain the bragging rights in Spain. The 36-time league winners will next face Mallorca on Wednesday, May 14.

Alejandro Garnacho to leave Man Utd! Argentina star seeks summer exit after Europa League final anger as Chelsea, Napoli and PL rivals line up moves

Alejandro Garnacho appears to be on his way out of Manchester United this summer amid his disappointment after their Europa League final defeat.

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Garnacho heading for Old Trafford exitUpset after he was benched for UEL finalSet for meeting with United soonFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

The Argentina international's representatives have scheduled a meeting with the club to discuss a summer move, reports. Garnacho was vocal about his disappointment at being dropped to the bench for United's 1-0 deafeat in the Europa League final, despite starting 10 of their previous 14 games in the competition and registering a goal and four assists.

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Garnacho, who caused problems for Spurs after coming off the bench for the last 20 minutes, hinted he could leave the club in his post-match interview and has been left disappointed by coach Ruben Amorim's handling of the situation around the final. United, the report adds, are open to selling the 20-year-old if a good enough offer comes along in the next transfer window.

DID YOU KNOW?

Garnacho was the subject of interest from Napoli and Chelsea in January and the player's entourage believe he will also receive interest from elsewhere in the Premier League. The Italian side are reportedly set to return for the winger this summer, with the Red Devils said to be willing to let him go for around €45 million (£37m/$51m).

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Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT FOR GARNACHO?

The attacker's representatives are set to meet with United in the coming days, but first they will face Aston Villa on Sunday in their last game of the season. It remains to be seen if Garnacho will get a game after his comments on Wednesday.

Qalandars earn massive win courtesy Fakhar Zaman 96 and Shaheen Shah Afridi five-for

Peshawar Zalmi put up spirited batting performance but target of 242 proves too stiff for Babar Azam’s side

ESPNcricinfo staff26-Feb-2023Gaddafi Stadium witnessed a clinic in six hitting on Sunday, as the home side Lahore Qalandars pumped 18 sixes while posting 241 for 3, the season’s highest batting total. After that, Shaheen Shah Afridi ran through the Peshawar Zalmi batting unit to finish with 5 for 40, thereby ensuring a 40-run win for Qalandars in a high-scoring mid-table tussle.The game was set up by Qalandars’ top order, with Abdullah Shafique (75) and Fakhar Zaman (96) putting on 120 in 10.3 overs. Shafique was the majority contributor in that partnership, thumping five fours and five sixes in his 41-ball innings. Once he fell, Fakhar took over proceedings, mauling 10 sixes and three fours while charging towards a third T20 century. However, he fell four short of the landmark when he mistimed a drive to cover.With Fakhar gone, Zalmi had the opportunity to bring Qalandars’ run-rate down in the slog overs. But No. 4 Sam Billings did not let that happen, crunching 47 runs in 23 balls to leave Zalmi chasing an imposing 242. The 18 sixes struck by Qalandars also set a PSL record while their total was the third-highest in the competition’s all-time list.The Zalmi chase began terribly with Mohammad Haris and Babar Azam falling prey to Shaheen’s new-ball spell. However, half-centuries from Saim Ayub (51) and Tom Kohler-Cadmore (55) in quick time on a batting-friendly surface kept Zalmi’s run-rate high, taking the side to 119 for 2 in 10 overs. They played a big part in Rashid Khan going for 1 for 49 in his four overs, his worst spell in PSL history.But both batters fell in the space of six deliveries and the experienced middle order could not come to the fore. Bhanuka Rajapaksa, James Neesham and Rovman Powell produced short-lived cameos but the side needed more runs from them with the target so stiff.Shaheen returned in his second spell and capitalised on the Zalmi batters looking for the big shots. He picked off Saad Masood, Wahab Riaz and Neesham with the older ball – his fifth five-for in T20s – to take the sting out of the contest, and Zalmi fell well short of the target despite a spirited batting performance, finishing on 201 for 9.Overall, it was a day to forget for bowlers, conceding 441 runs in 40 overs. Zalmi’s Arshad Iqbal (0 for 28) and the Qalandars pair of Zaman Khan (2 for 28) and Haris Rauf (1 for 38) were the only three bowlers to finish with single-digit bowling economies.

'Nice to blow the cobwebs out', says Lance Morris after fired-up show on day one of Shield final

His 2 for 52 set the tone for Western Australia reducing Victoria to 194 for 8 on the opening day of the finale

Tristan Lavalette23-Mar-2023

File photo: Lance Morris’ pace proved troublesome for Victoria•Getty Images

After almost two months on the sidelines, having been overlooked during Australia’s Test tour of India, speedster Lance Morris sparked a sedate opening day of the Sheffield Shield final between Western Australia and Victoria with trademark fiery quick bowling.Introduced in the eighth over, a fired-up Morris started with a nasty bouncer aimed at the body of dogged opener Ashley Chandrasinghe who wisely swayed out of the way.Even though the renowned pace-friendly WACA surface, which has been a minefield for most of this season, was somewhat subdued, Morris made his presence felt with sharp bowling that appeared too hot to handle for 21-year-old Chandrasinghe.He then engaged in a riveting battle with former Test opener Marcus Harris, who relishes the big stage having hit three tons in four previous finals. Morris dismissed Harris in his second over caught at second slip only to have overstepped before snaring him lbw two balls later.Used in short bursts, bowling from the Lillee-Marsh end with the aid of the famed ‘Freo doctor’ seabreeze, Morris finished with 2 for 52 from 18 overs.He also claimed wicketkeeper-batter Sam Harper later in the day to cap a successful return in his first match since the BBL in late January.Morris’ last red-ball game was against Queensland at the Gabba in early December before his elevation into Australia’s Test squad against West Indies for the second Test in Adelaide.”Certainly felt like it’s been two months, that’s for sure. A little bit of rust. Nice to blow the cobwebs out,” Morris said after the day’s play with Victoria reaching stumps at 8 for 194 in their first innings.Morris was locked in an absorbing battle with a gutsy Chandrasinghe, who repeatedly stonewalled in a 266-ball innings to bat through the day and finish 46 not out.He bowled one thunderous delivery that went over Chandrasinghe’s head though was left frustrated when he had the left-handed batter caught behind just before tea but it was ruled a no ball.Morris finished with six front no balls due in some part to technical changes to his run-up.”I’ve been working on technical stuff with run-ups… thrown me off. [I need to] find a way around it, will look to do that tomorrow,” Morris said. “It could have been a better day, but overall we shot ourselves in the foot…probably on my part.”Even though he has yet to crack a Test debut, Morris has soaked in a wealth of knowledge being around Australia’s stock of star-studded quicks.”Leading into the summer, never thought I would be near that [Test] level,” he said. “To be able to get knowledge off them and just watch them go about their business…is a huge learning experience.”Morris has been bandied around as a possible Mumbai Indians replacement for injured WA teammate Jhye Richardson. While hosing down those reports, Morris did say that he was eyeing a County deal in the U.K. ahead of Australia’s Ashes tour.That’s all down the track as Morris ,right now, remains focused on helping WA secure a historic treble of domestic titles for the second straight season.”[The wicket’s a] touch slow. If we can bowl them out for around 200, I think we’ll be pretty happy,” he said.

World Cup hopes on the line for Sri Lanka against IPL-weakened New Zealand

Big picture: Test thrills augur well

Despite the eventual 2-0 scoreline in favour of the hosts, it’s safe to say Sri Lanka might have surprised a fair few folks that tuned into the Tests in Christchurch and Wellington – okay, maybe not so much the latter, but certainly over the course of that epic first Test.In that game, the visitors, in pursuit of an unlikely World Test Championship berth, ran the defending WTC champions as close as pretty much anyone could have imagined. And in the process garnered some well-deserved respect from the wider cricketing world.That, though, was the Sri Lankan red-ball side, one propelled not through individual exceptionalism but an almost New Zealand-esque sense of collectivism. And while their white-ball outings have also seen a marked improvement in recent times, culminating in a memorable Asia Cup T20 victory last year, their ODI unit has largely underwhelmed.Since the start of the ODI World Cup Super League, Sri Lanka have lost away to West Indies, Bangladesh and England, while their home record has been marginally better, losing to India, beating South Africa and, most recently, drawing against Afghanistan.The ODI side’s nadir was arguably reached earlier this year during a 3-0 drubbing in India – a particularly tough pill to swallow in a World Cup year in the same country, especially as the T20I series that preceded had seen them take the hosts to series decider. While any silver linings in Sri Lanka’s recent one-day history might seem like wizard-level straw-clutching, the record will nevertheless also show a 3-2 series win at home to Australia last year – so, yeah, there is that.Which brings us to the present, where for Sri Lanka to have any hopes of automatic qualification for the World Cup later this year they need to complete a whitewash of New Zealand in the week or so ahead – and even then, they’re heavily dependent on South Africa fluffing their lines in a series against Netherlands.What they might have going for them is that the hosts won’t exactly be at full strength. With World Cup qualification secured, and conditions in India unlikely to be anything like what the likes of Auckland, Christchurch and Hamilton have to offer, New Zealand have given clearance for no less than nine ODI regulars to play in the IPL.Sri Lanka meanwhile have a relatively settled unit and, save for the absence of Dushmantha Chameera, will likely be able to put out their strongest XI. On paper at least they look the stronger side.

Form guide

(completed matches, most recent first)New Zealand: WWWWW
Sri Lanka: LLLWL

In the spotlight: Matt Henry and Angelo Mathews

With 65 ODIs to his name, in terms of experience Matt Henry comfortably eclipses the combined match tally of Blair Tickner (9), Henry Shipley (3) and the uncapped Ben Lister – New Zealand’s other seam bowling options for this series – while even the addition of Daryll Mitchell (19) to the list doesn’t help all that much. Lockie Ferguson’s 53 caps certainly would have evened the scales, but even without his recently picked-up hamstring strain, he was due to play only the first ODI before jetting off to the IPL. Henry is coming in on the back of an excellent Test outing against Sri Lanka, and if this youthful New Zealand outfit are to maintain their excellent home record, Henry will have a key role to play in it.Angelo Mathews hasn’t turned out for a Sri Lankan white-ball side since March 2021, and for much of that time a recall could have been categorised under hopeful at best. But if T20 cricket is a young man’s game, well, ODI cricket might still have room for some greying heads, even if Mathews’s recall at 35 in a World Cup year certainly does scream ‘last dance’. An average of 41.67 and nearly 6,000 runs, of course, is nothing to be scoffed at – not to mention his most recent LPL stint where he played the role of finisher in impressive fashion. Sri Lanka will need him to call on all of that vast experience if they are to have any chance at securing automatic qualification.

Pitch and conditions: Bright conditions in prospect

Eden Park hasn’t had much ODI cricket of late, but the last two games have seen 300-plus chased down and 273 defended. The pitch has also been known to aid spin. Weather is expected to be nice and sunny.

Team news: Bowes and Ravindra to debut

On the eve of the match, New Zealand captain Tom Latham announced that Chad Bowes and Rachin Ravindra would make their ODI debuts. He said, however, that the team hadn’t yet finalised their full XI, and would make a decision on the bowling attack keeping workloads in mind.New Zealand (probable) XI: 1 Finn Allen, 2 Chad Bowes, 3 Will Young, 4 Daryl Mitchell, 5 Tom Latham (wk), 6 Glenn Phillips, 7 Rachin Ravindra, 8 Blair Tickner/Ben Lister, 9 Henry Shipley/Lockie Ferguson, 10 Matt Henry, 11 Ish SodhiMost of Sri Lanka’s XI picks itself but a few key areas remain up for grabs. At the top of the order Nuwanidu Fernando is the likely option alongside Pathum Nissanka. Then with five seamers in the squad, Sri Lanka certainly have options, with allrounder Chamika Karunaratne also able come in if Sri Lanka want an additional batter lower down.Sri Lanka (probable) XI: 1 Pathum Nissanka, 2 Nuwanidu Fernando, 3 Kusal Mendis (wk), 4 Charith Asalanka, 5 Angelo Mathews, 6 Dhananjaya De Silva, 7 Dasun Shanaka (capt.), 8 Wanindu Hasaranga, 9 Lahiru Kumara, 10 Kasun Rajitha, 11 Maheesh Theekshana/Matheesha Pathirana

Stats and trivia

  • Sri Lanka last won an ODI series in New Zealand in 2001 (4-1). Since then they’ve won six of 23 completed ODIs in New Zealand.
  • Angelo Mathews needs 165 runs to score 6,000 ODI runs. He will become the ninth Sri Lankan to do so.
  • Since the 2019 World Cup New Zealand have won seven of 10 ODI series home and away.

March 24, GMT 0330 The preview was updated with the news that Bowes and Ravindra would debut for New Zealand.

Grace Scrivens leads march of Under-19 players in latest Women's Hundred signings

Grace Scrivens, England Under-19 captain, has been retained by London Spirit for this year’s Women’s Hundred, with several of the Under-19 team that recently reached the World Cup final in South Africa also signed for their maiden campaigns.A total of 26 players have been picked up in the open market, following the inaugural Women’s Draft, which took place in March.And Scrivens – who was one of the stand-out players in South Africa with 293 runs and nine wickets across England’s seven games – will once again be heading for Lord’s, where she’ll be captained by her senior counterpart, Heather Knight, when this year’s Hundred begins in August.”I’m delighted to be back,” Scrivens said. “Playing at Lord’s in front of such a big crowd was so exciting last season and I can’t wait to do it again.”Ryana MacDonald-Gay (Oval Invincibles), Liberty Heap (Manchester Originals), Josie Groves and Alexa Stonehouse (both Trent Rockets) are among the other Under-19 players to be picked up for the tournament.”I’m happy to see a lot of the Under-19 team being announced,” Scrivens added. “We really enjoyed the World Cup campaign and it’s great to see everyone continuing their professional progression in a world class competition like The Hundred.”Birmingham Phoenix have picked up a trio of non-England players, in Abtaha Maqsood (Scotland), Sterre Kalis (Netherlands) and Erin Burns (Australia).Other notable signings include the USA’s Tara Norris, a breakout star of the inaugural WPL, who has also joined London Spirit, while Georgia Adams Southern Vipers’ captain, returns to her original team, Southern Brave.

Full list of signings

Birmingham Phoenix: Abtaha Maqsood, Erin Burns, Chloe Brewer, Sterre Kalis
London Spirit: Grace Scrivens, Tara Norris, Niamh Holland
Manchester Originals: Liberty Heap, Phoebe Graham, Fi Morris
Northern Superchargers: Marie Kelly, Aylish Cranstone, Phoebe Franklin
Oval Invincibles: Eva Gray, Ryana MacDonald-Gay, Kira Chathli
Southern Brave: Georgia Adams, Rhianna Southby, Danielle Gregory
Trent Rockets: Josie Groves, Emma Jones, Naomi Dattani, Alexa Stonehouse
Welsh Fire: Alex Griffiths, Claire Nicholas, Sarah Bryce

Australia survive a staggering 155 from Stokes to take 2-0 Ashes lead

The visitors had been in control of the Lord’s Test for long periods but then everything changed on the final day

Andrew McGlashan02-Jul-2023

Ben Stokes heartbroken, Josh Hazlewood jubilant•Getty Images

Australia survived an anger-fuelled and astonishing century from Ben Stokes, ignited by the controversial stumping of Jonny Bairstow, to take a 43-run victory at Lord’s and hold a 2-0 lead in the Ashes.What was a hard-fought but reasonably sedate final day, erupted into controversy and raw emotion when Bairstow wandered out of his crease before over had been called having avoided a bouncer from Cameron Green in the 52nd over with Alex Carey then throwing down the stumps. Australia appealed and the third umpire upheld the decision with Bairstow well out of his ground.

In scenes unlike any witnessed at this ground, even in its long history of epic matches, the game was then played out in a febrile atmosphere where Australia were jeered endlessly by a full final-day crowd and MCC members had to reminded about their behaviour after incidents when the players left the field for lunch.When Bairstow was dismissed, England needed 178. Stokes then unleashed an assault on Australia’s attack, adding 108 in 21 overs with Stuart Broad, with an innings that included nine sixes. He was given a life on 114 when Steven Smith spilled a chance at deep square leg. This was Headingly 2019 on steroids, if that’s possible. Australia were rattled; England got to a point where they looked favourites.But straight after the afternoon drinks break Stokes top-edged Josh Hazlewood into the off side with 70 runs still needed. It was too much for the lower order who succumbed to the short ball, both Ollie Robinson and Broad hooking into the deep. Josh Tongue and James Anderson hung on for a while, briefly teasing the outlandish possibility of a final twist, before Mitchell Starc got one at leg stump as Tongue gave himself room.Australia celebrate a win at Lord’s•Getty Images

England had started the fifth day needing a distant 257 but Stokes and Ben Duckett made solid progress as they built a fifth-wicket stand of 132. When play began, all the talk was still of Duckett’s reprieve the night before to Starc’s catch at fine leg – if only everyone knew what was to come.Stokes went to his first half-century since the Old Trafford Test against South Africa last year and Duckett, for the second time in the match, was approaching three-figures when he top-edged a chance to Carey who caught it brilliantly, one handed above his head, to continue a fine series behind the stumps. However, his main part in the drama was soon to arrive.Five overs later, mayhem ensued. As he so often does, Bairstow let a ball through to the keeper, tapped his back foot quickly into the crease and immediately walked out of his ground. The ball had barely reached Carey, who gathered and under-armed at the stumps in one motion. Australia immediately celebrated as Stokes and Bairstow converged on the umpires. The third umpire Marais Erasmus deemed the ball not to have been dead and Pat Cummins saw no reason to withdraw the appeal.When Broad joined Stokes in the middle, England’s anger was clear. Broad was in the face of Australia’s fielders from the moment he took guard, while Stokes was obviously fuming but channelled his emotions into one of the most awe-inspiring displays of ball-striking Lord’s has seen.Jonny Bairstow and Ben Stokes argue with Australians•AFP/Getty Images

He tore into Green with three boundaries in an over through the leg side, then in Green’s next over went further with a trio of consecutive sixes, the second of them palmed over the rope by Starc at long leg. He reached his century from 142 balls with the third of them and there was barely a celebration, just a brief raise of the bat in acknowledgement.The fifty partnership came up in 4.4 overs moments before the players took lunch. Words were exchanged between Broad and David Warner as they walked off the pitch, while footage soon emerged of MCC members in the Long Room confronting Australia’s players. It was later claimed by Cricket Australia that physical contact was made and MCC apologised.Would the 40-minute break take the sting out the situation? The second ball of the afternoon session was launched over long-on by Stokes and two deliveries later he was spilled by a sprawling Smith who could not gather the top edge. By and large, Stokes tried to farm the strike although occasionally was happy to give Broad a few balls to face, and he joined in the heady atmosphere by pulling Hazlewood through the leg side to end an over where Stokes had already taken two further sixes.Hazlewood was withdrawn from the attack after a three-over spell which cost 30 as memories of Headingley came flooding back at every turn. Cummins had no frontline spin to turn to after Nathan Lyon’s calf injury on the second day and opted not to throw to ball to Travis Head.Stokes took another brace of sixes over the leg side, this time from Starc, before a summit meeting between Australia’s senior players saw Green return to the attack and he bowled two good overs which cost just three.By now, Australia had nine fielders on the fence to Stokes and the boundaries dried up. Nine runs came in six overs. Hazlewood returned, Stokes swiped across the line and Carey settled under the catch. Australian fielders ran from all corners of the ground. Cummins and Smith gave Stokes an appreciative tap on the back. They had stopped him in the nick of time. The Ashes were within their grasp but the events of the final day at Lord’s are likely to reverberate across both nations for a long time to come.

PCB withdraws Butt's name as selection consultant day after appointment

Butt’s appointment, his first position at the PCB since being banned for spot-fixing, came in for heavy criticism

Danyal Rasool02-Dec-2023Salman Butt has withdrawn as the consultant to chief selector Wahab Riaz a day after he was appointed to the position. Pakistan chief selector Wahab called a press conference to say Butt’s name was being withdrawn from the consultancy panel with immediate effect.Wahab accused the media of looking to besmirch the PCB’s name following Butt’s nomination to the advisory panel. He said he had been accused of giving Butt, known to be a close friend of Wahab, preferential treatment, and that he wanted to shield himself against those allegations. Saying his top priority was maintaining the reputation of the PCB and his own integrity, he confirmed Butt would now not be involved with team selection “in any capacity”.On Friday, Butt was appointed as a consultant member alongside Kamran Akmal and Rao Iftikhar Anjum “with immediate effect”, and they would be advising Wahab in selecting Pakistan’s team for the five-match series against New Zealand. The selection came in for heavy criticism for a number of reasons, including the provincial composition of the panel. All three members are from Punjab, historically the most influential and dominant region in Pakistan cricket. With Wahab also currently holding a government ministry in the Punjab government, the board instantly came in for allegations of favouritism.But it was Butt’s appointment that caused the greatest uproar. It was the first time Butt was handed a position at the PCB in any capacity since being banned for spot-fixing in 2010. He played domestic cricket and the PSL after returning from his ban, and has taken up a role as an analyst for various media outlets.Related

  • Salman Butt, Kamran Akmal and Rao Iftikhar to assist chief selector Wahab Riaz

But ESPNcricinfo understands Butt’s appointment was met with fierce internal resistance within the PCB too, with at least one employee said to be uncomfortable with it to the extent they threatened to resign. With criticism mounting across the board, Wahab convened a hastily arranged press conference on Saturday evening, withdrawing Butt’s name from the panel.Wahab said a replacement would be announced shortly, pointedly saying he would be from Karachi. Wahab also said Asad Shafiq is likely to be appointed to that position in due course.While Butt was the most high-profile appointment, he was not the only member of that panel to be wholly free from controversy. While Butt was banned and has served time for his role in the 2010 scandal, both Wahab and Akmal were questioned in and around that same episode. Akmal was sent a notice by the ICC after the T20 World Cup in 2010 – much before the spot-fixing incident broke out that year – though he was later cleared to be selected by Pakistan. Akmal did not play another Test after the episode at Lord’s, though he did feature in Pakistan’s white-ball sides.Wahab was also questioned by Scotland Yard in the immediate aftermath of the Lord’s Test that year, but was never charged with any offence. He was appointed the new chief selector of the senior men’s team two weeks back after Inzamam-ul-Haq had stepped down from his position in the wake of conflict-of-interest allegations.

RCB spinners and Perry stun Mumbai to seal berth in WPL 2024 final

Sobhana defended 12 runs in the final over to seal RCB’s final spot against Delhi Capitals

Srinidhi Ramanujam15-Mar-20243:23

Takeaways: Gutsy RCB show why you never say never

Royal Challengers Bangalore stormed into the WPL final for the first time after beating defending champions Mumbai Indians by five runs in Friday’s Eliminator in Delhi. After Ellyse Perry’s magnificent 66 propelled RCB to 135 for 6, a calm and clinical bowling display – especially at the death – knocked Mumbai out.The low-scoring, momentum-shifting game appeared to be in Mumbai’s grasp when they needed 20 runs in three overs with seven wickets remaining. However, RCB’s spin trio of Shreyanka Patil, Sophie Molineux and Asha Sobhana dented Mumbai at a crucial time by plugging the runs and picking up three wickets.When the equation came down to 12 runs off six balls, the uncapped Asha then held her nerve and bowled a boundary-less final over to put RCB in the final against Delhi Capitals.Related

How Minnu Mani overcame adversity to make her mark in the WPL

The rise of captain Smriti Mandhana

Harmanpreet: 'Batters couldn't hold nerve after my wicket'

Mumbai make early inroads with ballEven though Mumbai started with a 14-run first over by Shabnim Ismail, they returned strongly to take three RCB wickets in an action-packed powerplay. It began with some drama in the opening over when Sophie Devine got an inside edge onto the stumps, but the bails refused to budge. The next over, bowled by Hayley Matthews, began with Smriti Mandhana lofting one over mid-off for her second boundary. But Matthews was back in the contest soon, knocking off Devine with a length ball that drifted away from the right-hand batter after she played the wrong line.Harmanpreet Kaur then brought in Nat Sciver-Brunt, and it worked. She struck with her second ball as Mandhana miscued a length delivery pitched outside off to deep cover. With the right-hand batter Disha Kasat in at No. 4, Harmanpreet called on left-arm spinner Saika Ishaque instead of continuing with the offspinner Matthews. Ishaque understood the assignment and dismissed Kasat, who after six dot balls tried to manufacture a lofted stroke only to be caught at cover point. RCB slipped from 20 for no loss to end the powerplay at 34 for 3.Ellyse Perry helped RCB get to a respectable 135•BCCI

Perry lifts RCB, againRicha Ghosh struggled during her 19-ball 14, and when she was dismissed in the 10th over by Matthews, RCB were reeling at 49 for 4. However, Perry was unfazed by the wickets falling. She picked up lengths early, accelerated when required and played a calculative knock. The Mumbai bowlers didn’t offer many loose deliveries, but even then, the orange-cap holder found a way to score.After patiently playing out 21 deliveries to get to 17, she broke free when Vastrakar went short and smashed her over deep midwicket for six. After stitching a run-a-ball stand of 35 with Molineux (11 off 17) for the fifth wicket, Perry upped the rate with Wareham (18* off 10) and played as many balls as possible at the death overs. Perry and Wareham put on 42 off just 26, with RCB scoring 51 runs in the last five overs.Perry eventually moved to 50 off 40 deliveries in Ismail’s final over and 17th of the innings after smashing the seamer for a couple of fours. She then hit Amelia Kerr for two more boundaries in the 18th. In her 50-ball stay, Perry hit eight fours and a six but was out in the deep off Ishaque in the final over.Mumbai’s cautious startThe target seemed below par but Mumbai lost Matthews early for 15 when Patil dismissed her in the fourth over. Mumbai played cautiously after that dismissal, and wanted to see out the powerplay without another wicket. RCB also exerted pressure by bowling dot balls on a pitch where the ball was turning and sticking to the surface. At the end of six overs, Mumbai had huffed and puffed to 37 for 1.Soon after, Yastika Bhatia, who was back in the XI after missing the previous game due to illness, was bowled by Perry for a 27-ball 19. A few overs later, Sciver-Brunt’s cameo of 23 was ended by Wareham when she smashed the stumps. At the end of 11 overs, the equation came down to 67 runs from 54 balls.Harmanpreet-Kerr put on fifty standDespite their slowish start, Mumbai didn’t need to press the panic button since Harmanpreet and Kerr were still there. They aimed to keep getting the singles and finding the odd boundary per over. Molineux and Patil made run-scoring tough for the Mumbai pair but they found ways to ease the pressure. Harmanpreet, who was on 21 off 22 at one point, smashed Perry for two fours in the partnership while Kerr also went hard on Wareham for two fours. The duo shared a 52-run stand in 44 balls.Asha Sobhana stunned Mumbai Indians in the last over•BCCI

RCB’s knockout punchWith 18 balls left, Mumbai needed only 20 more But the match-changing 18th over from Patil was to follow. After Ghosh missed a massive stumping chance to dismiss Harmanpreet with the first ball, Patil forced Harmapreet to step out again off her final delivery but this time she holed out to long-on for 33.Molineux bowled the penultimate over with Mumbai needing 16 off 12. She mixed up her lengths and bowled from both sides of the wicket. She dismissed S Sajana off the fifth ball when she skipped down and missed a wild swing. Ghosh made no mistake this time behind the stumps and left 12 for the final over.With two right-hand batters, Kerr and Vastrakar, at the crease, Mandhana handed the ball to legspinner Asha ahead of Devine and Renuka Singh. She conceded only four runs off the first three balls and also got the wicket of Vastrakar. Eventually, Kerr needed a six off the final ball to take the game into a super over, but all she managed was a miscued shot for one.

Football Governance Act becomes law in historic moment as Prime Minister Keir Starmer pledges a 'fairer future for the game we all love'

Prime Minister Keir Starmer has promised a "fairer future" for English football after a bill to usher in an independent football regulator became law.

  • Football Government Act becomes law
  • Independent football regulator in English football
  • Starmer promises a "fairer future" for the sport
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The Football Governance Act received 'Royal Assent' on Monday, which means it has passed into law and establishes the regulator to oversee the men's game from the Premier League, right down to League Two. The Act will grant power to a body that is independent from government and footballing authorities, with PM Starmer saying this will help protect the "game we all love".

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    WHAT STARMER SAID

    Starmer said: "This is a proud and defining moment for English football. As someone who has loved the game all my life, I know just how deeply it runs through our communities. It’s where memories are made, and generations come together. Our landmark Football Governance Act delivers on the promise we made to fans. It will protect the clubs they cherish, and the vital role they play in our economy. Through our Plan for Change, we are ushering in a stronger, fairer future for the game we all love."

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    The regulator will be launched later this year, and its purpose is to improve financial sustainability across the top five leagues of English football, while also stopping clubs from joining breakaway competitions like a European Super League. While the Premier League itself has been critical of the need for a regulator, this initially sprouted out from a fan-led review, and now the Labour government has passed it into law in an historic moment for football.

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    WHAT NEXT?

    In addition to launching it later this year, the government have said the process of appointing a senior leadership team for the Independent Football Regulator (IFR) is ongoing, with the announcement of an interim CEO and board 'expected shortly'.

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