T20 World Cup: Five-wicket Hosein shines as Windies thrash record-low Uganda

T20 World Cup: Five-wicket Hosein shines as Windies thrash record-low Uganda
West Indies’ Akeal Hosein, left, celebrates with teammates after their 134-run victory over Uganda during an ICC Men’s T20 World Cup cricket match at Guyana National Stadium in Providence, Guyana on June 8, 2024. (AP)
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Updated 09 June 2024
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T20 World Cup: Five-wicket Hosein shines as Windies thrash record-low Uganda

T20 World Cup: Five-wicket Hosein shines as Windies thrash record-low Uganda
  • World Cup debutants looked completely out of their depth in being routed for 39 off 12 overs
  • West Indies’ second win in as many matches pulls them level at the top of the table on points with Afghanistan

PROVIDENCE, Guyana: Left-arm spinner Akeal Hosein’s career-best figures of five for 11 decimated an inept Ugandan batting line-up as the West Indies romped to a 134-run victory in a Group C match of the T20 World Cup at the Guyana National Stadium on Saturday.
Set a daunting target after the tournament co-hosts posted 173 for five batting first, the World Cup debutants looked completely out of their depth in being routed for 39 off 12 overs.
The score equalled the record of the Netherlands against Sri Lanka at the 2014 tournament for the lowest innings total in the T20 World Cup.
West Indies’ second win in as many matches pulls them level at the top of the table on points with Afghanistan although the Afghans remain in first position by virtue of a better net run-rate.
Now regularly entrusted with the responsibility of opening the bowling for the Caribbean team, Hosein felt the spectacular success on the night was just reward for continuous hard work and improvement.
“I needed this. In the nets and in the previous series we’ve played I felt the ball was coming out nicely but I just wasn’t getting the rewards,” he said after collecting the “Man of the Match” award.
“It’s a lot of hard work, especially when you start getting success. The way the game is moving, guys are going to study and come up with different plans, so you have to keep working to stay one step ahead of them every time.”
Just four days after a historic victory over Papua New Guinea, the Africans were made acutely aware of the yawning gap in class in the batting department, even if their bowlers still emerged from the match with considerable credit.
Opener Johnson Charles led the West Indies batting effort with a top score of 44 off 42 balls (four fours, two sixes), yet none in the celebrated power-hitting middle-order were able to cut loose.
Captain Brian Masaba earned the two important wickets of Nicholas Pooran and opposite number Rovman Powell with his wrist-spinners, while seamers Cosmas Kyewuta and Juma Miyagi impressed with their pace and accuracy.
It was left to Andre Russell with a 17-ball unbeaten 30 (six fours) to the West Indies innings late acceleration.
“It’s a very steep learning curve for us, especially in the batting department and we have to learn from this experience and understand what we need to do to keep ourselves in the game,” said Masaba in assessing the overall effort of his team.
“It’s a huge challenge (this World Cup debut) but it’s something we’re enjoying and we understand if we are going to get better we need to be playing against opposition like this a bit more and over time we will be able to narrow the gap.”
For West Indies captain Rovman Powell, the improvement from a scrappy opening victory over PNG nearly a week earlier was particularly pleasing.
“That last game we were a little bit flat so coming into this game we just wanted to improve as a team and I think we’re up to 70-80 percent now and it’s good to see guys getting performances under their belts because moving forward it’s going to get tougher,” he noted.
“We have been playing good cricket as a team for the last 12 months or so it’s just for us to continue to improve because we understand the conditions and cricket isn’t easy in the Caribbean.”


Stephen Curry to miss at least two games for Warriors with left ankle injury

Stephen Curry to miss at least two games for Warriors with left ankle injury
Updated 29 October 2024
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Stephen Curry to miss at least two games for Warriors with left ankle injury

Stephen Curry to miss at least two games for Warriors with left ankle injury

SAN FRANCISCO: Stephen Curry will miss at least the next two games for the Golden State Warriors nursing an injured ankle that he hurt in a loss to the Los Angeles Clippers on Sunday night.

Curry had an MRI exam after the game and it showed no structural damage and revealed a left peroneal strain. The team said he would be reevaluated Friday.

Golden State plays consecutive home games Tuesday and Wednesday against the New Orleans Pelicans. Their next game after Curry is examined again is Saturday at Houston.

Curry exited for good with 7:55 remaining in the fourth quarter of a 112-104 defeat.

Curry had briefly returned to the game with 8:08 to play and was along the key being defended by Kris Dunn when he cut away from Dunn toward the baseline and reinjured the ankle when it appeared to roll outward. It happened near the end of Golden State’s bench and he limped into the tunnel that goes to the locker room.

It was at the 2:43 mark of the third quarter when Curry initially hobbled to the bench and sat the remainder of the period.

The two-time MVP and NBA all-time 3-point leader finished with 18 points, six assists and four rebounds, shooting 6 for 11 with four 3-pointers.

 


FIFA to host talks on player welfare with unions, clubs, leagues invited on Arsene Wenger-led panel

FIFA to host talks on player welfare with unions, clubs, leagues invited on Arsene Wenger-led panel
Updated 29 October 2024
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FIFA to host talks on player welfare with unions, clubs, leagues invited on Arsene Wenger-led panel

FIFA to host talks on player welfare with unions, clubs, leagues invited on Arsene Wenger-led panel

ZURICH: FIFA is ready to host talks led by Arsene Wenger on improving player welfare that could weigh limiting the number of games they play in a congested calendar and mandating off-season breaks.

FIFA said Monday a Wenger-led task force “will convene in the coming weeks” and include delegates from global players’ union FIFPRO, clubs and domestic leagues, plus national federations. Those groups previously had seats on a committee of stakeholders that FIFA shut down in 2021.

The new panel’s scope will include “operational, medical, regulatory and legal perspectives,” FIFA said, without specifying a timetable or path to making decisions.

The consultation will start with FIFA under increasing legal pressure to listen more to stakeholders, including a formal complaint to the European Commission in Brussels this month by union and league officials.

That filing cited European competition law in how FIFA has expanded or added new men’s competitions that increase the workload for elite players that has pushed some to talk of going on strike.

“The task force is due to make recommendations informed by the latest scientific research into the topic of players’ physical and mental well-being,” FIFA said in a statement.

FIFA already partners with the World Health Organization including to promote good practice on managing head injuries.

Wenger, the former Arsenal coach, has been FIFA’s head of global soccer development since 2019.


Haaland skips Ballon d’Or and travels to Sweden to watch friend clinch domestic league title

Haaland skips Ballon d’Or and travels to Sweden to watch friend clinch domestic league title
Updated 29 October 2024
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Haaland skips Ballon d’Or and travels to Sweden to watch friend clinch domestic league title

Haaland skips Ballon d’Or and travels to Sweden to watch friend clinch domestic league title

MALMO: Erling Haaland skipped the Ballon d’Or gala in Paris on Monday to watch a friend clinch the Swedish league title with Malmo instead.

The Manchester City striker, who was nominated for the Ballon d’Or but was not considered among the favorites, was seen in the stands in Malmo as the defending Swedish champion beat IFK Goteborg 2-1 to secure the title with two rounds remaining.

He posted a picture on Instagram of himself wearing a Malmo jersey, which has the same light blue color as City’s shirt.

Haaland’s Norwegian friend Erik Botheim plays for Malmo as a forward.

Malmo, which is eight points clear of Hammarby in the league table, has won the Swedish title a record 24 times.

Because of the long winter, the Swedish league starts in the spring and ends in the fall unlike most of the European leagues.


Dodgers beat Yankees to reach brink of World Series crown

Dodgers beat Yankees to reach brink of World Series crown
Updated 29 October 2024
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Dodgers beat Yankees to reach brink of World Series crown

Dodgers beat Yankees to reach brink of World Series crown

NEW YORK, United States: Freddie Freeman homered for a record-tying third consecutive game and the Los Angeles Dodgers reached the brink of a World Series title by beating the New York Yankees 4-2 on Monday.

Freeman, who smashed a walk-off grand slam to win the opener in Los Angeles, crushed a two-run homer in the first inning and Walker Buehler threw five shutout innings allowing only two hits to spark a victory that leaves the Dodgers 3-0 up in the best-of-seven series.

“When you come into a road park you want to try and strike early and quiet the crowd down and we were able to do that in the first inning,” Freeman said.

The Dodgers can capture their first crown since 2020 by winning game four on Tuesday at Yankee Stadium. The Yankees will head into that game knowing that no team has ever recovered from a 3-0 deficit to win the World Series.

“We’re trying to get a game tomorrow. That’s where our focus lies,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “Hopefully we can go be this amazing story and shock the world.”

“Right now it’s about trying to get a lead, trying to grab a game, and force another one, and then on from there,” Boone said. “But we’ve got to grab one first.”

Freeman matched Hank Bauer in 1958 and Barry Bonds in 2002 as the only players to homer in the first three games of a World Series.

The Dodgers first baseman also matched George Springer’s record of homers in five consecutive World Series contests.

Freeman though was uninterested in personal milestones after the win.

“When it’s all said and done, I can look at that but the most important thing is one more win,” Freeman said. “That’s all I care about right now. I don’t care how it happens. I just want to get one more win.”

The Yankees have not been swept in a World Series since Cincinnati did it in 1976. The most recent World Series sweep was by San Francisco over Detroit in 2012.

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts says his players yearn for a champions’ parade in Los Angeles, their first since 1988 after a pandemic scuttled 2020 celebrations.

“We want that parade. We never got a chance to celebrate with the city of Los Angeles. That’s something of incentive,” he said. “Outside of that, you have an opportunity to be a world champion. That’s more than enough incentive and motivation.”

The Dodgers seek their eighth World Series title while the Yankees, with a record 27 crowns, chase their first World Series title since 2009.

OHTANI BETTER THAN MOST

Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani suffered a partially dislocated left shoulder in Saturday’s game-two triumph but was back in the leadoff role as designated hitter to start game three.

The 30-year-old Japanese superstar walked on four pitches to open the game before scoring on Freeman’s homer.

“They made some mistakes with the heater and he made them pay,” Roberts said.

Ohtani hit 54 home runs and stole 59 bases this season, the first such 50-50 player in MLB history.

“He’s not feeling his best but whatever percent of Shohei is better than most people,” Roberts said.

Tommy Edman scored in the third on a Mookie Betts single and Gavin Lux scored in the sixth on an Enrique Hernandez single for the Dodgers.

Buehler, who has twice undergone “Tommy John” elbow ligament surgery, struck out five to earn the win.

“It takes that adrenaline to really get me going mentally,” Buehler said. “There’s something different in the playoffs.”

Roberts saying the 30-year-old right-hander showed his best form of the season.

“This is as confident as I’ve seen him,” Roberts said. “His stuff was as good as it has been all year.”

Six Dodgers relievers denied the Yankees until Alex Verdugo’s two-run homer in the ninth produced their only runs.

“Most of their bullpen guys came in and threw a lot of pitches,” Boone said. “Hopefully that little bit of familiarity serves us well.”


Australian World Cup winner Wade retires from international cricket

Australian World Cup winner Wade retires from international cricket
Updated 29 October 2024
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Australian World Cup winner Wade retires from international cricket

Australian World Cup winner Wade retires from international cricket
  • Wade played 36 Tests and 189 limited-overs matches for his country
  • Australian batter will become an assistant coach for Australia’s national team

SYDNEY: Australian World Cup winner Matthew Wade announced his retirement from international cricket on Tuesday and will become an assistant coach with the national team.

The wicketkeeper-batsman played 36 Tests and 189 limited-overs matches for his country, and was a pivotal figure in their T20 World Cup triumph in 2021.

The 36-year-old is now set to be wicketkeeping and fielding coach for the T20 series against Pakistan next month.

“I’m officially retiring,” Wade said, according to Cricket Australia.

“It’s been an ongoing discussion for pretty much every tour or every World Cup that I’ve been on in the last three or four years.”

Wade played for his country for 13 years and filled in as T20 captain between December 2020 and February 2024.

He was part of the Australia team that made an early exit from the T20 World Cup in June.

“If we went into the last World Cup and I managed to get some runs and we won that, then things would look maybe a little different and maybe I’d keep going,” he said.

“It was just kind of an understanding from all of us.”