PCB says lack of unity within Pakistan team discussed in ‘Connection Camp’

PCB says lack of unity within Pakistan team discussed in ‘Connection Camp’
Pakistan cricket team's red-ball coach Jason Gillespie (left), Pakistan Cricket Board's Chief Operating Officer Salman Naseer (center), and white-ball head coach Gary Kirsten are pictured during their media talk in Lahore, Pakistan, on September 23, 2024, after Connection Camp meeting. (@TheRealPCB/X)
Short Url
Updated 25 min 10 sec ago
Follow

PCB says lack of unity within Pakistan team discussed in ‘Connection Camp’

PCB says lack of unity within Pakistan team discussed in ‘Connection Camp’
  • Pakistani media has reported on rifts among players and PCB management over captaincy changes, overseas cricket leagues
  • “Connection Camp” led by PCB chairman featured Babar Azam, Shaheen Afridi and Pakistan’s white and red-ball coaches 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Chief Operating Officer Salman Naseer this week acknowledged that the board’s officials and cricketers discussed the lack of unity in the national team and PCB management during the recently held “Connection Camp,” vowing that fans will see positive results both in the short and long term. 

The Connection Camp was a series of day-long discussions led by PCB Chairman Mohsin Naqvi featuring prominent cricketers including Babar Azam, Shan Masood, Shaheen Shah Afridi, Mohammad Rizwan as well as the national men’s coaching staff. The camp focused on reviving Pakistan cricket’s glorious past amid a string of humiliating losses.

Pakistan’s local media has extensively reported on an alleged rift between Azam and Afridi. The Pakistani batter was replaced with Afridi as skipper of the T20 squad last year but was reappointed once after Pakistan suffered a humiliating 4-1 loss to New Zealand. Afridi reportedly did not take his sacking well as cricket commentators claimed rifts between Azam and Afridi led to two opposing camps in the Pakistan team, leading to the national team’s lackluster performance in the T20 World Cup in June and the Bangladesh series at home this month. 

When asked whether lack of unity among players was discussed during the camp, PCB’s chief operating officer said at a news conference:

“The session was about this (lack of unity) that we openly and candidly accept and identify (issues) and ask for a commitment from each other, demand it, on how we can improve our performances and how we work together as a team.

“Our unanimous view was that we need to resolve this going forward and need to identify how we do it.”

Media reports have also cited tensions between the PCB and some Pakistani cricketers after they were denied no-objection certificates to participate in overseas cricket leagues over the summer. Afridi, Azam, Mohammad Rizwan and Naseem Shah were all prevented from playing in leagues before the start of Pakistan’s home season, with workload management the primary reason cited by the board.

“Where the talk is of unity, it wasn’t only about the team,” Naseer said. “It was between the team and management and how we can work together to do things more successfully. These were part of the discussions. We talked about planning, we talked about workload management.”

Pakistan’s white-ball coach Gary Kirsten, who was also part of the camp, said he was encouraged by the quality of the players he had witnessed during the ongoing Champions Cup tournament and enjoyed the competitive tournament. 

“Been great to see a lot of young players showcasing what they are capable of,” he said.

Meanwhile, Pakistan’s red-ball coach Jason Gillespie maintained that the discussions would continue, citing the players cared about their performances and were “desperate” to do well. 

“Because we’re new to the job, our job is to listen and learn and look to implement ways where we can be more effective as players, as a team, and as coaches,” he said. “What was really clear today was the pride the Pakistan players have in playing for Pakistan and how they want to inspire the country. We’re on this journey together and we’ll do everything we can to help.”

Pakistan is set to host England for a three-match Test series next month from October 7 to 28 and play three Tests. The first and second matches will be played in Multan from October 7-19 while the third Test will be played in Rawalpindi from October 24-28.
 


US Open champion Sabalenka chases year-end number one ranking

US Open champion Sabalenka chases year-end number one ranking
Updated 52 min 50 sec ago
Follow

US Open champion Sabalenka chases year-end number one ranking

US Open champion Sabalenka chases year-end number one ranking
  • Fresh from winning the US Open, Sabalenka can take a large step toward overhauling the Pole at the top of the rankings with victory in Beijing
BEIJING: Aryna Sabalenka said Tuesday that she wants to cap off a stellar year by returning to the top of the world rankings.
The world number two is the top seed at the China Open this week following the withdrawal of top-ranked Iga Swiatek, the defending champion, because of undisclosed “personal matters.”
Fresh from winning the US Open, Sabalenka can take a large step toward overhauling the Pole at the top of the rankings with victory in Beijing.
“Of course that’s one of my goals, to finish the season at world number one,” the Belarusian, who won the Australian Open at the start of the year for a second time, said.
But the 26-year-old added: “I’m not trying to focus on that, I’m trying to focus on my game. There is only three tournaments left.
“I’m just trying to bring my best tennis on court. After the season, I’ll see if it was enough to finish the year at number one or have to improve something else to get to number one.”
The three-time major champion first became world number one a year ago, before being usurped by Swiatek.
“To be called the best player in the world, that means everything. It’s good to know that you’ve been doing the right thing, all of that hours of training, wasn’t a waste of time,” she said.
Sabalenka will be playing for the first time since beating Jessica Pegula in the final in New York earlier this month. She has a bye in the first round.
Pegula also features at the prestigious 1000 WTA hardcourt event in the Chinese capital, along with fellow American Coco Gauff, four-time major champion Naomi Osaka and China’s Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen.
The competition begins on Wednesday.
A men’s ATP 500 event runs alongside the women’s tournament.

Presidents Cup is a one-sided affair the International team hopes to change

Presidents Cup is a one-sided affair the International team hopes to change
Updated 24 September 2024
Follow

Presidents Cup is a one-sided affair the International team hopes to change

Presidents Cup is a one-sided affair the International team hopes to change
  • The Presidents Cup starts at Royal Montreal, the oldest golf club in North America and site of another US romp in the Presidents Cup in 2007
  • The Americans have won nine in a row since the 2003 tie, and the only International victory was in 1998 at Royal Melbourne in Australia

MONTREAL: Golf has never seen a rivalry as lopsided as the Presidents Cup, so heavily weighted toward the Americans it can barely be considered a rivalry.

Adam Scott needs no reminder.

He was a 23-year-old making his Presidents Cup debut in 2003, right in the middle of the action in South Africa, urging for a Tiger Woods-Ernie Els playoff to continue in the dark if it meant the International team not getting a share of the trophy. It ended in a tie. They shared the gold trophy.

But for Scott and the Internationals, it’s been all downhill — more like plunging off a cliff — ever since then.

The Americans have won nine in a row since that tie, and the only International victory was in 1998 at Royal Melbourne in Australia.

What makes Scott think this will be any different?

“I think our team is deeper than we’ve seen for a while, as far as the world ranking goes — not that it’s the be all and end all, but it’s something,” Scott said. “I feel like we’re putting together a formidable side, and 18-hole match play and some momentum, we can get right in it.”

He has said that before. He just hasn’t done that before.

The Presidents Cup starts Thursday at Royal Montreal, the oldest golf club in North America and site of another US romp in the Presidents Cup in 2007. The only consolation for Canada that year was Mike Weir taking down Woods, even though the outcome had been decided.

Weir is now the International captain and hopeful Canada has more to cheer.

That starts with being in front of a home crowd.

“We know what they can do,” Xander Schauffele said Monday as both teams played nine holes at Royal Montreal in cool weather and occasional rain. “And they’re on home soil.”

That certainly doesn’t hurt the cause, as the last two times illustrated. The International team, led by Els at Royal Melbourne in 2019, had the Americans on the ropes and was leading 10-8 going into the last day, only for the Americans to rally in singles and win.

Before that was South Korea in 2015. The Internationals thought they had it won until Chris Kirk made a 15-foot putt and Anirban Lahiri missed from 4 feet. With a chance for at least a tie, Sangmoon Bae in the final match duffed a chip on the final hole.

Close, but no trophy. That’s been the case since 1998.

In America, it’s been no contest. The US built an 8-2 lead after two sessions the last time, at Quail Hollow in North Carolina in 2022, against an International team that lost two key players, Cameron Smith and Joaquin Niemann, who joined the Saudi-funded LIV Golf League.

And then there was Liberty National in 2017, such a shellacking that the Americans had a chance to win the cup before even getting to the 12 singles matches on the final day.

Schauffele, playing in his third Presidents Cup, believes the home crowd matters, especially if US players fall behind early.

“If you start out shaky, the fans can make a big difference. You can be made to feel like you’re playing worse than you really are,” Schauffele said.

Most of the Americans haven’t played since the Tour Championship three weeks ago — Max Homa missed the cut at the Procore Championship in Napa, California, while Presidents Cup rookie Sahith Theegala tied for seventh.

But they arrived on the weekend, a few days earlier than normal, to get acquainted with Royal Montreal. The International team spend two days in Montreal after the Tour Championship.

“I know they’re putting a lot into it to kind of make it feel like as much of a home game as possible for us, and we’re counting on the Canadian fans for that,” Scott said. “But we’re all going to have to do our job and win some points to get them on our side.”

As for the little things, Weir points to a big starting point in 2019 when Els had a logo — it’s more like a shield — as a symbol of an International side that is starting to feel more like a team. This team has players from six countries. Three of them are Canadian, all of whom Weir chose with his captain’s picks.

“You can just see it. You feel it. The guys are more comfortable with one another,” Weir said. “And I think that’s a big factor for our team.”

Scott, Hideki Matsuyama and Jason Day are the only players who have competed in at least three Presidents Cups. For the rest of the players, the losing streak is only what they hear.

“We do know the past, and we want to change that,” Weir said. “And we’re doing all the little things behind the scenes to help to change that.”


Nadal, Alcaraz and Sinner in Davis Cup finals teams

Nadal, Alcaraz and Sinner in Davis Cup finals teams
Updated 24 September 2024
Follow

Nadal, Alcaraz and Sinner in Davis Cup finals teams

Nadal, Alcaraz and Sinner in Davis Cup finals teams
  • French Open and Wimbledon winner Alcaraz will be Spain’s key figure as they bid to win the competition dubbed the World Cup of tennis for the first time since 2019
  • US Open and Australian Open champion Sinner is part of Italy’s squad for the finals, which start on Nov. 19

BARCELONA: Spain named 22-time Grand Slam champion Rafael Nadal and Carlos Alcaraz in a five-man Davis Cup team on Monday, while Italian world No. 1 Jannik Sinner will also compete in the final eight in Malaga.

Nadal, 38, pulled out of the US Open and Laver Cup in recent months and has only taken part in one of the last seven Grand Slams because of injury and fitness struggles.

French Open and Wimbledon winner Alcaraz will be Spain’s key figure as they bid to win the competition dubbed the World Cup of tennis for the first time since 2019, starting with a clash against the Netherlands.

Alcaraz inspired Team Europe to Laver Cup victory over Team World last weekend in Berlin.

US Open and Australian Open champion Sinner is part of Italy’s squad for the finals, which start on Nov. 19.

The 23-year-old was crucial as Italy triumphed last year, beating Serbian superstar Novak Djokovic twice in one day, first in singles and then in doubles, in the semifinals.

Italy, who face Argentina in their quarterfinal clash, beat Australia in the 2023 final to win the competition for the first time since 1976.


Reports: Man City’s Rodri ‘out for season’ after ACL injury

Reports: Man City’s Rodri ‘out for season’ after ACL injury
Updated 24 September 2024
Follow

Reports: Man City’s Rodri ‘out for season’ after ACL injury

Reports: Man City’s Rodri ‘out for season’ after ACL injury
  • ESPN and Spanish sports daily Marca reported that tests on Monday have confirmed an ACL tear
  • Rodri has been touted as a potential Ballon d’Or winner this year after his influential role in City’s latest Premier League title and Spain’s success at Euro 2024

MANCHESTER: Manchester City and Spain midfielder Rodri could miss the rest of the season due to an anterior cruciate ligament injury, according to reports in Spain on Monday.

The 28-year-old limped off during City’s 2-2 draw against Arsenal in the Premier League on Sunday after going down holding his right knee.

ESPN and Spanish sports daily Marca reported that tests on Monday have confirmed an ACL tear.

Rodri’s loss would be a huge blow to City’s hopes of winning a fifth consecutive Premier League title and ambitions of reclaiming the Champions League.

The former Atletico Madrid player has lost just one of his last 84 games for club and country.

He has been touted as a potential Ballon d’Or winner this year after his influential role in City’s latest Premier League title and Spain’s success at Euro 2024.

“Rodri is strong. He leaves the pitch in this action because he felt something, otherwise Rodri stays there,” City boss Pep Guardiola said after the Arsenal match.

“He’s the best holding midfielder in the world, he is a potential Ballon d’Or winner. I would love for him to win (the Ballon d’Or).”

City were already light in cover for Rodri and his absence leaves a gaping hole in the middle of Guardiola’s midfield.

Mateo Kovacic has deputized in the holding midfield role early in the season as Rodri was bedded in slowly after his exertions in winning player of the tournament at Euro 2024.

Just last week Rodri had warned leading players could go on strike over an ever-expanding schedule.

He played over 5,000 minutes in 63 games for City and Spain last season.

“I don’t know what’s going to happen, but it’s something that worries us because we are the guys that suffer,” he said on the increasing physical and mental demands placed on players.

“Someone has to take care of us because we are the main characters of this, let’s say, sport, or business, whatever you want to call it.

City face Watford in the League Cup on Tuesday, little over 48 hours after the Arsenal match.


Arsenal get under Man City’s skin amid ‘dark arts’ accusations in English soccer’s new big rivalry

Arsenal get under Man City’s skin amid ‘dark arts’ accusations in English soccer’s new big rivalry
Updated 23 September 2024
Follow

Arsenal get under Man City’s skin amid ‘dark arts’ accusations in English soccer’s new big rivalry

Arsenal get under Man City’s skin amid ‘dark arts’ accusations in English soccer’s new big rivalry

LONDON: Call it the dark arts. Call it anti-football. Call it doing whatever it takes to win.

Arsenal tried it all against Manchester City on Sunday in the latest chapter of the Premier League’s new heavyweight rivalry — and came within seconds of victory.

“There was only one team that came to play football,” Manchester City midfielder Bernardo Silva grumbled after an intense, absorbing and incident-packed 2-2 draw at Etihad Stadium. “The other came to play to the limits of what was possible to do and allowed by the referee, unfortunately.”

John Stones’ equalizer for City in the eighth minute of second-half stoppage time denied Arsenal, who played with 10 men for the entire second half, what would have been a defining victory for a team that is getting closer and closer to Pep Guardiola’s repeat champions.

City’s players know it, too.

Hence Bernardo’s outspoken post-match comments on Arsenal. Notice how Erling Haaland chucked the ball at the back of Arsenal defender Gabriel’s head in City’s wild celebrations after Stones’ late intervention. Look, too, at Pep Guardiola kicking his seat in the dugout after feeling a sense of injustice at the manner of Arsenal’s equalizer by Ricardo Calafiori.

Arsenal has gotten under City’s skin.

Roll on the return match at Emirates Stadium in early February.

“As a football match, it is a great spectacle for the Premier League,” City captain Kyle Walker said of the new rivalry with Arsenal, who have been runners-up in the last two seasons. “Probably not so much certain stuff — I think it’s part and parcel of the game and we’ll say the dark arts.”

Stones spoke of Arsenal’s attempts to slow the game down by what he perceived as feigning injuries to allow manager Mikel Arteta to “get some information on to the pitch.”

“I wouldn’t say they have mastered it but they have done it for a few years now so we knew to expect that,” Stones said. “You can call it clever or dirty, whichever way you want to put it, but they break up the game which upsets the rhythm.”

To that extent, Arteta looks to have taken a page out of former Chelsea and Real Madrid coach Jose Mourinho’s playbook. Mourinho was, of course, once a huge rival of Guardiola’s and took cynical play to the extremes at times.

Arteta’s Arsenal can play beautiful football, as well. But with captain Martin Odegaard out injured and Leandro Trossard sent off against City in first-half stoppage time, the

Gunners knew when it was time to change the approach to the other extreme.

“It’s unbelievable what we have done,” said Arteta, who knows City and Guardiola inside out having once been his fellow Spaniard’s assistant at the Etihad.

For Silva, matches against Liverpool — which was City’s big rival before Arsenal — were more enjoyable to play in.

“Liverpool always faced us face-to-face to try to win the games,” the Portugal playmaker said, “so by this perspective, the games against Arsenal haven’t been like the ones we had and have against Liverpool. So yes, maybe a different rivalry.”

Silva was one of many City players to get riled in what was an incendiary encounter pretty much from the start. At one stage, he curled his finger into a “0” as he faced up to Gabriel – seemingly in reference to Arsenal not winning any Premier League titles, at least since Silva joined City in 2017. Arsenal’s last league championship was in 2004.

Pressed on the difference between playing Liverpool and Arsenal, Silva said: “Maybe that Liverpool have already won a Premier League, Arsenal haven’t. That Liverpool have won a Champions League, Arsenal haven’t.”

Will this be the season that Arsenal end their wait for the league title?

After five games, Arsenal sit in fourth place and two points behind City, the leaders, having just emerged from visits to Tottenham and City — two of their toughest away games — in the space of a week with four points, either side of a 0-0 at Atalanta in the Champions League.

The stage could be set for another City vs. Arsenal title race.