Agreement reached on Rangers star to sign £30k-p/w contract to leave Ibrox

There looks set to be plenty of change at Ibrox this summer after Russell Martin was officially unveiled as the new manager for Glasgow Rangers.

There could be plenty of inward and outward business for the Scottish giants before the window slams shut at the start of September, and one player who could be on his way out of the club is central defender Robin Propper.

The latest on Robin Propper's exit from Rangers

At the start of this month, RangersReview reported that the Dutch defender is ‘expected’ to seal a permanent exit from Ibrox before the end of the window.

Robin Propper

It was then claimed by Dutch media that FC Twente would like to pay a fee of £1m to bring the Gers flop back to the Netherlands, and that he had already agreed a three-year contract with the Eredivisie side.

Fast forward to the present day, and the latest update on Propper’s future is that he is waiting to hear from Rangers about what they want to do with him heading into next season.

FC Twente sporting director Jan Streuer explained the situation earlier this week, saying: “We have to wait and see with him. Robin wants to hear from his club on what they’re going to do.”

It now remains to be seen whether or not Propper, who scored two goals in the Scottish Premiership in the 2024/25 campaign, will be at Ibrox next term.

The former FC Twente skipper is not the only Rangers star who could be on his way out of Ibrox, though, as another player is reportedly closing in on a transfer.

Rangers star Dessers reaches agreement to leave Ibrox

According to reports relayed by The Daily Record, centre-forward Cyriel Dessers has agreed a £30k-per-week contract with Greek side AEK Athens ahead of a move to the club this summer.

The report claims that they have made the Nigeria international their number one transfer target, and now they have reached an agreement with him to ditch Ibrox for the Agia Sophia.

Appearances

35

35

Goals

16

18

Big chances missed

27

21

Ground duel success rate

29%

34%

Aerial duel success rate

40%

31%

Dessers, who has missed 48 ‘big chances’ in two Premiership seasons with the Light Blues, is keen on making the move, per this report, and it is now down to the two clubs to agree a transfer fee for the player.

The Daily Record adds that the club’s new American owners are prepared to hold out for a significant fee for the Nigerian marksman, and that AEK Athens are expecting to pay a fee in excess of £5m to land their number one target.

As aforementioned, the 30-year-old attacker, who journalist Josh Bunting claimed is “awkward” to play against due to his physicality, has been incredibly wasteful with the ‘big chances’ that have come his way in the Premiership since his move from Cremonese in the summer of 2023.

Cashing in on the experienced forward, despite his respectable goal return, could provide Martin and sporting director Kevin Thelwell with the opportunity to target a more ruthless striker who can be relied upon in the big moments when the big chances fall their way.

He's Jelavic 2.0: Rangers ready bid for "complete" £6m star

Rangers could be set to make a bid for a new striker who could be the club’s next Jelavic.

ByRoss Kilvington Jun 14, 2025

He won't start again: TFG must finally axe Everton's new Phil Neville

Ask an Everton fan what their club’s priority should be as they step into the looming summer transfer window, they will tell you that David Moyes’ side need more quality in the final third.

Recent losses in the Premier League have highlighted the Toffees’ deep-rooted offensive issues that need sorting out if the 2025/26 season is to promote a new breed of success.

New owners, The Friedkin Group, ran the gauntlet when bringing Moyes back to the club in January, but it certainly seems to have worked out, Everton leaping away from the relegation fodder.

Everton manager David Moyes

The seeds have been planted, but Everton need to fix some playing-squad issues in offence. However, defensive problems also simmer under the surface, with plenty set to change this summer.

The state of play in Everton's defence

Last time out at Goodison Park, Everton fought hard to get something from their match against Manchester City but ultimately fell short in the second half, losing 2-0.

Compounding the defeat, James Tarkowski was forced off with a suspected hamstring injury, since confirmed to be a muscular tear that will require surgery. The unflappable centre-half will miss the rest of the season, his recovery creeping into pre-season.

James Tarkowski injured for Everton

With Jarrad Branthwaite’s future reportedly not necessarily at Bramley Moore, there’s plenty of uncertainty around Moyes’ backline.

Furthermore, Everton’s contractual situation is going to have a marked impact on the defence, with Michael Keane, Seamus Coleman and Ashley Young all out of contract this summer.

Moyes recognises skipper Coleman’s value and would allegedly like to extend his deal for the leadership and experience benefits, but Young is not a spring chicken anymore and must leave, having become the Scotsman’s new version of Phil Neville.

Moyes must ditch Moyes' new Phil Neville

Neville is fondly remembered for his time at Everton, and Young will depart with a similarly positive legacy, having arrived as an ageing veteran – previously of Manchester United’s parish – but putting in a shift and a half during his time.

However, the 40-year-old needs to leave when his contract expires in the coming months.

Like Neville, Young formerly played for United and was capped by England, working industriously even earning praise from Antonio Conte for being a “machine” of an athlete when plying his trade with Inter Milan.

The 48-year-old completed 385 appearances for the Red Devils before moving to Everton for a fee in excess of £3m. He was 28 at the time, a further similarity to Young given he spent a good chunk of his prime years in red before moving to Inter Milan, then back to Villa, then finally settling at Goodison.

Man United

261

19

33

Aston Villa

247

38

53

Watford

110

22

9

Everton

66

2

4

Inter Milan

59

5

9

Not just walking the same pathway toward Merseyside as Young, Neville was also a versatile defender, chiefly placed as a right-back but wandering over to the alternate side and even featuring in a deep-lying midfield position.

Since starting Moyes’ first game of the (second) Moyes era, a home defeat against Aston Villa, Young has been consigned to cameos ever since.

Ashley Young looks dejected for Everton

Young has earned his keep at Everton over the past few years, but he’s now 40 years old and must not see his contract renewed ahead of the new chapter at Bramley Moore.

He was worse than Harrison: 5/10 Everton dud proved that TFG need to spend

Everton have lost back-to-back matches in the Premier League.

ByAngus Sinclair Apr 28, 2025

Biggest talent since Rooney: Everton line up shock deal for £25m star

Everton are nine games unbeaten in the Premier League. Nine. David Moyes lost his opener against Aston Villa after replacing the beleaguered Sean Dyche, but the progress has been otherwise breathtaking.

This Toffees team is a far cry from the previous version, refashioned only a few months ago with just Charly Alcaraz welcomed from the transfer gates in January.

If the 15th-placed club are to compete at a higher level over the coming years, it’s important that the market is well utilised. What Everton need is a superstar signing, comparatively speaking.

Well, The Friedkin Group certainly have a shock move lined up. You need only look over to Anfield Road to find this player’s signature.

Everton lining up move for Liverpool star

According to recent reports, via The Mirror, Everton are weighing up a move for Liverpool talent Ben Doak in what would be a shocking transfer. Doak has excelled on loan at Middlesbrough this season and Moyes is thoroughly impressed.

The Toffees are preparing to test the waters with a £25m offer, which falls into a similar ballpark as bids from Bournemouth and Crystal Palace back in January, both rebuffed by the Reds.

Dealings between the Merseyside rivals have been sparse in modern times. In fact, Abel Xavier is the last player to transfer directly between the two teams, joining Liverpool from Everton in 2002.

Everton could land their next Wayne Rooney

Let’s be honest, this would be as difficult a deal to orchestrate as any. However, saying that, Liverpool have been open to selling Doak in recent months and their ostensible interest in Jarrad Branthwaite suggests negotiations could be somewhat amenable.

Ben Doak in action for Middlesbrough

And Doak would be worth the effort. Only 19, the Scotland winger has dazzled through the maiden years of his career, so brisk and powerful and purposeful down the right flank.

On that note, with Jack Harrison and Jesper Lindstrom’s loans at Goodison Park wrapping up this summer, the urgency for a fresh right flanker is doubly important.

Across 24 Championship appearances this term (21 starts), he’s scored three goals and assisted seven more, leading former Scotland manager Craig Levein to say: “This kid could be a world-class player.”

Few teenagers carry themselves with such swagger and potency, but Doak’s certainly one of them. Moyes knows a thing or two about developing exciting prospects – he handed Wayne Rooney his professional debut, after all.

Rooney: scorer of great goals, leader of men. He’s one of the greatest footballers to do it in the Premier League, behind only Alan Shearer and Harry Kane in the division’s all-time scoring charts (with 208 goals).

Any youngster compared to the retired Three Lions captain is worth their salt, and Doak has indeed been claimed to have a stylistic semblance to Rooney, with his agent, Jackie McNamara, actually labelling him “a Scottish Wayne Rooney.”

His electric pace, his strong-limbed bursts into the danger area, do carry a hint of the former Premier League star, with Doak’s metrics from the 2024/25 campaign highlighting his barrelling style.

Goals scored

0.15

Top 69%

Assists

0.35

Top 9%

Shot-creating actions

4.15

Top 30%

Pass completion

79.1%

Top 21%

Progressive passes

2.83

Top 65%

Progressive carries

6.78

Top 1%

Successful take-ons

1.77

Top 24%

Everton need such a player, and Moyes has shown in the past that he has the tactical nous to bring the best out of such a youngster’s talent.

Now, it boils down to Liverpool and Everton’s ability to negotiate. It won’t be easy, but this could be quite the deal if pulled off.

A dream for Branthwaite: Everton will have £25m bid accepted for Mina 2.0

Everton are planning to strengthen in the transfer market this summer.

ByAngus Sinclair Mar 31, 2025

Explosive SRH's powerplay implosions

Eight times SRH have lost three or more wickets in the powerplay since the start of IPL 2024 – here’s how those games went

ESPNcricinfo staff05-Apr-2025 • Updated on 23-Apr-2025There’s no questioning the incredible, unprecedented levels of powerplay hitting that Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) have brought to the IPL since the start of the 2024 season. Their average run rate in that phase of the innings is 11.00, and they have hit 67 sixes in those overs since IPL 2024 – both are the highest in the league.The flipside is the number of times they have imploded in that phase. They have scored all those quick runs, but they have also lost 39 wickets in 20 innings in that phase, an average of almost two wickets per powerplay. This is also the highest in the league.Here’s a look at all the times SRH have lost three or more wickets in the powerplay in IPL 2024 and IPL 2025 (so far), and how the results have gone in those games.Punjab Kings (PBKS) vs SRH, Mullanpur, IPL 2024It was the 23rd match of the season, and, batting first after losing the toss against PBKS, SRH finished the powerplay at 40 for 3. Travis Head fell for 21 in 15 balls, Aiden Markram, the No. 3, for a two-ball duck, and Abhishek Sharma for an 11-ball 16. They got 182. It was enough for a two-run win.Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) vs SRH, Hyderabad, IPL 2024This was a chase, after RCB had put up 206 for 7 courtesy half-centuries from Virat Kohli and Rajat Patidar. SRH finished the powerplay on 62 for 4, with Head, Abhishek, Markram and Heinrich Klaasen all gone. They got to 171 for 8 after 20 overs for a 35-run defeat.1:10

Do SRH need to rethink their batting approach?

Chennai Super Kings (CSK) vs SRH, Chennai, IPL 2024In a tournament where 200 was being crossed often, CSK got to 212 for 3 after losing the toss and being asked to bat, Ruturaj Gaikwad leading the way with a 54-ball 98. SRH had to go hard, and they did, but they were out of Head, Anmolpreet Singh and Abhishek by the end of the powerplay, with the scoreboard reading 53 for 3. They were all out for 134 in 18.5 overs, losing by 78 runs.Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) vs SRH, Ahmedabad, IPL 2024This was Qualifier 1, pitting the top two teams of the group stage of IPL 2024. SRH, second in the league, won the toss and opted for first strike, but with Mitchell Starc on target, they were 45 for 4 after the powerplay – they were four down after five overs with 39 on the board – with Head, Abhishek, Nitish Kumar Reddy and Shahbaz Ahmed gone for a total of 12 runs between them. Rahul Tripathi, the No. 3, scored 55 in 35 balls amid the carnage. They finished on 159. KKR overhauled the target in 13.4 overs for the loss of just two wickets.Rajasthan Royals (RR) vs SRH, Chennai, IPL 2024SRH still made it to the final, and that was because they won Qualifier 2 against RR despite losing three wickets in the powerplay. The men to fall were Abhishek, Tripathi (for a 15-ball 37) and Markram, but, chiefly because of Tripathi, they had 68 on the board after six overs despite Head struggling to get going. RR’s chase never quite got going, and they fell 36 short.3:12

Cricinformed: Are Sunrisers selling themselves short?

Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) vs SRH, Chennai, IPL 2024Final. All to play for. Toss – SRH. So far so good. And then Starc, again, with the wickets of Abhishek and Tripathi, and Vaibhav Arora with the wicket of Head, for a first-ball duck. The powerplay ended at 40 for 3. And SRH were bowled out for 113. The chase was easy, done and dusted in 10.3 overs.Delhi Capitals (DC) vs SRH, Visakhapatnam, IPL 2025They batted out of choice after winning the toss, but were without Abhishek (1), Ishan Kishan (2), Reddy (0) and Head (22) by the end of the powerplay, which ended at 58 for 4. They lasted 18.4 overs and finished with 163 on the board, and DC won by seven wickets with four overs in hand.Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) vs SRH, Kolkata, IPL 2025This is the match that has led to all the questions around SRH’s approach with the bat, their latest loss. On Thursday. They fielded out of choice. And KKR went on to score 200 for 6. In the chase, Head, Abhishek and Kishan were all gone by 2.1 overs, Arora and Harshit Rana getting all the wickets, and 33 for 3 is all they got in the powerplay. In the end, they were 80 short, bowled out for 120 in 16.4 overs.SRH vs Mumbai Indians, Hyderabad, IPL 2025It was an unusually quiet start from SRH as they got just two runs off the first over. Head’s first real aggressive shot ended up in the hands of backward point as Trent Boult got the ball to swing away from him and produce a top edge. Then, Kishan was dismissed in bizarre fashion, walking after he thought he nicked one down leg. Ultra Edge subsequently showed no spike. Abhishek was done by a Boult slower one, and Reddy chipped one to mid-on, leaving SRH reeling at 24 for 4 after the Powerplay.

Revitalised Williamson returns to scene of his debut heroics ready for fresh IPL challenge

After an IPL to forget in 2022, he has a new franchise, a fit-again elbow and – having given up captaincy – a freed-up mind to help him find his best form again

Shashank Kishore29-Mar-2023As you enter the lounge area of the Gujarat Cricket Association (GCA) inside the Motera complex in Ahmedabad, you see plenty of cricket photographs adorning the walls on all four sides. Kane Williamson is seen in the background of one of them, in which India’s prime minister and then Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi is seen shaking hands with Jeetan Patel.That picture is from 13 years ago, from the same Ahmedabad Test where Williamson became New Zealand’s youngest debutant centurion. That day, as he removed his helmet to acknowledge the applause of his team-mates, all Williamson managed was a shy smile along with his raised bat. In fact, Daniel Vettori, his captain, was the more animated of the two as he ran over to put his arm around the youngster’s shoulder, embraced him in a big hug and handed out a few pats on his back.That baby-faced, fresh-out-of-teens kid who didn’t even have stubble back then now returns to Ahmedabad for the first time since that hundred. Still, he’s as calm as a sage, but now he comes with a with a full-fledged beard that he often tends to as he speaks at a media interaction organised by Gujarat Titans, the reigning IPL champions. One second, he’s reminiscing about his debut in the city, the next he’s speaking of being part of two thrilling Tests within a month and hopping onto the next flight to India.Related

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He’s also asked about his prospects of being in Titans’ starting XI, and the hurt of not being retained by Sunrisers Hyderabad. Williamson is focused and unhurried. When there’s chatter in the foreground, he stops and waits patiently before he continues. And, as he speaks, as always, there’s an air of calm around him.”My cricketing brain certainly hasn’t been switched off,” he warms up with a laugh, when asked about how life has been since he decided to give up Test captaincy in December. “When you’re out on the field, you’re trying to do as much as you can for the team. Whether that’s assisting where you can when you’re called upon for your ideas or otherwise.”It’s quite a natural thing to be engaged in the game but having said that it [the decision to step down as Test captain] has taken a little bit off my plate, which was a large part of the reason for making that decision. Often, it’s the parts around it [captaincy], where you get a little bit more time back. I’ve always thought it was never a ‘forever job’, it requires a lot of energy, and I really enjoyed my time in that specific role. I do enjoy being involved in leadership, which is basically helping where I can.”Kane Williamson has handed the New Zealand captaincy reins over to Tim Southee•Getty Images”Less commitments off the field” has come as a relief. “It’s been a really enjoyable thing in terms of playing under Tim Southee, who is captaining the Test team and doing a great job,” Williamson says. “Having said that, there’s transition involved [of going from captain to just a player] without a doubt, there’s perhaps less commitments off the field.”It’s still a change, something that I’m experiencing at the moment and working through. I’m fortunate to have a number of leaders in the New Zealand environment. And then to come here and have Hardik [Pandya] captaining the side, it’s something I’m excited about as well.”Williamson isn’t just reinvigorated in mind, but he’s also no longer worried about his “niggling elbow”, which for so long had forced him to manage his workloads and sometimes even curbed certain shots or long throws at training.That elbow certainly appeared to have an effect on his batting. At IPL 2022, Williamson scored just 216 runs in 13 innings. His strike rate of 93.50 was the slowest among batters who faced at least 100 balls in the season. This time around, Williamson believes he’s in as good a physical state as he’s been before.

“My cricketing brain certainly hasn’t been switched off. When you’re out on the field, you’re trying to do as much as you can for the team. Whether that’s assisting where you can when you’re called upon for your ideas or otherwise.”Just because he’s not captain anymore doesn’t mean Kane Williamson switches off in the field

“Yeah, it was something that was improving slowly all the time, it was requiring management,” he explains. “It’s a lot better now and it’s not something that is restricting me in terms of training loads, playing and all those things. Although no injury is ideal and often injuries require time to heal, working through this was no different. It’s nice to be back playing, training and not be burdened by it.”Think Williamson and the IPL, and it’s hard to not imagine him in the orange uniform of Sunrisers Hyderabad, whom he had played for since 2015 and captained since 2018 before being let go after the 2022 season. But a change of teams and perspective, and being unshackled by leadership duties, could just free him up to play a key role, possibly at the top of the order with Shubman Gill.If Williamson pulls it off, helping Titans extend their debut-season success, chances are he’ll find himself in another big photo frame in the GCA lounge, with himself more front and centre, when he potentially returns to the Motera later this year for the ODI World Cup.

India women just lost a year, but not all the blame goes to Covid

Last year at this time, they were looking ahead to their first T20 World Cup final. After that, everything went downhill

Annesha Ghosh07-Mar-2021March 8 last year, International Women’s Day, was box office for women’s cricket. India’s maiden appearance in a T20 World Cup final, against defending champions Australia, drew 86,174 spectators at the MCG – the most ever at a women’s or men’s T20 World Cup final and for a women’s sporting event in Australia.The significance of it all had barely sunk in before the Covid-19 pandemic took hold. Global sport screeched to a halt by the close of March. While Australia, England, New Zealand, South Africa, West Indies and Pakistan all played at least one women’s series apiece in the 12 months since, India played none. By the time they face South Africa in Lucknow on March 7 they will be just a day short of a full year during which they have not played any international matches. The reasons why are a reflection of many ills, most of which have afflicted the women’s game in India for decades now.India’s women cricketers cut their teeth in international cricket in October 1976, three years after the formation of the Women’s Cricket Association of India (WCAI), which became the custodian of the women’s game in the country. Until January 1977, India played eight Tests, including two overseas. An inactive spell of nearly 12 months followed.The next time they took the field, in January 1978, it was for their World Cup debut, also their first ODI. India finished last in that four-team competition but the tournament itself was significant as the first international cricket championship of any kind to be held in India, a decade before the country hosted its first men’s World Cup.India women wouldn’t play any cricket for 54 months after that 1978 World Cup – largely due to an acute cash crunch at the WCAI, which was founded by volunteers and those from the political fraternity. India returned to action with the 1982 ODI World Cup and played 35 international matches until July 1986, the games fairly evenly spaced out in that period. Then all cricket stalled for them for 1644 days, or another four and a half years, their longest gap between two international matches.ESPNcricinfo LtdIn that period, Australia played 32 matches, New Zealand 24, England 23, Ireland 21, Netherlands 14, and Denmark six. India, on the other hand, stagnated, with the cash-strapped WCAI unable to afford to send them abroad or host other teams.”That [break] was horrible,” remembers Diana Edulji, India’s captain for the best part of the period between 1978 and 1993, and for nearly three years a member of the Committee of Administrators, appointed by India’s Supreme Court, that ran the BCCI between 2017 and 2019. “We missed the 1988 World Cup in Australia despite being in a training camp before that, because the sports ministry had withdrawn our entry from the tournament without us or the association [WCAI] knowing.” A disagreement between the WCAI secretary and the government ministry of youth, sports and women and child development over guidelines issued by the latter that the WCAI was expected to follow (because it was receiving funding from the government at the time), is understood to have prompted the withdrawal from the World Cup, but an official explanation was never given to the players.”We had to catch up a lot because the other teams had moved far ahead,” Edulji says. “It took us time when we got back. That is why in our era we couldn’t perform well in the World Cups.”Gargi Banerji, who debuted under Edulji as India’s youngest player ever – male or female – at 15, agrees. “We were way better prepared to put up a fight in the 1988 World Cup than in the 1978 one. That gap of four-plus years killed the possibility, and the careers of several talented players.”The WCAI merged with the BCCI in November 2006, a year after the ICC made mergers between all national boards and their women’s bodies mandatory. The BCCI was the last of the national boards of the top eight countries to start administering women’s cricket in its country, and the absorption of women’s cricket into the larger fold happened at a snail’s pace in India. Against the backdrop of the delay in integrating the workings of women’s cricket at the level of the state associations came another hiatus for the players, stretching 424 days, from March 2007 to May 2008. It remains the longest India have gone without playing an international game since the BCCI took over.The current 364-day gap is India’s longest between two international matches since then. Save for Mithali Raj and Jhulan Goswami, who debuted in 1999 and 2002 respectively, none of the players from India’s 2020 T20 World Cup contingent or their squads for the upcoming series against South Africa, had prior first-hand knowledge of what a gap year looks like.Jhulan Goswami and Mithali Raj have gone long spells without cricket before, but none of their team-mates have•ESPNcricinfoThis hiatus is unlike any Raj and Goswami have experienced before, though. For starters, the security accorded by annual retainers at a time when the players have not been able to turn out for their country was unthinkable in the era before professionalisation. The BCCI, the richest and most powerful cricket board in the world, has to its credit, since the merger, bettered infrastructure for its female cricketers. It has improved the quality of grounds, upgraded travel essentials, introduced match fees, daily allowances and central contracts and announced pensions for its retired female cricketers. It has allowed its women players to participate in overseas competitions, and launched a tournament that is understood to be a precursor to an IPL-style women’s league.The 2010s were a productive – and critical – phase for women’s cricket administration in India, not least because of the impressive on-field results of the national team. Among the highlights was a maiden series win in Australia in 2016 and a breakout runners-up finish at the ODI World Cup the following year. A first appearance in eight years in the knockouts of a T20 World Cup then came in the 2018 edition of the competition, though the format wasn’t deemed their strong suit.India made the final of a T20 triangular series featuring England and Australia in February last year. The same young squad (with the addition of a 16th member) carved out an unbeaten run to the final of the T20 World Cup in February and March, beating favourites Australia in the tournament opener. Their campaign culminated in an 85-run hiding but on the whole it bolstered India’s stature as world-beaters in the making. The pandemic then brought their momentum to a halt.Then, even as international cricket resumed, in July 2020, and preparations for the IPL and the India men’s tour of Australia gathered pace, the women’s team remained starved of communication from the BCCI for months about what, if anything, was in the offing for them, as a raft of cancellations and postponements of their bilateral assignments played out rather discreetly. The players found themselves without a dedicated point person or a selection committee, and with the contract of their manager awaiting renewal.”Sometimes we do feel there’s no sense of purpose if we don’t have competitive cricket or any international series, even domestic,” Raj said during the ICC’s ‘100% Cricket’ virtual discussion last September. Six months on from then, India have not had a national camp in all of 2020, despite the BCCI president himself having promised one in August. Their domestic season begins on March 11, two months after the men’s started, so the only top-flight playing opportunity they have had since the T20 World Cup was the four-match Women’s T20 Challenge last November. They go into the upcoming South Africa series with just three training sessions, having come off a five-day quarantine, and their last outing in ODIs dates back to November 2019. The preparations aren’t ideal by any measure, not least for veterans Raj and Goswami, who are both 38, or for the six uncapped rookies in the two squads.ESPNcricinfo LtdIndia aren’t the only women’s team to have not played for so long. Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Thailand too haven’t had a game since the T20 World Cup in Australia. Ireland, USA, Netherlands and PNG haven’t played since the T20 World Cup Qualifier in September 2019. And Zimbabwe’s first series in nearly two years was called off after just one game due to Covid-19-enforced flight restrictions. Worse, nine of these ten teams are slated to compete in the 2022 ODI World Cup Qualifier in four months’ time, with only India among them having earned direct qualification to the tournament proper.At the MCC cricket committee’s virtual meeting last month, the disproportionately low amount of international women’s cricket played compared to the men’s game since the start of the pandemic was discussed. The concerns raised echoed the 2020 UN Women brief, which said that the pandemic has exposed how, in the face of slashed revenues across the entire ecosystem, organisations instinctively lean towards prioritising investments in “traditional” sports – meaning men’s sports.In the situation the Indian team finds itself in now, the absence of an independent players’ mouthpiece has not helped. “The fact that the best women’s players in India haven’t played for more than a year is hugely disappointing,” Tom Moffat, the CEO of the Federation of International Cricketers Associations (FICA), says. “From our perspective, it’s critical for the growth of the game and safeguarding of player interests that players have a voice and that they’re represented collectively through a players’ association.”India does have a players’ body – the Indian Cricketers’ Association – but it is for retired players only. The BCCI recognises it, but not FICA, which, in its Women’s Professional Cricket Global Employment Report 2020, highlighted an increase in volume of cricket for women’s players among its chief recommendations. It also described the Indian public as becoming “increasingly accepting of female sport” in general and off the field.”If you look at the most sophisticated team sports around the world, including cricket, like Australia and England, many of the most developed sports are the ones where players are best protected,” Moffat says. “A strong players’ association is the best way that we know to reach fair outcomes, and now with what’s going on in the world at the moment, especially for the women’s game.”An additional challenge facing India, and the women’s game at large, needs tackling in the immediate future. “Over the coming months, if there isn’t renewed focus on the women’s game and ensuring greater volume of cricket and exposure across more countries globally, a very foreseeable outcome is that there’ll be less eyeballs watching,” Moffat says. “Therefore, the reality is, there’s going to be potentially less fan interest and commercial interest in the game. And we know the commercial side of things is really important to sustaining the game longer term and to enabling it to grow across more countries.”On March 8, last year, for the third time, India came within touching distance of their maiden world title. Win or lose the series opener against South Africa today, they will feel somewhat relieved that their year without cricket is finally behind them. More than the memory of the defeat to Australia a year ago, their anguish at the eroded momentum of their recent world-tournament finishes is likely to linger.A timeline of the series that India women missed out on

Clayton Kershaw’s Kids Left Him the Sweetest Message Before Dodgers-Blue Jays World Series

As Clayton Kershaw prepares to step onto the mound for his last stretch of games in this year's World Series, he'll do so with the full confidence of Dodgers fans—and his kids, too.

Ahead of Game 1 of the World Series between the Dodgers and Blue Jays, Kershaw received a special voice message from his four children: Cali, Charley, Cooper and Chance. Last month, the 37-year-old announced he was going to retire at the end of the 2025 season, and with his final postseason games quickly approaching, his kids gave him the sweetest tribute through .

You can listen to those heartfelt messages below:

So adorable.

Kershaw also has a little something extra to look forward to following the World Series and his impending retirement, as he and his wife Ellen are expecting a baby girl.

Kershaw, an 11-time All-Star and three-time Cy Young winner, will hang up his glove after 18 seasons with the only team he's ever known. He's made it to the postseason in 14 of those years and clinched the World Series championship once in 2020. Kershaw also was on the Dodgers for their 2024 World Series run, though he was limited by injuries and didn't play at all that postseason.

He'll have a pretty good shot at winning another title with this year's star-studded Dodgers squad, which is set to face off against the Blue Jays in Toronto for Game 1 on Friday night.

A Sunday to savour for Kamalini and family: runs, a trophy and a big payday

The 16-year-old wicketkeeper batter has shown fearlessness and resilience during her rapid rise

Sruthi Ravindranath16-Dec-2024G Kamalini’s mother Saranya had never felt such happiness. Not even when her daughter was born.On Sunday, 16-year-old Kamalini first won the Player-of-the-Match award for her unbeaten 44 off 29 balls for India against Pakistan in the Under-19 Asia Cup in Malaysia, and then earned a INR 1.6 crore deal with Mumbai Indians at the WPL 2025 auction in Bengaluru. For Kamalini’s family, who watched both events from Chennai, it felt like a dream.”Don’t think we were this happy even when Kamalini was born,” Saranya told ESPNcricinfo. “Kamalini’s revelling in the moment. She’s getting a lot of calls and wishes – her team-mates, coaches have all been calling. She’s feeling very happy. She also scored at the Under-19 Asia Cup and got Player of the Match today, she’s so happy that everything is going well.”There was a bidding war between MI and Delhi Capitals for the teenager, and MI head coach Charlotte Edwards and team mentor Jhulan Goswami exchanged smiles after they won. Kamalini later revealed to Goswami that her family couldn’t control their tears.Saranya, Kamalini’s father Gunalan, and her brother Dominic Kishore had sat glued to the television all day.”Her dad was so confident she would be picked but I kept my hopes low,” Saranya said. “She was part of the trials with several teams, including Mumbai, ahead of the auction. I probably thought she’d go for 50 lakh. Her dad was nervous when the match was on but was relaxed during the auction. So many players before her went unsold so we were a bit worried. But I did not expect her to go for this amount.”MI liked what they had seen and heard of her over the last year and had set aside a significant chunk of their purse to secure the “cheeky” Kamalini at the auction.”It’s the one name that’s cropping up in all meetings we’ve had in the last two or three months,” Edwards said at the auction. “Having seen her first hand as well, she looks an exciting, young talent. We need back-up for Yastika [Bhatia] at the top of the order but equally we wanted a left-handed option for our middle order, that’s something we recognised last year. She seems the perfect fit. I know she’s young. She looks cheeky which I like. We knew there’d be other interest in her. So we knew we needed to keep some purse to hopefully secure her.”As a kid growing up in Madurai, Tamil Nadu, Kamalini was into inline skating. She was so good at it that she had her own showcase at home to display her medals and trophies. But she wanted to play cricket like her brother. She took up the game when she was 11 and it soon became an “obsession”.Related

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With her father as her first coach, Kamalini and her brother trained almost every day. A natural right-hander, she was trained to become a left-hand batter by her father, who believed that would give her an edge.The family decided to move to Chennai for better opportunities for both children. Her father even quit his business. Kamalini and her brother joined the Super Kings Academy in 2022 and started training under coach Louis Mariano.A hard-hitting opener who keeps wicket, Kamalini also bowls spin. But Mariano was keen that she prioritised wicketkeeping.”Kamalini has everything you look for in a cricketer,” Mariano said. “Be it defence, shots all round the wicket, back foot or front foot. She also has the ability to clear the ground with ease. Even at 16 she can play the ground easily because the technique is so good whatever shots she plays. The technique takes care of her game. She was destined for greatness right at a very young age.”Mariano was all praise for her work ethic. It’s hard even for Kamalini’s coaches to get her out of the nets. She spends at least five hours at the academy every day.Kamalini has made giant strides after joining the academy. In 2023, she was the Player of the Tournament in the Freyer T20 Cup hosted by the Tamil Nadu Cricket Association. She captained Tamil Nadu Women in the BCCI Under-15 tournament and was also picked for a special National Cricket Academy U-15 camp in Alur.Making the step up to the Under-19 level last year, Kamalini continued her terrific form. She was instrumental in Tamil Nadu winning the Under-19 domestic tournament in October, hitting 311 runs in eight matches. She followed that up by top-scoring with 79 in the Under-19 tri-series final for India B against South Africa A, which earned her a spot in India’s Under-19 Asia Cup squad.It was right before one of those tournaments last year that Kamalini’s family was coping with tough situation. Her father had a massive heart attack, kidney failure, and underwent an open-heart surgery. While he spent days in the intensive care unit, Kamalini and her brother were under the care of their extended family as their mother cared for their father.Kamalini had the Senior Women’s One-Day tournament to play during this turbulent time.”She’s so mentally strong. Even if the situation had worsened for her dad, she wouldn’t have returned from the tournament,” Saranya said. “She has that kind of mentality. She’s been like that since she was small. She left to the tournament crying, I’ll never forget that. Everyone told her father that he’ll live to see the day she wears the India jersey, and I believed in that too.”Kamalini had an excellent run in that tournament, scoring a century and finishing as the second highest run-scorer. Mariano said Kamalini’s biggest strength is her resilience and “fearlessness”.”She’d still turn up for training every day even when her father was critically ill,” he said. “She even attended a TNCA camp at that time. Her parents made sure the situation didn’t stop her cricket. Along with her skills, her fearlessness on and off the field is the biggest strength. She’s never scared to speak out also.”Kamalini father recovered but hasn’t been able to get back to training with her. Her rapid rise, however, has kept him in good spirits. Her parents’ dream is to see her in the senior Indian team for a long time.”We want to see her wear the jersey consistently,” Saranya said, “And play many games for India and have a long career.”

Max Scherzer Trolls Umpire By Pretending to Flip Coin for Ball and Strike Calls

Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Max Scherzer decided to have some fun in the dugout on Friday night during his team's matchup against the Cleveland Guardians.

With teammate Chris Bassitt on the bump in a 2-2 tie, the two-time World Series champion was caught by SportsNet cameras mimicking umpire CB Bucknor, pretending to flip a coin to determine balls and strikes behind the plate.

Here's a video of the hilarious gesture:

"I think we all know what Max Scherzer is doing here," the broadcast relayed. "The picture tells the story."

Scherzer himself couldn't help but smirk.

The 40-year-old, eight-time All-Star signed a one-year, $15.5 million deal with the Blue Jays back in February, but has started just one game in 2025 due to right thumb inflammation. Scherzer was placed on the IL the following day, March 30, but reportedly threw a "heavy bullpen" recently, signaling that he's on the mend.

Shubman Gill: A big honour for me to lead such legends

India’s new ODI captain gears up for his first game in charge of a team that includes Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma

Tristan Lavalette18-Oct-20252:29

Gill: ‘Extra responsibility brings the best out of me’

As Shubman Gill fronted the press pack in Perth, with the picturesque Swan River behind him, several locals passing by looked on curiously as if they could not quite pinpoint exactly who he was.Gill, clearly, does not yet quite have the global stature of Virat Kohli or Rohit Sharma. But that should soon change, with him holding the top leadership posts for India in Tests and ODIs. As the new poster boy of Indian cricket, Gill and his counterpart Mitchell Marsh are plastered on the marketing signs around the city to promote the ODI series opener between Australia and India at Optus Stadium.It represents a transition for India as they start building towards the 2027 World Cup, a tournament where they will hope to end a 16-year wait for the title.Gill, 26, has cut a relaxed figure so far on tour, appearing undaunted about stepping into the hot seat and following in the footsteps of Rohit and Kohli. He is perhaps encouraged by the successful start to his Test reign but, unlike in that format, there is the added intrigue of him now captaining these larger-than-life cricketers he grew up idolising.Related

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“These are the kind of players I used to idolise when I was growing up. The kind of hunger that they had used to inspire me,” Gill told reporters. “It is a big honour for me to be able to lead such legends of the game. I am sure there would be so many moments in this series where I would be able to learn from them.”If I get in a difficult position, I wouldn’t shy away from taking advice from them.”With Rohit remaining in the team despite being stripped of the captaincy, there has been innuendo over how seamlessly the leadership baton will be passed on. However, Gill said he has already leaned on Rohit’s experience.”The narrative that goes on outside is different. There’s nothing like that between us – things are just as they were before, ” Gill said of his relationship with Rohit. “He is very helpful. And whatever he has learned from his experience, or if I think I need some help, I ask him what he would have done in a particular situation.”I like to know everyone’s thoughts and then decide as per my understanding of the game. In that respect, I have a great equation with both Virat and Rohit . Whenever I have a doubt, I go to them and take their suggestion, advice, and they also don’t hesitate in sharing [their knowledge].”Shubman Gill addresses the press in Perth•AFP/Getty Images

The three-match ODI series in Australia will be the first glimpse of what type of style and combination Gill wants for his team. What has been seemingly answered, having scored five tons from 13 innings since taking charge in the Test format, is that Gill is a cricketer who thrives with the added responsibility.His Test average has risen noticeably, though that might be difficult to replicate in ODI cricket given his average currently stands at 59 from 55 matches.”I like it when I have the additional responsibility. The pressure brings out my best,” he said. “I enjoy that responsibility, though I feel when I go out to bat, I take the best decision when I think as a batsman and do not think too much about being a captain and thinking like one.”When I do that, then I put myself under extra pressure. As a batsman, I think what the team needs the most at that moment. So I try to take decisions as Shubman Gill the batsman rather than taking that additional responsibility of scoring all the runs or finishing the match.”While the ODI series is likely to be a celebration of Kohli and Rohit, as they bid farewell to a country where they have had countless battles, Gill is set to emerge into prominence in Australia where he is unlikely to fly under the radar again.”Definitely, very exciting,” he said about his debut as ODI captain. “It’s very big shoes for me to carry the legacy that Virat and Rohit have left.”How they converse and what kind of communication or messaging they had with the players is something that helped me get the best out of myself. That’s the kind of captain I would want to be, where all my players feel very secure in the job they have to do.”

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