Liverpool now trying to convince £120m superstar to join alongside Wirtz

Liverpool are reportedly “confident” of striking a big-money deal for a “world-class” attacking player this summer, with a plan to bring him in alongside Florian Wirtz.

Liverpool closing in on stunning Wirtz signing

The Reds are expected to embark upon one of their busiest summer transfer windows in years, and there has now been a huge development regarding their pursuit of Bayer Leverkusen star Wirtz.

While Bayern Munich have been the favourites to sign the German for a while, various reports on Friday claimed that the 22-year-old has now decided to join Liverpool instead, leading to plenty of joy among the fanbase.

It is reported that Wirtz’s father flew to England and was given a presentation by Michael Edwards and those within the recruitment team, persuading him that his son would be better off joining the Reds than Bayern this summer – or staying at his current club, for that matter.

If Liverpool could get a deal over the line, it could genuinely prove to be one of their most significant pieces of business in many years, with the Leverkusen ace among the world’s leading attacking players – and one with most of his career ahead of him.

Liverpool "confident" of another incredible addition

According to a promising update from GiveMeSport, Liverpool and Edwards are now “confident” of also completing the signing of Newcastle United superstar Alexander Isak this summer by convincing him to move to Anfield.

The Reds believe they can turn the 25-year-old’s head, and also have the “financial clout” to strike a deal ahead of next season amid a mooted £120m price tag, as Edwards and sporting director Richard Hughes look to work their magic and sign him alongside Wirtz.

In many ways, Isak is the perfect option to come in and be Liverpool’s new No.9, replacing the misfiring Darwin Nunez and making the Reds a more potent attacking force.

The Swede has been one of the best players in the Premier League this season, scoring 23 goals in the competition, and he has also been described as “world-class” by none other than Magpies legend Alan Shearer:

“I think there’s three world-class forwards in the Premier League now. Haaland being one, Salah being another. I think Isak has played himself into that company now.”

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It remains to be seen just how possible it is for Liverpool to afford both Isak and Wirtz, but if they did manage to sign the pair, it would be remarkable, taking Arne Slot’s side up plenty of gears and surely making them favourites to retain their league crown when next season gets underway.

Their own Bruno Fernandes: Man City readying bid to sign £51m "monster"

At times, it has appeared as though this season would be a complete catastrophe for Manchester City.

Now, having won four successive Premier League matches, they have second-placed Arsenal firmly in their sights, while the Sky Blues are also through to a third successive FA Cup Final, massive favourites to defeat Crystal Palace at Wembley in ten days’ time.

Nevertheless, Pep Guardiola will still want to oversee a major squad rebuild this summer, so does he have his eyes on one of the Premier League’s most outstanding players this season?

Manchester City's number one midfield target

According to a report in Spain, Manchester City are plotting an offer of €60m (£51m) to sign Nottingham Forest midfielder Morgan Gibbs-White, claiming Guardiola ‘already has in mind’ how he would fit into his team.

Fabrizio Romano adds that Gibbs-White is one of Man City’s main “priority targets”, although the deal will not be easy, given that Forest “still hope to keep” hold of their star asset.

The 25-year-old joined Forest from Wolves for a reported £42.5m three summers ago, and his value has only increased since then, hence why Ciaran McCarthy of TeamTalk is reporting that he is valued at £100m by the Garibaldi Reds.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

So, would Gibbs-White be a good signing for the Citizens, and could he have a similar impact to that of a talismanic midfielder from across Manchester?

Man City's answer to Bruno Fernandes

Given that Manchester United are currently 15th in the Premier League table, on course for their lowest finish since being relegated in 1974, Mark Critchley of The Athletic’s question is a valid one: where on earth would they be without Bruno Fernandes?

Well, in the relegation zone is the seemingly hyperbolic but possibly accurate answer because, as outlined by Jamie Jackson of the Guardian, Fernandes has been Man United’s most important player from the moment he first arrived, as outlined in the table below.

Appearances

285

Matches not featured in

18

Goals

98

Assists

85

PL goal involvements

112

% of PL goals involved in (since debut)

35.33%

As the table notes, Fernandes has been directly involved in more than 35% of Man United’s 317 Premier League goals since his debut on 1 February 2020, underlining that he’s simply been a transformational player at Old Trafford.

Bruno Fernandes celebrates for Manchester United

So, could Gibbs-White have a similar impact at the Etihad? Well, let’s compare the duo to help find out, having been noted as similar players in the top-flight this season, among those in their position, as per FBref.

Appearances

31

33

Minutes

2,561

2,762

Goals

5

8

Assists

9

10

Goals – xG

+0.3

-2.1

Shots on target %

34%

30.1%

Pass completion %

78.2%

75.2%

Shot-creating actions

104

169

Goal-creating actions

17

12

Through-balls

16

27

Progressive carries

64

65

Progressive passes received

118

118

Touches per 90

53

78

Ball recoveries

118

192

Note: all statistics are Premier League only

As the table highlights, Fernandes and Gibbs-White have recorded very similar statistics this season, with the Portuguese international predominantly coming out on top, albeit the Englishman has proved to be a more clinical finisher, while registering more goal-creating actions, as well as a higher percentage when it comes to passing and shots on target.

Jacek Kulig of Football Talent Scout praises Gibbs-White’s “versatility and quality”, while commentator Jamie Martin is impressed by his “superb ball-carrying”, adding that the midfielder is “constantly improving”. In the words of journalist Ahmed Yussuf, he is “a transition monster”.

Morgan Gibbs-White for Nottingham Forest.

As outlined by Zak Garner-Purkis of Forbes, Gibbs-White’s ‘exceptional performances’ have been key to Forest’s astronomical rise up the table this season, adding that it’s easy to understand why Man City are ‘eager to have him in their ranks’.

So, could he be making the move from the City Ground to Manchester City this summer?

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Better than Nico Williams: Arsenal plotting to sign "unstoppable" £86m star

This summer looks set to be a massive one for Arsenal, Mikel Arteta has even admitted as much.

The Spaniard’s side might still be able to do something truly remarkable in the Champions League, but with Liverpool now 11 points ahead in the Premier League, any chance of domestic glory looks all but gone.

It’s been a bruising campaign for the Gunners in that regard, as endless injuries and underwhelming form have seen them miss out on the chance to take advantage of Manchester City’s incredible collapse.

Arsenal manager MikelArtetareacts

Fortunately, it appears as if the North Londoners are determined not to let the same thing happen next year by going big in the summer transfer market, and while Nico Williams has long been linked with the club, recent reports have now touted an even better player for a move to the Emirates.

Arsenal transfer news

Even before Arteta commented on the magnitude of the summer ahead, it looked almost certain that Arsenal would be in the market for a new centre-forward, as recent weeks have seen two names constantly linked with the club: Viktor Gyokeres and Benjamin Sesko.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

The former will supposedly be available for around the £58m mark and has amassed a tally of 55 goal involvements in 44 games for Sporting CP this season, while the latter could cost up to £67m and has amassed a haul of 25 goal involvements in 39 games for RB Leipzig.

However, it looks like the club don’t just want a new centre-forward, as alongside Williams, there has been another superstar winger recently touted for a move to N5: Rafael Leão.

AC Milan's RafaelLeao

Yes, according to a recent report from Spain, Arsenal are keen on signing AC Milan’s Portuguese game-changer.

The report has revealed that the Gunners have made the dynamic attacker one of their top priorities for the upcoming window as they seek a ‘star signing’.

However, Milan are understandably reluctant to let their star man leave easily, so the North Londoners would have to pay his mammoth release clause, which reportedly exceeds €100m, or £86m.

It would be an incredibly costly and potentially complicated transfer, but given Leão’s ability, it’s one worth fighting for, especially as he’d be a better signing than Williams.

How Leão compares to Williams

So, if Arsenal can only sign one left-winger this summer, how does Leão stack up against Williams?

AC Milan's RafaelLeaobefore the match

Well, when it comes down to their pure output, the Portuguese superstar comes out on top.

For example, in 43 appearances this season, totalling 2997 minutes, the “unstoppable” Milan star, as dubbed by journalist Zach Lowy, has scored ten goals and provided nine assists, which comes out to an average of a goal involvement every 2.26 games, or every 157.73 minutes.

Leão vs Williams

Player

Leao

Williams

Appearances

43

39

Minutes

2997′

2689′

Goals

10

9

Assists

9

7

Goal Involvements per Match

0.44

0.41

Minutes per Goal Involvement

157.73′

172′

All Stats via Transfermarkt

In contrast, the Athletic Bilbao dynamo has scored nine goals and provided seven assists in 39 appearances, totalling 2752 minutes.

That means the Spaniard is currently averaging a goal involvement every 2.43 games, or every 172 minutes, which isn’t bad but doesn’t stack up to the competition.

Moreover, when we take a look under the hood at their underlying numbers, it’s another win for the Almada-born monster.

For example, he comes out ahead in practically every relevant metric, including but not limited to expected and actual non-penalty goals plus assists, progressive and key passes, crosses and passes into the penalty area, goal-creating actions, shots and shots on target, passes into the final third and more, all per 90.

Leão vs Williams

Statistic

Leão

Williams

Non-Penalty Expected G+As

0.60

0.35

Non-Penalty G+As

0.58

0.43

Progressive Passes

3.74

3.17

Progressive Carries

4.95

5.34

Shots

2.57

2.45

Shots on Target

1.04

0.87

Passing Accuracy

75.0%

70.3%

Key Passes

2.48

1.88

Passes into the Final Third

1.58

1.06

Passes into the Penalty Area

2.16

1.35

Crosses into the Penalty Area

0.45

0.38

Shot-Creating Actions

4.77

5.05

Goal-Creating Actions

0.63

0.58

All Stats via FBref for the 24/25 League Season

Ultimately, signing either Leão or Williams would make Arsenal a far more dangerous proposition next season, but if they have to pick one, Arteta and Co should sign the Milan star, as he’s simply the better player.

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'Emotional' Siraj reminds RCB what they let go of

Playing against his former team, he silenced the Chinnaswamy with a spell of 3 for 19

Shashank Kishore03-Apr-20251:30

‘A bit more fire in the belly for Siraj after Champions Trophy snub’

Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) fans need no reminding of two things. First, the seemingly harmless slogan that has become an albatross around their necks. Second, a long list of players they let go of only to watch them flourish elsewhere and, at times, haunt them.KL Rahul, Travis Head, Yuzvendra Chahal, Shane Watson, Moeen Ali, Shivam Dube – enough heartbreaks? On Wednesday night, another name was added in bold to that illustrious list – Mohammed Siraj, the one they let go of before the IPL 2025 mega auction.Siraj now plays for Gujarat Titans (GT) but RCB was his IPL home for seven seasons, where he rose from a rookie to their pace spearhead. Yet, being overlooked in favour of Yash Dayal – an uncapped signing – for retention must have stung, especially after finishing as their joint-highest wicket-taker in 2024. He claimed 15 wickets in 14 games, though his economy rate, at 9.18, was on the higher side.Related

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At the time, the rumblings within the camp pointed to Siraj’s underwhelming record at the Chinnaswamy, and that his prolific years with the franchise had come when the IPL moved to the UAE during the Covid years. A look at his record, however, suggests there’s very little to choose from. His economy for RCB at the Chinnaswamy (8.81) was only marginally higher than elsewhere (8.53), while his average at home was significantly better (26.84 as opposed to 33.54 away).How poetic, then, that one of his best IPL spells – 3 for 19 off four overs, a fine follow-up to the one against Mumbai Indians in Ahmedabad last week – came at the very ground where he was once deemed to have fallen short. His execution was just as impressive as his pace and zip on a surface that, as RCB coach Andy Flower noted, “wasn’t a typical Chinnaswamy pitch”.Mohammed Siraj thought he had dismissed Phil Salt but Jos Buttler ended up dropping the catch•BCCIThe evening began with warmth – plenty of bonhomie and backslaps with former team-mates. But the competitive fire took over quickly, igniting further when Virat Kohli elegantly drove him through extra cover for a boundary off his second ball.The Chinnaswamy erupts at the slightest spark when RCB play, and it takes something extraordinary to silence it – and that’s exactly what Siraj did. After sending Devdutt Padikkal’s stumps cartwheeling, he sprinted the length of the pitch before unleashing his trademark Cristiano Ronaldo celebration. The silence in the stadium that followed was telling.”I was a little emotional, because I played here for seven years in the red jersey,” Siraj said later, after being named Player of the Match. “Now it’s a different colour. I was a little nervous and a little emotional, too. But as soon as I got the ball in my hand, I was full on.”Siraj’s full-on avatar truly sparked life into the GT camp when he dismissed the in-form Phil Salt. Siraj should have had him in the very first over when he edged a pull but Jos Buttler put it down. It seemed Siraj and GT had done their homework: In the IPL, Salt strikes significantly better (227.36) against full deliveries than he does against deliveries bowled on a good length or just short of it (146.64).

“I was a little emotional, because I played here for seven years in the red jersey… But as soon as I got the ball in my hand, I was full on”

GT’s plan was evident from the outset when Salt mistimed a pull on the very first ball, the delivery from Siraj thudding near his bat sticker. The struggle against those lengths nearly led to Salt’s downfall. He was on 7 off ten when he had a mix-up with Rajat Patidar as he attempted a tight single to get off strike. But Siraj, despite all three stumps in sight, missed the direct hit at the non-striker’s end.Much to Siraj’s frustration, Salt countered with a monstrous 105-metre pulled six that sailed into the adjacent metro sheds – a premeditated response to a 144kph bouncer. Such a blow can dent a bowler’s confidence, even shake his resolve. But not Siraj’s. Unfazed, he struck back in style, landing the ball on a good length, getting it to nip away off the seam, and splattering Salt’s stumps as the batter attempted an ambitious golf swing. It was as if Siraj was engulfed by a mystical power that stayed with him all night.He didn’t need to push the speed gun to its limits to be RCB’s wrecking ball. It was all about skill, a deep understanding of his craft, and the unwavering belief that his body would respond exactly as he intended. This was Siraj at his peak – far removed from the bowler who ran out of steam in the latter stages of the Border-Gavaskar Trophy in Australia, only to return home and find himself sidelined from India’s white-ball plans.Siraj roars after eventually getting Salt•BCCI”I was playing matches consistently, so, I wasn’t realising the mistakes I was making,” he said when asked about his rhythm. “I took a break and focused on my fitness and bowling. It also helped mentally. Then when I joined GT, I spoke to Ashu [Ashish Nehra, coach] . So it’s coming out well and I am confident. Ashu tells me to go out and have fun. There’s no bigger confidence-booster than that.”Siraj’s first two wickets came from his potent mix of hard lengths and sharp movement off the pitch, his third – dismissing half-centurion Liam Livingstone – was just as crucial, potentially denying RCB vital runs at the death. More than the runs, though, it took the momentum away from RCB just as Livingstone was igniting a late surge. His brutal assault on Rashid Khan – who registered 0 for 54, his joint-second-most expensive T20 spell – had begun to turn the tide, only for Siraj to snatch it back.”I have only one mindset that as a bowler, it is very important to have belief,” he said. “If you don’t have belief, then obviously you will panic from inside. Then when you hit a six, then you tend to try something else. So, the most important thing is to have the belief that I can do it. No matter which wicket I am bowling on, I have belief. That is my mindset that I can do it.”Bowling the way he did, Siraj looked unshackled, free from the mental cobwebs that may have weighed him down in recent times. His fiery start to IPL 2025 could well mark the beginning of a happy chapter with GT.

Harry Brook atones for Ben Stokes run-out by making history with third hundred

“It probably makes you concentrate more,” explains England’s record-breaker after comedy mix-up with captain

Vithushan Ehantharajah18-Dec-2022It takes a bolshy, self-assured, unique soul to run out your captain.There’s a point when you realise it’s happening and you wonder what the right decision is, moments after you’ve made the catastrophic wrong one. The latter, in this instance, was a hesitation from Harry Brook bringing him to a standstill that proved terminal for Ben Stokes, who was charging to his end for a comfortable third.Your options at that point are pretty clear. Sacrifice yourself for the leader? Maybe, and in this case that would have meant Brook setting off to the non-striker’s end in vain. And heck, as much as people like to pretend, this isn’t war. It’s only a game, arguably both the silliest and most selfish of them all. Brook was on 42, Stokes 26 – and only one of them in the midst of a historical purple patch. Brook decided his best bet for his own safety was to retreat back to the end he’d tentatively left, touching his bat in fractionally before Stokes got there.There was none of the animosity the situation would usually elicit – not that you would expect there to be with this group. This is as free-spirited an England team there has been, liberated from the conservative shackles of English Test cricket long before they arrived in Karachi with an unassailable 2-0 lead.Harry Brook and Ben Stokes were stranded at the same end after a mix-up•Matthew Lewis/Getty ImagesOn Friday, England’s preparations for the third Test concluded with a six-hitting competition between the northerners and southerners within the squad (won by the northerners), followed by a one-on-one competition between Stokes and Brendon McCullum. Stokes lost, meaning he had to serve dinner to the best-on-show for the winners – which was Brook. Here they were, two days later, Brook returning the favour by barbecuing his skipper. “I’ll have to serve him dinner tonight,” Brook reflected, with a grin. “And tuck his little towel [napkin] in.”Brook offered a hand up in apology. Stokes immediately reciprocated with a thumbs-up. The next time their paths crossed at tea, Brook had 108 not out, on his way to an eventual 111 that provided the backbone for England’s first innings of 354.”It was probably my fault to be honest,” Brook said, hands up in the press conference. “I’ll take the blame. There probably was three there. I was slightly lazy with my running. I was a bit tired to be honest.” Understandably so, given the 23-year-old’s output this last month, off the back of England’s successful T20 World Cup campaign and a stellar T20I series on these shores before that.Related

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One of the many things you can say about Brook, with great confidence, is the Yorkshire batter just seems to belong. He’s in the team for good, even once Jonny Bairstow returns. He’s in the conversation as one of the best young multi-format batters going. He’s worthy of mention among the sport’s legendary names, many from the days of yore.A third century in as many Tests on this tour has him alongside the likes of George Headley, Arthur Morris, Conrad Hunt and Sunil Gavaskar as players with three or more in their first four caps. Only Mohammad Azharuddin has managed as many in fewer than Brook’s six innings.He is also now England’s leading run-scorer in an overseas Test series against Pakistan, with 468 runs a ludicrous average of 93.60 and an even more ludicrous strike rate of 93.41. A crisp brace through the covers took him to 93 and and ahead of Alastair Cook’s tally of 450 during the 2015-16 series in the UAE.ESPNcricinfo LtdMore historical, perhaps, was the first of those two runs, which moved him to a record English tally in Pakistan, passing David Gower’s 449 in 1983-84. Which is funny because, just last year, Brook’s grandma made a move on Gower when she was collecting the Cricket Writers’ Club young cricketer of the year award on his behalf. Evidently, seizing your moment on a big stage is a family trait.Even if the series is England’s, you could argue the centuries have been of escalating importance, certainly within the sole context of the matches themselves. The first – off 80 deliveries – was England’s fourth (and fastest) on day one of the series, as the tourists closed on 506 for 4 in 75 overs. His most productive knock was arguably his 87 from 65 in the second innings which allowed England to declare with a lead of 342 at tea on day four, before going on to secure the win with just 10 minutes of light to spare on the final day.Number two in Brook’s charts was the only century of the Multan Test, pushing England to 275 in their second innings to ensure Pakistan had to chase 355. They needed almost all of those runs, eventually coming through by 26. From a personal point of view, it was also the product of some necessary recalibration, after failing as one of Abrar Ahmed’s seven victims earlier in the match: skying to mid-off having played from his crease, which he recognised afterwards is not something he usually does.He carried that experience into his second innings on Sunday, with Abrar on the receiving end of all three of Brook’s sixes, all down the ground over the bowler’s head, whom he took for 63 from 65 deliveries overall. Without Brook’s calm, England’s recovery from 58 for 3 and 98 for 4 would have been a lot trickier, and even parity with Pakistan’s 304 might have been a long way off. In the end, with the help of Ben Foakes – with whom he shared a stand of 117 – and some contributions from the tail, a lead of 50 was established. Pakistan resume on Monday on 21 without loss.Just as with the previous two hundreds, Brook’s celebration when his 133rd ball was struck off the back foot through the covers – off Abrar – was devoid of any emotion bar satisfaction. Even the remorse of running out a team-mate on his way to a century – as happened with Ollie Pope in the previous Test – was given a positive, tongue-in-cheek spin.ESPNcricinfo Ltd”It probably makes you concentrate a little bit more actually, when you’ve been involved in a run-out,” he began. “But obviously I was involved in Ollie Pope last week and I went on to get a hundred in that game. So maybe I should start something up.”Evidently, the confidence Brook is exuding is nothing new. He revealed that, prior to coming on tour, he predicted a decent run: “I actually said to one of my mates before I came out here that I would love to get two hundreds out here, so obviously to go one better is a very nice feeling.”He went on to revel in the fact he has given those above him a problem to consider, given Bairstow’s forthcoming return following a golf accident that opened the door for Brook. “Most selectors say they like headaches, so hopefully I’ve caused a very big migraine.”Bairstow’s return to competitive action is unlikely to come until the start of the Indian Premier League, meaning he is expected to miss the two Tests out in New Zealand; Brook believes his Yorkshire team-mate will come straight back into the side when he is available, and he is almost certainly right.As for where that might be, Brook says that is for other people to decide. But really, he has probably made their minds up for them.

Which batsman had the longest streak of single-digit scores in Tests?

And which bowler took at least one wicket in 52 consecutive innings?

Anantha Narayanan08-Aug-2020As I had mentioned in my previous piece, it’s now time for a fun and wacky article, this one on streaks in Test cricket. You might have come across quite a few either in ESPNcricinfo’s huge collection of records, in Steven Lynch’s excellent weekly Q&A columns, or in features written by members of the site’s stats team. But I’ll venture to say that this might be the first time you will see all these 40 streaks in Test cricket grouped in one place.Player combinationSame 11 players: England played the same team in six Tests in 2008. The XI comprised of: Andrew Strauss, Alastair Cook, Michael Vaughan (c) , Kevin Pietersen, Ian Bell, Paul Collingwood, Tim Ambrose (wk), Stuart Broad, Ryan Sidebottom, James Anderson, and Monty Panesar. England won four and drew two with this XI. South Africa (on five separate occasions), Australia (three times), England (one other occasion) and West Indies (once) have played the same team in five consecutive Tests.Same opening pair: This is a rarely mentioned streak. Justin Langer and Matthew Hayden opened in 91 consecutive innings between November 2001 and October 2005. They averaged 51.17 runs per completed partnership during this run. After the ICC Test in 2005, Hayden opened with Michael Hussey and other batsmen. Strauss and Cook had two opening streaks of 43 and 45 innings, averaging 43 runs across those streaks. These were separated by two Tests against Bangladesh in which Michael Carberry and Jonathan Trott opened, with Cook. Surprisingly, Jack Hobbs and Herbert Sutcliffe only opened together in 11 successive innings. Hobbs opened quite a few times with Wilfred Rhodes, and Sutcliffe with Percy Holmes.Same opening bowlers: The established fast-bowling partnerships do not rule the roost here. Kapil Dev and Karsan Ghavri opened the bowling in 45 consecutive innings between November 1978 and January 1981. In Lahore, in the Test before their streak began, Sunil Gavaskar opened with Kapil, and in the Test after it ended, in Melbourne, Dilip Doshi opened with Kapil. Anderson and Broad opened in 39 consecutive innings between 2017 and 2018. Pakistan and West Indies generally played musical chairs with their new-ball combinations. Their best pairs were Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis (16 innings) and Malcolm Marshall and Joel Garner (28 innings) respectively.ResultsWins: Between October 1999 and February 2001, Australia won 16 Tests in a row, 11 at home Tests and five away. This streak was ended by India in the Laxman-Dravid-Harbhajan Test in Kolkata. Before their streak started, Australia played out two rain-hit draws in Sri Lanka.

Between the Boxing Day Test of 2005 and the New Year Test in 2008, Australia again won 16 Tests in a row, once again 11 at home and five away. Included in this streak are a two-wicket win and a three-wicket win. This streak was ended by India in Perth, where they beat Australia by 72 runs. Before this sequence, Australia drew a hard-fought Test against South Africa.In 1984, West Indies won 11 Tests in a row, three at home and eight away. This streak was bookended by dominating near-win draws against Australia.Innings wins: In the 2019-20 home season, India won four Tests by an innings. On no fewer than 15 occasions have teams registered three consecutive wins by an innings. It should be noted that the recent trend, post 2001, is to not enforce the follow-on, and teams end up with wins by huge run margins. Many of these could be innings wins in any other era.Draws: West Indies drew ten Tests in a row between March 1971 and March 1973. But let me make it clear: this was not yet the famed West Indies side. The pace attack was pedestrian, with Andy Roberts, the first of those great fast bowlers, still a year away from making his debut.Losses: This is on expected lines. Bangladesh lost 21 Tests in a row between November 2001 and February 2004 – 12 of them by an innings. A novice team, taken to the cleaners by the experienced teams. Zimbabwe have had streaks of 11 and ten losses in the past 20 years.Innings defeats: Bangladesh, twice (once in 2001-02 and once in 2004) and Zimbabwe, in 2005, lost five consecutive matches by an innings. Zimbabwe’s sixth loss was by ten wickets.TossesToss wins: Let me clarify that these toss wins/losses are from the team’s point of view and not the captain’s. From October 1998 to September 1999, Australia won 12 tosses in a row, seven at home and five away. Australia won five, drew three and lost four of these Tests. From January 1960 to June 1961, England won 12 tosses in a row, five at home and seven away. England won four, drew seven and lost one of these Tests. There have been six occasions when teams won the toss in eight consecutive Tests.Toss losses: India had the misfortune to lose ten tosses in a row from December 2009 to October 2010. There were six home Tests and four away Tests. India won seven, drew one and lost two of these Tests. The last two wins were achieved despite Australia crossing 400 on each occasion. There were seven occasions when teams lost the toss in nine consecutive Tests.Teams400-plus scores: In the 1986-87 season, India went past 400 in six consecutive innings. The scores were 517 for 5, 676 for 7, 451 for 6, 400, 527 for 9 and 403. Surprisingly (or not), India won only two of the Tests. Australia, twice (1938 and 2003), and India, again in 2010, scored five consecutive 400-plus totals.Sub-100 scores: In their first Test, South Africa scored 84 and 129. Then the might of Australia and England settled on them like a shroud. They did not reach 100 in their next six innings. The sequence was 47, 43, 97, 83, 93 and 30. All the matches were defeats to England. New Zealand, in 1958, and India, in 1952, had sequences of three sub-100 innings.Opening partnerships of above 100: Four teams share a sequence of three 100-plus opening partnerships: England, in 1925 and 1947, Pakistan in 2003, and Australia in 2015.Capturing all ten wickets: England took all the opposing team’s wickets no fewer than 37 times between March 1885 and July 1893. Australia achieved it 33 times during their golden 16-win run in the 1999-2001 period.CaptainsThis is a tricky bit of analysis. There are two type of streaks. A player captains his team in X Tests and then does not play in a few matches; “X” is one type of streak. And then he comes back and continues to captain, say, for a total of Y matches; this is another streak. “X” is from a team’s point of view while “Y” is from the player’s point of view. For “X”, the key is “an unbroken sequence for both team and player”. This is the more common definition. For “Y”, the key is “as long as he played, he was the captain”.Captain – Team: Allan Border captained Australia in 93 consecutive Tests from December 1984 to March 1994. His results were 32-39-22 (W-D-L). Using a 2-1-0 points allocation, Border had a Result Index of 55.4% (103 points out of a maximum of 186). Ricky Ponting captained Australia in 73 consecutive Tests from November 2004 to December 2010. His Result Index was 69.9% (45-12-16).Captain – Player: Graeme Smith captained South Africa in 108 consecutive Tests he played from April 2003 to March 2014. Smith’s Result Index was 61.6% (53-27-28). Border’s run of 93 Tests has already been chronicled. Stephen Fleming had a run of 80 Tests, with a Result Index of 50.6%, Ponting 77 Tests (70.8%), and Clive Lloyd 74 Tests (66.2%).

Winning Captain – Team: Ponting won 16 consecutive Tests as captain. This was during Australia’s golden run in 2008. During their other golden run, Steve Waugh captained in the first 12 Tests, then Adam Gilchrist captained successfully against West Indies in Adelaide, before Waugh took over again to complete the run.Winning Captain – Player: Ponting’s 16 consecutive Tests as a winning captain is followed by Steve Waugh’s 15 consecutive wins. Clive Lloyd had a run of 11 successful Tests in 1984.Draws by captain: John Reid drew nine successive Tests as captain from February 1964 to March 1965. Nari Contractor, in 1962, and Garry Sobers, in 1973, drew eight successive Tests as captains.Losing captain: Khaled Mashud lost ten successive Tests as captain from December 2001 to December 2002. Khaled Mahmud, who succeeded him, fared slightly better, losing nine in a row. Habibul Bashar, who took over the sinking ship, lost one Test, was lucky to save a Test because of rain and finally managed to save a fully played out Test. Those were the early days in Test cricket for Bangladesh.BatsmenConsecutive hundreds: This is a very well-known streak. Everton Weekes had a streak of five hundreds in 1948. His sequence of scores was 141, 128, 194, 162 and 101. This streak has remained a record for the past 70-plus years. It is interesting to note that his next score was 90. Jack Fingleton, in 1936, Alan Melville, from 1939 to 1947, and Rahul Dravid, in 2002, had streaks of four 100-plus innings.

Consecutive 90s: Clem Hill, in 1902, had a cruel sequence of 99, 98 and 97, missing three hundreds by a total of six runs. Fifteen batsmen had sequences of two nineties. It is interesting to note that there is just a single score of 99 in these 30 scores in the 90s. Apart from Hill, Frank Woolley, Gordon Greenidge (twice) and Mahela Jayawardene had dual nineties in a single Test.Consecutive 50-plus scores: Weekes continued his run of five hundreds with innings of 90 and 56. This completed the record streak of seven fifties. Just look at his next two innings – 48 and 52. He missed an amazing streak of nine consecutive fifties by two runs. However, this time he has to share his record. Kumar Sangakkara had a streak of seven 50-plus scores in 2014. His sequence of scores was 75, 319, 105, 147, 61, 79 and 55. His aggregate of 841 runs is the highest in this group. But this does not end here.Four other batsmen share this record of seven consecutive fifties. Andy Flower (2001), Shivnarine Chanderpaul (2007), Chris Rogers (2015) and KL Rahul (2017) had similar streaks. Flower’s previous innings, before the start of the streak, was 48.Unbeaten in innings: There is a crowd of six batsmen sharing nine occurrences of three consecutive unbeaten innings (of scores of 50 and above). Out of these six batsmen, two are worth delving into a little deeper. Sachin Tendulkar had innings of 241*, 60* and 194* in 2004 and accumulated 495 runs in these three innings. Surprisingly, Tendulkar was out for single figures in the next six innings. (Perhaps the declaration in Multan when he was on 194 put him off.) Chanderpaul achieved this hat-trick streak four times in his career (2002, 2004, 2008, 2014). The other batsmen are Ken Mackay (1958), Brian McMillan (1997), Jacques Kallis (2002) and Ross Taylor (2016).Now we move on to the other end of the spectrum.Single-digit scores: For batsmen who averaged over 20 in their careers, Reid, in 1954, had a wretched run of ten single-digit scores. The telephone-number sequence was 0, 3, 6, 1, 9, 7, 6, 0, 3 and 1. That is the calling code for Sonapur in Assam and Erfurt in Germany. Maybe the paucity of good replacements kept him in the side. His next innings was a top-quality 135 against South Africa in Cape Town. Alan Knott (1977-80), Mohinder Amarnath (1983) and Kapil Dev (1981) had sequences of eight single-digit scores.Zeroes: Among batsmen who averaged over 20 in their careers, the bespectacled Pankaj Roy had a quartet of zeros during the 1952 tour of England while facing the the express pace of Fred Trueman and the swing of Alec Bedser. He had previously made another zero and scores of 35 and 19 for Roy in the series. Mark Waugh made four consecutive zeros in Sri Lanka in 1992 while facing a total of 12 balls. Three of the dismissals were to bowlers whose names did not start with the letter M.Bowled dismissals: Jimmy Sinclair of South Africa was bowled in seven consecutive innings in 1910. His scores were 28, 3, 0, 12, 22, 10 and 19. Tip Snooke of South Africa was also bowled in seven consecutive innings with scores of 7, 9, 2, 16, 23, 8 and 20. Three other batsmen have a six-innings streak of bowled dismissals, the most recent being Alec Stewart in 1994.Run-out dismissals: John Jameson of England was run out in three consecutive innings in his first two Tests. His scores were 28, 82 and 16. He was then dropped and played in only two more Tests. As many as 55 players have a two-innings streaks of run-outs.BowlersTen-wicket hauls in a match: Who else but Muttiah Muralitharan? The master magician dominates the bowling streaks. It is interesting to note that of the 192 Test bowlers who have captured 100 or more wickets, only 26 bowlers have taken ten in a match at least four times. And of these 192, 63 have never taken ten in a match. This set of numbers puts Murali’s performances in perspective.He has taken ten wickets in a match in four consecutive Tests twice in his career. The first instance was in victories between August and November 2001 – 11 for 196, 10 for 111, 11 for 170 and 10 for 135. The next instance was between May and August 2006 – 10 for 115, 11 for 132, 10 for 172 and 12 for 225. Sri Lanka lost the first of those four Tests, but won the next three. Claire Grimmett finished his illustrious career with three ten-wickets hauls in 1936. The sequence was 10 for 88, 10 for 110 and 13 for 173. That was some exit.Eight-wicket hauls in a match: I have determined that taking eight wickets in a match more often than not leads to Test wins. Yasir Shah leads this illustrious list with five successive hauls of eight or more wickets in a match between April and October 2017 – 8 for 154, 9 for 177, 8 for 218, 8 for 171 and 8 for 231. Note how generous Yasir has been in terms of runs conceded. It did not help Pakistan much since they lost three of these Tests. Then we have the master, Murali, who has achieved this streak no fewer than five times. In addition to the two sequences of four ten-wicket hauls, he achieved this again during 2000, 2002 and 2006. Charlie Turner and Sydney Barnes also had four such sequences during 1888 and 1914.Five-wicket hauls in a innings: Turner achieved a streak of six successive innings in which he captured five or more wickets, in 1888: he had a sequence of 5 for 44, 7 for 43, 5 for 27, 5 for 36, 6 for 112 and 5 for 86. Tom Richardson (1896), Alec Bedser (1953) and Shane Shillingford (2013) had dream runs of five five-wickets per innings spells.Four-wicket hauls in an innings: I have included four-wicket hauls since it is more valuable than scoring a hundred. Murali had a streak of nine consecutive innings of four-wicket hauls between December 2001 and May 2002. Waqar Younis had a streak of nine innings of four-wicket captures between April 1993 and February 1994. Turner had a streak of eight such innings.Innings with at least one wicket: I am very strict about this streak. If a bowler bowled a ball, it is taken as a spell. That is how it should be when determining streaks. Murali had a run of 52 consecutive innings in which he captured at least one wicket – between July 2002 and April 2006. He had another run of 49 innings in which he captured at least one wicket – between December 1999 and June 2002. Unfortunately in between these two streaks, he had a spell of 2-0-17-0 that broke the sequence. Otherwise it would be 102 successive innings with at least one wicket. Bishan Bedi had such a sequence of 42 innings from July 1971 to January 1977. Murali, Dennis Lillee and Waqar had streaks of 41 successful spells.

WicketkeepersFive dismissals in a match: Brad Haddin had a golden run of six Tests, between January 2012 and August 2013, in which he dismissed five or more batsmen. He dismissed 36 batsmen during this run. He dismissed four batsmen in the Test before and four and five batsmen in the two Tests afterwards. Geraint Jones matched this sequence of six Tests in 2006, dismissing 35 batsmen during this run. Wally Grout and Adam Gilchrist had five such Tests each during 1961 and 2004 respectively.PlayersConsecutive Tests: Cook had a sequence of 159 consecutive Tests. He scored 60 and 104 not out in his debut Test in Nagpur in 2006. Then he made 17 and 2 in Mohali. He did not play the Mumbai Test; that followed, but came back to the team at Lord’s and played in England’s next 159 Tests. Border played his first Test at the MCG in 1978. He scored 29 and 0. In the next two Tests his scores were 60*, 45*, 11 and 1. He was inexplicably dropped for the next Test, but came back to the MCG and played in Australia’s next 153 Tests. These two are Bradmanesque distances away from the other batsmen. Gavaskar played in 106 consecutive Tests and Mark Waugh in 107 Tests.

Consecutive Tests through their entire career: Note the subtle difference. These players were never dropped and never missed a single Test. Brendon McCullum played 101 consecutive Tests, which formed his entire career. Similarly, Gilchrist played in 96 Tests, which was his entire career. Real giants indeed – on either side of the Tasman Sea.Miscellaneous triviaTest cricket is 143 years old. An almost perfect halfway mark can be found on August 18, 1948, the day Don Bradman said farewell to Test cricket. A very memorable day indeed. The halves are just over 71 years long. If one compares the two halves, 303 Tests were played in the first half and over 2087 Tests in the second half. The first half saw five triple-hundred scores and the second, 26. There were two scores of 299, one in each half. Surprisingly, there were six 15-wicket match hauls in the first half and six in the second half. There were two team innings of 900-plus, one in each half. There were two scores of 30 or lower in the first half and one in the second half. In all these occurrences, the first half seems to take the lead. The 400, 456 and ten wickets in an innings (twice) are the pluses for the second half.There have been three long breaks in Test cricket. The First World War saw a break of 2483 days. The Second World War saw a break of 2411 days. And now, the Covid-19 enforced break lasted 127 days. We necessarily have to exclude the initial years when the first five Tests were played in 1877, 1877, 1879, 1880 and 1882. Regular schedules started after that.The longest-standing important records are as follows: The 81 run-aggregate in two innings record – the lowest in a Test when the batting team has lost 20 wickets – by South Africa has stood for 31,994 days and counting
The 26-run innings score record by New Zealand – the lowest in an all-out innings – has stood for 23,877 days and counting
Nineteen wickets in a match by Jim Laker has stood for 23,387 days and counting
456 runs in a Test by Graham Gooch has stood for 10,967 days and counting
952 runs – the record innings total by Sri Lanka has stood for 8404 days and counting
400 runs in an innings by Brian Lara has stood for 5961 days (12/4/2004) and countingOn the other hand:The last two-day Test was played around 790 days back (in June 2018)
The last 300 was scored around 250 days back (in November 2019)
The last Test hat-trick came around 180 days back (in February this year)This shows that triple-hundreds and hat-tricks are always around the corner. But maybe not two-day Tests. However, no one is going to take 20 wickets in a Test or score 401 in an innings in a hurry. No team is going to fold up for 25, although Australia desperately tried to achieve this at Newlands a few years back.No bowler has taken 18 wickets in a Test. No bowler has conceded 198 runs in a Test spell. Similarly no batsman in Test cricket has scored 229. No team has won by eight or nine or 15 or 43 runs. The most frequented hundred-plus score is 100. It has been reached 161 times. That may be because of teams declaring soon after their batsman reaches 100. It is no wonder that the score of zero has occurred no fewer than 10,601 times (12.5% – one out of eight innings) and 1477 of these were unbeaten zeros.If any reader suggests a streak I’ve missed and I think that is a good one, I will incorporate those.My next feature will be streaks in one-day cricket. The overall structure will be the same, but some aspects of the game special to ODIs will also be incorporated.

Calm Ashwani fills the gaps in MI's Bumrah-centric bowling plans

Ashwani Kumar might not even have played the game, but he did, and bowled crucial overs to help Mumbai Indians eliminate Gujarat Titans from IPL 2025 and get into Qualifier 2

Shashank Kishore31-May-20252:13

Moody: Ridiculous how far ahead of the rest Bumrah is

B Sai Sudharsan had just missed a scoop off a full Trent Boult delivery. Unhappy that the umpire had not called it a leg-side wide, he signalled for a review. At that stage, Gujarat Titans (GT) needed 99 off 48 to knock Mumbai Indians (MI) out of IPL 2025. It was a proper dogfight.As the third umpire did his work, and concluded that Sai Sudharsan had moved across his stumps too much, Hardik Pandya called his quicks for a conference. A few animated words and a slight shuffling of the fielders later, they dispersed. But the pause didn’t help MI; Boult ended up conceding 18 runs in that over, with Washington Sundar plundering two sixes and a four. Heavy dew, something MI hadn’t anticipated, had set in.Now, Hardik felt the need for another meeting. A message was on its way from the dugout, too, but the umpires politely instructed the reserves to go back. Just then, Suryakumar Yadav signalled for medical help, suggesting that he was cramping. MI now had the time they wanted. Gamesmanship? Genuine injury? Either way, it was a momentum-breaker for GT.Related

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In the huddle, Jasprit Bumrah took charge of the conversation. And as they dispersed, Ashwani Kumar looked like he would bowl. Before Hardik asked him to stop and handed the ball to Bumrah instead. In an ideal scenario, Hardik wouldn’t have brought Bumrah on for a third over this early – it was the 14th; but desperate times called for desperate measures.With the equation having been whittled down to 81 off 42, and the Washington-Sai Sudharsan partnership having reached threatening proportions, this was Hardik’s last roll of the dice. And four balls in, his call stood vindicated. A searing yorker had Washington completely off balance as he tried to evade the toe-crusher, and the ball snuck between his legs and smashed into the stumps.Bumrah ran down the pitch, his fists punching the air downwards. MI had the breakthrough they were after. “It’s very simple. Whenever you think the game is going away, just bring him [Bumrah] on,” Hardik said with a grin after the match on the broadcast. “When you have that [Bumrah], it’s a luxury. It’s like Mumbai housing prices – he’s that [precious].”Ashwani Kumar closed out the game for Mumbai Indians•BCCIAshwani bowled the next over. It’s likely he wouldn’t have not played the game, since the team management had been toying with the idea of playing an extra spinner because the surface wasn’t anything like the one that hosted Qualifier 1. While there was consistent bounce, there was no exaggerated seam movement. But the call to bring Ashwani on at that moment – with 77 needed from 36 – was in itself a massive show of faith.Earlier this month, he had come in as a concussion sub for Corbin Bosch and dismissed Jos Buttler at a crucial moment en route figures of 2 for 28. On March 31, he had ended with the best figures on IPL debut – 4 for 24. With Bumrah still recovering from injury then, Ashwani’s performance had been timely, one that helped kickstart a turnaround.On Saturday, as per ESPNcricinfo’s pitch map data, 15 Ashwani deliveries were either full or yorker-length. His focus on nailing what he had been asked to do was unwavering, and a nine-run over at that stage, keeping the equation at 68 off 30, was gold.2:49

Are MI favourites for Qualifier 2?

Ashwani’s eagerness to bowl had been evident from even before MI took the field. Their batting innings had barely wound down when he followed bowling coach Lasith Malinga out to the field, stump in one hand and cone in the other. The warm-up over was done.”We have given him simple plans so that he doesn’t get confused,” coach Mahela Jayawardene said of Ashwani at the post-match press conference. “A lot of guys on the field help him. Booms [Bumrah], Deepak [Chahar], Hardik, all those guys have those chats. But it is all about execution and the pressure and what we have seen in him.”I mean, this is not the first time. We use him tactically when we need to against opposition. In big games, if he can produce this, he will get more confident. What you see is not the full Ashwani. There is much more to come from him; he is a fabulously skilled bowler. We just need to keep grooming him in the right direction.”I think the first season itself, the way he has responded to the challenges that we put him through, he has done brilliantly. I know he hasn’t played much state cricket as well but when we saw him, we saw the skill that he has.”1:54

Have GT been let down by their middle order?

If Ashwani’s second over went for nine, his third, which came on the back of Richard Gleeson dismissing Sai Sudharsan, was equally noteworthy as he denied Rahul Tewatia and Sherfane Rutherford – two powerful left-hand batters who pride themselves on finishing games. Again, he conceded just nine to leave GT needing 45 off 18.Bumrah and Boult then took over to leave GT needing 24 from the last over. This was now Ashwani’s chance to close out the game he had played a massive part in already. But Gleeson had the ball. It felt as if Ashwani was robbed of his opportunity.Not quite. As Gleeson walked off clutching his hamstring three balls in, Hardik threw the ball to Ashwani to complete the job. But even with 21 to defend off three balls, Bumrah kept signalling to him from short fine leg, trying to make sure he didn’t bowl a wide or no-ball. Suryakumar and Hardik ran in from their positions to speak to him. And when he had M Shahrukh Khan tamely chipping a full delivery to extra cover with his first ball of the over, they were all over him.Bumrah had brought the fire, and Ashwani the calm. At the end of it, MI were within two wins of a sixth IPL crown.

The IPL was supposed to have been much longer by now. Why isn't it?

Projections said the league would have many more matches per season but we’re still at 74 and that doesn’t look likely to change soon

Matt Roller23-Apr-2025Something almost unheard of happened in the world of sports broadcasting recently. The number of IPL games a season, stipulated to increase to 84 in 2025, according to the IPL’s lucrative media-rights contract of 2022, remained at 74 for the fourth successive year.The decision defied a global trend of incessant growth in sports leagues and events: football’s World Cup and Champions League have both swelled in recent years, while the Club World Cup is growing from seven matches to 63. But in the IPL, even an incremental expansion has been treated with caution, to the point of being deferred.This has been true across the league’s 18-year history. The IPL has become a commercial behemoth since its launch in 2008, but its season has only grown from 59 matches between eight teams to 74 between ten. In fact, the current format is two matches than that used in 2012 and 2013, soon after the IPL’s first expansion to include additional franchises.Related

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A significant change has been the dramatic decline in the number of double-headers. The past two seasons have seen only 12 games played in the afternoon slot, less than one in six; back in 2011, that proportion was more than one in three. The result is a longer IPL window, with the season now stretching past nine weeks.Players much prefer evening games, as demonstrated by Ishant Sharma’s obvious discomfort after bowling in the 40-degree Ahmedabad heat on Saturday. But the decline in the number of afternoon games owes primarily to the decline in broadcast ratings for games that start at 3.30pm compared to 7.30pm – around 30-40% percent lower for the earlier-starting matches.

“The analogy used was a soap opera,” says Mike Fordham, who worked in the IPL from inception for the events company IMG and was later Rajasthan Royals’ chief executive. “There were big traditions in India of families watching soap operas, so the idea was that this would be your nightly entertainment – and you’d have to watch every game to know the full story.”
In that sense, the IPL is different to the vast majority of sporting leagues around the world: it does not schedule fixtures that run simultaneously, barring occasional overlaps when an afternoon game overruns. It fuels the idea that the casual viewer is agnostic to whether their team is playing when they tune in, as long as they can watch some of their favourite players.The US business podcast recently released a four-hour IPL special, analysing the league’s growth, and was surprised that it has remained so short. “Looking at it from the outside in, there’s no way that in five-ten years from now there are not more games [played] during the IPL,” says co-host David Rosenthal. “All the economic forces are pointing that way.”Rosenthal believes that the IPL has been “really smart” in avoiding an expansion beyond ten teams. “Take the NBA: nobody cares about an average game on an average night. There’s 30 teams: who cares if the [Charlotte] Hornets are playing the [Atlanta] Hawks? Nobody. There’s a real sense right now in basketball of ‘these games don’t matter’. The IPL is the exact opposite.”The IPL’s current broadcast deal, signed in 2022, is worth US$6 billion across a five-year cycle, giving it the second-highest price-per-match valuation of any sports league in the world, behind the NFL. But that statistic relies on the scarcity of games: in absolute terms, there are four different European football leagues with media rights deals worth more than the IPL’s.Players aren’t big fans of afternoon games, and neither are fans•AFP/Getty Images”[The price-per-match valuation] is both incredibly, incredibly impressive and overstates the size of the IPL in terms of overall economic impact,” Rosenthal says. “To us, that’s why we think this league is clearly going to expand – and it shows the need to keep the right amount of restraint in not going to 30 teams, or playing six months of the year. But it is a good example of the potential of just how big this can get.”Some believe that there is no more juice to squeeze from the lemon: the valuation of the “IPL ecosystem” fell by 11.7% in the Indian firm D&P Advisory’s most recent report, which anticipates “a more conservative approach” in media-rights bids for the next cycle. That prediction follows the completion of the Reliance-Disney merger in India last year, bringing the IPL’s broadcast and streaming platforms together in a single entity.”Everyone knows that this is something that is here to stay, and IPL will only grow bigger,” says Santosh N, the firm’s managing partner. “But from a numbers perspective – some of the billion dollars that we talk about, with regards to media rights or title sponsorship – I actually think that maybe we ran too fast on some of these.”The alternative view comes from the league’s founder, Lalit Modi: “IPL is the golden goose that all want… Don’t worry, IPL will continue to be fiercely bid upon,” he posted on Instagram. Streaming of the league’s games has returned to a paid model this year after two seasons where every match was available for free. JioHotstar vice-chair Uday Shankar said last week that the app already has 200 million paid subscribers: “IPL is a very, very powerful asset.”Among the teams, there is an appetite for a longer season. The current 74-match format is lopsided: each team plays five of their nine opponents both home and away. Officials at multiple franchises told ESPNcricinfo that they would support a move to a full home-and-away season, increasing the total number of fixtures to 94, provided player availability can be guaranteed.One concern commonly raised around extending the season is that squad sizes would have to increase: “We also have to factor the load on the players due to the increase in matches,” Jay Shah, the ex-secretary of the BCCI, told the last year. It would also mean more time away for overseas players, an increase in team salary caps, and buy-in from national boards – an issue that would come across Shah’s desk in his new role as ICC chair.The IPL is pay-to-watch this season, unlike in previous years, when matches were free to stream•BCCIEight of the ten IPL franchises now have interests in at least one short-form league outside of India, demonstrating their desire for growth. But a significantly longer IPL – say, a six-month-long season – remains far-fetched at this stage, not least given the constraints of the global calendar. “It’s a tournament, really, more than a league,” Fordham says. “And despite what some seem to think, there’s no indication that the BCCI wants to destroy the international game.”
There are in-built constraints to the IPL’s dates. The monsoon hits most of the lower half of India by mid-June, providing a hard stop at the far end, while ICC events – like this year’s Champions Trophy, and next year’s T20 World Cup – often run into early March. The Women’s Premier League has also run into March, though it will shift forward into a January-February window next year.”Either you need a bigger window or you will end up having more double-headers,” IPL chairman Arun Dhumal recently told the . Expanding the season by another week or two, bringing the start date into early or mid-March, would require international support and assurances from other boards that they would make their players fully available.
There has long been speculation of a second, shorter IPL tournament taking place in the second half of the year, around September, which some believe could be a significant new revenue stream for franchises. The trouble, again, would be finding space in a crammed global calendar.The league’s most recent expansion, from eight franchises to ten, has been a qualified success. But while there is little doubt that more new teams would be hugely lucrative – “They’d sell for a billion dollars plus,” Fordham predicts – there is no prospect of another sale coming soon, as newcomers Gujarat Titans and Lucknow Super Giants continue to establish themselves.The lack of appetite for expansion in the near term also reflects the dominance of the league’s three biggest brands: Mumbai Indians, Chennai Super Kings and Royal Challengers Bengaluru have more Instagram followers between them than the other seven teams combined. “We have to look at the larger picture and keep in mind what works best for the league,” Dhumal said.Do fans – and therefore broadcasters- really want a longer IPL season? “Maybe India is different, but a personal view is that non-stop T20 cricket for six months could get very samey,” Fordham says. The IPL turns 18 years old this year – but adulthood alone does not guarantee maturity.

Red Sox Acquire Reliever Jorge Alcala From Twins

The Boston Red Sox have acquired reliever Jorge Alcala from the Minnesota Twins, according to a report from Robert Murray of

The 29-year-old Alcala is in his seventh season with the Twins. He holds a career 9-13 record over 187 and two-thirds innings pitched with a 4.32 ERA. It's been a rough 2025 for Alcala, as he's amassed an 8.88 ERA over 24 and one-third innings, but he is coming off a 2024 where he posted a 3.24 ERA over 58 and one-third innings pitched for the Twins.

Alcala will add another depth arm to Boston's bullpen, which has been taxed incessantly of late due to the team's struggles in the starting rotation. Boston got some much needed help from the starters in the three game series against the Tampa Bay Rays, however, as the team's starters pitched at least six innings in each of the three games of the set this week.

The Red Sox are 34-36 on the season and host the New York Yankees at Fenway Park this weekend.

Hossan century underpins powerful Bangladesh win in first Youth ODI

Minto stars for England with five-for, but Ratan takes 4 for 9 to seal comfortable victory

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay05-Sep-2025Bangladesh U19 292 (Hossan 100, Minto 5-68) beat England U19 205 (Mohammed 75, Ratul 4-9) by 87 runsRizan Hossan’s authoritative century off 101 balls outdid a five-wicket haul from Durham’s James Minto and a sparkling 75 from Isaac Mohammed as Bangladesh Men U19s beat England Men U19s by 87 runs in the first Youth One-Day International at Loughborough.Despite a confident start, a target of 293 proved too much for the hosts, as England dramatically collapsed from 132 for two to 205 all out. Bangladesh’s spinners combined to take eight wickets. Samiun Basir Ratul stood out with outstanding figures of 4.2-0-9-4.Bangladesh openers Zawad Abrar and Rifat Beg made a brisk start, reaching 31 for none after five overs. Abrar’s brace of sixes over fine leg during an expensive opening spell by Minto typified their approach. Progress was halted when Leicestershire’s Alex Green claimed Beg’s wicket with his first ball, which grazed the leg stump and ended the 44-run opening stand.Bangladesh captain Azizul Hakim Tamim, who was dropped on four, was next to depart, caught by Kent’s Ben Dawkins off Yorkshire new-ball bowler, Matthew Firbank, for 11. England struck again when Abrar gloved Minto down the legside, at 69 for three in the 13th over the Young Lions appeared to gain a foothold in the game.However, a fourth-wicket partnership worth 148 between Kalam Aleen and Hossan allowed the visitors to regain the initiative.Initially Hossan was the main aggressor, he got to his fifty off 58 balls with a stylish boundary over midwicket. Aleen’s half-century, characterised by strong sweep shots, soon followed off 68 balls, as both batters manipulated the field effectively.The partnership was broken by Minto in the 39th over, who took two wickets in consecutive balls, leaving the score on 217 for five. Firstly, Aleen played across the line and was trapped LBW and then Mohammad Abdullah was the victim of another legside strangle, with captain Thomas Rew completing a regulation catch.England’s impressive death bowling meant that only 66 runs were added in the final 9.2 overs of the innings. The late flurry of wickets included Hossan, dismissed by Nottinghamshire’s Hatton-Lowe, one ball after getting to a deserved century. In the final over, Minto mopped up the innings, bagging two tailend wickets in two balls, the left-armer finishing with five for 68.England’s chase of 293 began badly, as Fahad castled Dawkins, in the first over of the reply. Joe Moores followed in the sixth over for 14, a looping top edge offering Tamim a catch off his own bowling.That brought Will Bennison to the middle, the Yorkshire batter in partnership with Mohammed proceeded to dominate the powerplay, accelerating the score to 129 for two after 15 overs. Isaac’s fifty, off only 34 balls, contained a ramped six along with several conventional boundaries.Bangladesh’s breakthrough came via Shadin Islam’s off-spin, bowling Bennison through the gate for 36 off 32 balls. Soon after, Mohammed’s fine innings of 75 ended with a catch to cover, leaving two new batters at the crease and 151 runs needed off 32.2 overs.Skipper Rew and debutant Jack Nelson maintained the pressure until a critical passage saw Middlesex’s Nelson undone by Ratul. The slow left armer also accounted for Rew as England faltered at 189 for six after 26.2 overs.The situation considerably worsened when Ralphie Albert was needlessly run out. The very next ball, Hatton-Lowe was then caught behind off Shahdin.Ratul closed out the game a few overs later with Firbank’s wicket, a sharp catch of his bowling.Mohammed said: “I really enjoyed it to be fair, I just felt good, I’ve doing a lot of training recently and I feel like a lot of that paid off today. At the end of the day the result didn’t go our way but when Sunday comes hopefully we can put it right.”When I’m batting, I like to stay positive, whatever the scenario is, I’m backing my ability.”Speaking about the Bangladesh spinners claiming eight wickets, he added: “At the start it was quite a fresh ball so it wasn’t doing as much. When the spinners did come back on, I’d just got out before that.”But looking at some of the videos, it looked like it was starting to grip, so if we are playing on the same wicket on Sunday, that could be something to look into.”Mohammed, whose Worcestershire are in the men’s Metro Bank One-Day Cup final against Hampshire later this month, to cap a breakthrough season for the batter said: “I’m loving it, and hopefully in the (Metro Bank) final against Hampshire, we can bring home the trophy.”

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