Boland: 'I've got my own internal motivations'

Scott Boland says he’s not driven by comments that England’s batters don’t fear him

Alex Malcolm17-Oct-20252:25

Mitchell Starc backs Australia’s fast-bowling depth

Scott Boland could not hide the smirk on his face.Not long after he had scythed through New South Wales to take a match-winning 5 for 67 to go with his 3 for 59 in the first innings to help Victoria claim a thrilling Sheffield Shield win at the Junction Oval, Boland was asked the obvious question in his post-match conversation with a group of reporters.Boland was asked if he had seen former England captain Michael Atherton write in the that he “holds no fear” for England’s batting line-up based on how they played him in England two years ago.”I saw it. My cousin sent it to me. He [Boland’s cousin] was taking the piss,” Boland said. “I’m sure there’s going be so much banter between the former players in between now and the first Test and even the end of the summer.”Related

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He was asked if it motivated him at all ahead of the Ashes.”Not really,” Boland said. “I’ve got my own internal motivations for what I want to do for the summer. I’ve never gone into a game where I’m just middling along. I guess there’s always some motivation for me to try and either come into the team and try to put in a really good performance, to try and keep my spot. There’s so many good fast bowlers in Australia that you just don’t want to give anyone an inch. So that’s sort of my goal when I’m playing Test cricket.”Boland, 36, always speaks like a man on the outside looking in. But right now, he is actually an incumbent in Australia’s Test XI having played in their last Test match in Jamaica in place of Nathan Lyon as part of a four-man pace attack. In fact, he took a Test hat-trick in the last Test over he bowled.And it’s looking increasingly likely that he will retain his spot even though Lyon is set to return for the first Test against England in Perth, with skipper Pat Cummins saying it’s “less likely than likely” he will be fit to play as he continues a slow recovery from a back injury.Boland said he had not spoken to Cummins in several months. But he was not expecting the skipper to miss all five Tests.”Patty’s so resilient,” Boland said. “He can play through a little bit of pain if he has some. Those guys play so much cricket there’s bound to be games where someone misses out. But if Pat happens to not play the first game, we’ve got a pretty handy incoming in at some stage during the summer.”

“I just want to find my rhythm as quick as I can in the game. And sometimes it happens in half a spell. Sometimes it takes a bit longer”Scott Boland

Boland is primed if he is called upon for the first Test. Like a prized race horse ahead of the Melbourne Cup, he seems to have timed his preparation down to the minute. He is pain free and without strapping on his knees for the first time in several years after a block of strength work in the gym following the Caribbean tour. His former Victoria team-mate and now Australia coach Andrew McDonald had challenged him to rethink the way he trained to become even more resilient as he ages.He bowled impressively in the opening Shield game of the summer against South Australia at Adelaide Oval last week and then backed it up with eight wickets at the Junction Oval. But he was frustrated with his performance this week having been far more expensive than usual. He conceded a tick over 4.1 runs per over across 30.4 overs in the match as the New South Wales batters looked to attack him, with Sam Konstas reverse ramping him for six in the second innings.With 0 for 54 to his name from 9.5 overs in the second innings, Atherton’s words felt prescient. But Boland found another gear, snaking a stunning delivery back through the gate to bowl the dangerous Oliver Davies for 64. He took 5 for 13 from his final 35 deliveries, including clattering the stumps twice more, to win the game for his state.”I knew the game was on the line,” Boland said. “I didn’t feel like I’d… not that I’d let the team down, but I hadn’t bowled as well as I wanted to for the whole week.”I just think it’s just a minor thing in my run up. I’m probably just stressing a little bit too much from what I usually do. But I know sometimes that just happens. I just want to find my rhythm as quick as I can in the game. And sometimes it happens in half a spell. Sometimes it takes a bit longer. This game just took a little bit longer, but I still felt like I was able to hang in there enough to bowl some spells when I’m getting wickets for the team.”Scott Boland took eight wickets for Victoria in their last Sheffield Shield game•Getty ImagesHe also showed a rare sign of raw emotion. After knocking over Davies, he charged past him and glared at him with a guttural roar. It was out of character for a man who barely celebrated a Test hat-trick and it caught the eye of veteran New South Wales coach Greg Shipperd.”Yeah, interesting, wasn’t it,” Shipperd said. “I don’t know what might have led up to that, but it’s not the Scotty Boland I know.”Victoria coach Chris Rogers said Boland and Davies had some history and that Davies “likes to give as much as he gets” but Boland played a straight bat.”I was just excited to get a wicket,” Boland said. “I hadn’t got one for a while. But I know we’ve had some good contests. I played an Aussie A game with him last year. Really enjoyed his company. So nice fellow. We had some nice words for each other after the game.”Boland is set to rest from Victoria’s next Shield game against Tasmania but will return for round four against New South Wales at the SCG in a game that is likely to feature Steven Smith, Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Lyon.”I’ve got two really good games of work into my body now,” Boland said. “My body’s feeling really good. No issues with any my knees or anything like that that have been little niggles in the past. So I’m really happy with how it’s tracking. It’d be nice to have a few days off now and get some strength back in, because I know that when I’m doing that, my body’s feeling great, and I feel like I can get through as many games as needed for the summer.”

Chelsea have already signed "the next Cristiano Ronaldo" for half of his release clause

Sources have described an incoming Chelsea starlet as another potential superstar, as BlueCo prepare to welcome another Estevao-like talent.

Estevao rise leads Chelsea youth transfer revolution

Estevao has announced himself as one of world football’s brightest young talents since joining Chelsea this summer, producing performances that suggest the Brazilian teenager could become a generational superstar at Stamford Bridge.

The 18-year-old has enjoyed a sensational start to life in English football, scoring five goals and providing one assist in just 740 minutes across all competitions.

Statistically, he’s already surpassed legendary figures at similar stages of their careers, with his goal contributions eclipsing what Lionel Messi and Ronaldo managed in their first seventeen appearances for Barcelona and Manchester United respectively.

Estevao’s finest hour yet came against Barça in the Champions League on Tuesday night.

His breathtaking solo goal left top-level defenders trailing in his wake before the ex-Palmeiras sensation fired into the roof of the net, making him only the third teenager in history to score in each of his first three Champions League starts alongside Real Madrid’s Kylian Mbappé and Man City’s Erling Haaland.

Minutes

83′

Expected Goals

0.13

Goals

1

Expected Assists

0.35

Big Chances Created

1

Key Passes

3

Long Balls

1/1

Shots

2

Touches

47

Recoveries

4

Estevao’s Premier League performances have shown similar promise, with the South American’s dramatic last-gasp winner against Liverpool in October sending Enzo Maresca into raptures on the touchline.

Chelsea’s investment in young talent continues to shape their long-term recruitment strategy, with Estevao representing just the beginning of an exciting wave of arrivals.

Ecuadorian midfielder Kendry Paez, who is currently on loan at sister club Strasbourg, has been tipped for an exciting future, with Kairat Almaty forward Dastan Satpaev and Corinthians left-back Denner also set to arrive in 2026 — alongside Strasbourg striker Emmanuel Emegha.

As well as the aforementioned quartet, Chelsea will welcome Sporting CP sensation Geovany Quenda to London next summer.

Maresca’s side struck a £44 million deal for the winger in March, and he’s already been described by some as one of the most exciting young talents in world football.

Quenda has been on fire this term with five goals and eight assists in 20 appearances, with Chelsea signing Quenda for half of his release clause earlier this year in what could turn out to be a bargain move.

Chelsea have already signed 'the next Cristiano Ronaldo' in Geovany Quenda

That is according to Sky Sports reporter Kaveh Solhekol, who also says that those in Portugal are describing Quenda as ‘the next Cristiano Ronaldo’ in very high praise.

Speaking in a video down at the bottom of a Sky Q&A, Solhekol also reports that there are ‘more Estevaos on the way ‘— referencing Quenda as chief among them.

Commenting on his move to Chelsea, Sporting boss Rui Borges did have a word of caution for the Portugal Under-21 international — namely that this hype could ‘affect his mental state’.

Being compared to Ronaldo brings its own pressure, but from what Quenda has shown already, Chelsea could indeed be about to welcome yet another Estevao to Maresca’s ranks.

Rules of three: how England have dealt with a most thorny batting position

The Pope-Bethell question highlights how picking a No. 3 has never been easy for them

Vithushan Ehantharajah19-Jun-2025On Wednesday lunchtime, it was announced that Ollie Pope had been entrusted as England’s No. 3 for the start of the Test series against India.In previous eras, that news would not be, well, news. Pope averages 43.06 in the position, where all but one of his eight centuries have been scored – the last of which, 171 against Zimbabwe, came a month ago.And yet, he embarks on this first Test at Headingley under pressure from a challenger in the immensely talented Jacob Bethell, who has still not registered a professional century. Bethell’s only relevant experience is a stint moonlighting at first drop in New Zealand at the end of last year. The crux of his case? High elbow, big flair, bigger vibes.Amid all the pontificating around loyalty to Pope, or whether Bethell shapes up better, the broader framing of Pope vs Bethell speaks to a sea change in how Test cricket regards the No. 3 position.Just last week, Wiaan Mulder and Cameron Green, allrounders by trade and certainly not top-order batters, slotted in at three for South Africa and Australia in the format’s showpiece event. India are now unsure of theirs, as the only person to do it for more than one Test since Cheteshwar Pujara’s last appearance in the previous World Test Championship final, Shubman Gill, moves to four as captain.Related

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As far as English cricket goes, this feels like a seminal moment that has been in the offing since Pope took the job in the first place. Then, it was a calculated play from someone reared as a six. Upon Ben Stokes’ appointment, Pope clocked the gap in the batting line-up. He picked up the phone and made his case to Stokes, who was impressed by Pope’s forwardness. And so, the gig no one had nailed since Jonathan Trott – nor wanted – was his.

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English cricket’s relationship with the No. 3 position is no different to that of any other Test-playing nation. But it has changed dramatically in recent years.Ironically, the best vessel to explore England’s at-times toxic relationship with the position is Moeen Ali. Moeen excelled at it domestically (averaging 51.85 across 79 knocks for Warwickshire and Worcestershire) without ever nailing it at international level (180 runs at 20). Moeen only did it nine times in his 118 Test innings because he was never entrusted to do it well.In 2018, during a home series against India, he was recalled to the England side for the fourth Test, in Southampton. Halfway through that first appearance in six months, his captain, Joe Root, came to him for a favour.”Rooty kept getting out lbw to Jasprit Bumrah,” Moeen recalls. “So he asked me to bat three.”

Moeen did not mind. He was fresh from 219 at three against Yorkshire, and moreover, he found the concept quite cool, even if he was unsure he was worthy of it.The feelings of inadequacy he harboured were based on the names you’d associate with the position. Sift through the greatest batters of all time and you’ll find plenty of No. 3s. From an English perspective, there exists a Mount Rushmore of Ken Barrington, Wally Hammond, Ted Dexter and Bill Edrich, who did it for a meaningful period of time (30 innings or more) and averaged over 50.”I didn’t really have… I don’t know what it is,” Moeen says, “but you know, Ricky Ponting, Hashim Amla, when they get hundreds and how they’re massive hundreds? That. It was short term, and I knew it was never going to be given to me.””Given” feels apt. Because No. 3s were chosen, and in the case of some of the names listed above, it was based on technical proficiency and mental strength. Ergo, the best batters at a country’s disposal. And yet here was Root, the man who would go on to become England’s all-time biggest Test run-scorer, glad to be rid of it.Root did it 20 more times after picking the role back up for the 2019 Ashes, but was clearly reluctant. So much so that one of Stokes’ first moves as captain was to ring-fence him at four. (The great irony, of course, is Root’s career-best 262 last year in Pakistan came at three, after Ben Duckett suffered an injury in the field, moving Pope and Root up a spot. Root did not even entertain the idea of staying there.)It feels instructive that Root and the rest of the “Fab Four” of Virat Kohli, Steve Smith and Kane Williamson have all been on similar journeys with the No. 3 position. Only Williamson has stuck with it, while the rest have, well, “retreated” to the sanctuary of four at the behest of their teams. Three might offer gravitas, but in a stats-driven era, offering generational talents the best chance of scoring big and scoring often, against an older ball and more worn bowlers, is the value play.Five years on from that mid-game favour to Root, Moeen offered the same to Harry Brook during the third Ashes Test at Headingley. With Pope out injured, Brook had gone in earlier for the first innings – primarily to keep Root at four – and made an uncomfortable three runs. Here was another generational talent – the fastest to a thousand Test runs ever, by the way – being hamstrung by the job, at the first time of asking.The stand-in: Moeen Ali first batted at three as a favour to Joe Root, and finished his career batting there three times in the 2023 Ashes•AFP”Even before Brooky batted in the first innings at Headingley, I personally believed he’d be better at No. 5,” Moeen says. “Three, it wasn’t high for him because he’s not good enough, but like Root way back when, it was about getting more of him at No. 5.”In the second innings, Moeen himself only managed 5. Brook, however, back in the comfort of his usual spot, all but sealed the chase for England with 75, the first stage of hauling back Australia’s 2-0 lead. They completed that about turn at The Oval, with Moeen seeing out the series at No. 3.”Brook’s got really good technique, he’s good against fast bowling, good at taking the game on and assessing situations. But that doesn’t ensure he’s going to enjoy three. A lot of batting is mental. But three is more so.”

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There has been something of a generational shift among modern players. A societal awakening, a cultural acceptance, that it is okay to not be okay at three.Speak to players in county cricket and few covet the position. A straw poll of domestic batters unearths broadly consistent views. “If you grew up as an opener, the waiting is tough,” says one county veteran. “You’re often in early, on green county decks, the bowlers are up and about,” says another whose years at three were in service of trying to attract selectors’ glances. “It can be a bit of a mug’s game.”The No. 3 has always been a hybrid of opener and middle-order batter. In England, however, the accent has been more on the former, given the Dukes ball and the lavish movement available through the air and off the pitch.Trott embodied this. Resolute, impenetrable, risk-averse and with an ability to bat time. His average of 45.72 from 73 innings is the best of all Englishmen to do it in the last 35 years. And yet, the only better No. 3 than Trott in the last 55 years was one of the most revered stroke-makers the world over.David Gower wasn’t prepared for life at three but he grew to love it. “When you have a good day at three, it’s a great day,” he says•M McKeown/Getty Images”You’re going to tell me that I was very good?” David Gower asks, as much scepticism as hope in his voice.He was: 2619 of his 8231 runs came at three, as did eight of his 18 centuries. Only 56 of his 204 innings came at the position, yet only Dexter (51.81) did it as many times and averaged more than Gower’s 49.41.By his own admission, Gower treated one to six broadly the same, even with the differing wait times. By the time he was first entrusted with the role, during the 1981 Ashes, England’s Mount Rushmore was already in place. Not that he was bothered. All he saw was opportunity.”I suppose you do have to be aware of the history. But there are a lot of people who look at No. 3 and say that is your pivotal position. If I’m honest, I can’t say I was ever giving it too much thought growing up. The great thing about batting three or four is, you have normally got time to make big scores.”The first stanza of his Test career came in the middle order, in keeping with his spot at Leicestershire. And then, ahead of the fourth Test at Edgbaston of the ’81 Ashes, Mike Brearley asked Gower to step in at No. 3 after Bob Woolmer and then Brearley himself had failed. After a duck and 23, Gower was back to the middle with Chris Tavaré seeing out the remainder of the series at first drop.”I wasn’t really ready for it,” says Gower. “I’d played pretty much my whole Test career at five, and four and five for Leicestershire. I remember feeling slightly uneasy about it. Not prepared at all. As simple as it sounds, I was not used to putting the pads on straight away and getting out there.”A year later, Gower was back at three for the 1982-83 Ashes. He would finish as England’s top run-scorer with 441 runs, the start of eight years as a solution to one-down.

“Everything clicked. Whatever it was – whether I liked Australian conditions or the bowling… a year later one is more ready, confident. And instead of it going slightly wrong and therefore [feeling] unsure about it, the first innings of that series – a 72 at the WACA that should have been 150 – it felt perfect.”So began a deep love for three. The kind that sets Gower apart from other batters who have talked about the position. There is no mention of new-ball challenges, anxious waiting or crippling pressure. Just glory and liberation.”That longer, more successful, stint at three ended up defining me,” he says. “It gave me kudos. When you have a good day at three, it’s a great day. Because even if you’re piggybacking on a good opening partnership, you’re still amplifying the good news.”He highlights his 157 at The Oval in 1985 – against Australia – as his favourite knock at three. England needed to avoid defeat in that sixth and final Test to win the Ashes back. He walked in at 20 for 1 on the first day and went off as the second man out much later that same day.”Coming in relatively early on day one, with a little slice of luck as one looped off the shoulder of the bat and cleared the slips… and then, this most sublime day.”Everything slots into place. Nice pace, nice bounce. And you walk off with 157 to your name. That is your absolute pinnacle. Days like that, No. 3 was incredibly special and incredibly satisfying. The day that makes it all worthwhile.”Another aspect of Gower’s play that suited the position – by no means a prerequisite but certainly a desired trait – was his style. Being easy on the eye, particularly early on in an innings, has a calming influence on a dressing room. Pope’s frenzied starts, for instance, do not reassure those outside the current set-up.Gower’s 157 at The Oval in 1985 was a career highlight•Getty Images”You’d rather not be noted for your freneticism – when you bat, or in life,” Gower says. “With myself – and I always have to make this point – the perception was very different to reality.”If I appeared – to use the dreaded words ‘laid-back’ – part of that was a construct for my own benefit. Portraying an air of calm is a good thing, for your own sake and ultimately for the team’s sake. The days that you walk out and it all clicks straight away are few and far between, even for the greatest.”For Gower, the role was as much about the duty of assuming a starring role as the accolades that come with it.”Ideally, if you go No. 3, it’s like being promoted. You’re a prefect – you’re meant to be setting an example.”But I always have to believe that your own personal day is there to be treasured as well, as much as the contribution to the team. Those interviews when players say, ‘It’s all about the team.’ Oh f**k off. You’re allowed to be proud of yourself, especially if you’ve succeeded there.”

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Earlier this year British actor Tom Hardy revealed he was told by a producer he could never play Mr Darcy in , a role that subsequently went to Matthew Macfadyen. “All women have an image or a vision of what Mr Darcy looks like,” the conversation went. “And I’m afraid, Tom, you just aren’t it.”If you are willing to extrapolate the desired prim-and-properness of a Mr Darcy as translating to the desired prim-and-properness of a No. 3, then Mark Butcher was very much Hardy rather than Macfadyen.The game never truly bothered Butcher. “It’s not in my nature to stress about cricket,” he says. He admits to getting bored easily, and being prone to lapses in concentration.Yet no one in English Test history has three-ed more: 78 innings, five more than Trott, averaging 38.30. That rises to 42.32 when you isolate the 40 innings when he was given the role outright upon his recall in 2001. All six of his hundreds at three came during this stint, including the pièce de résistance – unbeaten 173 against Australia.173 and all that: Mark Butcher bats at No. 3 in the Headingley Test of 2001•Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images”That was basically a fluke, really,” says Butcher of his return to the XI. “Michael Vaughan, Mark Ramprakash and a whole number of others who’d have been in the side ahead of me were injured into that year’s Ashes. There were two spaces at three and five. I was delighted to be back playing, but the fact it was at three was cool.”Cool because Butcher was a rarity – a No. 3 fanboy. He did it growing up, only opening because it was the clearest route into the Surrey team. Opening the batting was his job, but three was his passion, fuelled by West Indies’ Larry Gomes who, ironically, was no specialist at three, playing just 19 of 60 Tests there.”Way back to the 1984 England versus West Indies Test series, Gomes was a hero of mine. He went under the radar with the likes of [Gordon] Greenidge, [Desmond] Haynes, and Viv Richards coming behind him. He batted three that series and made a mountain of runs in an understated way. He provided the stability for the lunatics to smash it around him. Because of Gomes, I grew up knowing there was a certain amount of respect to batting at three.”Underpinning this ambition was Butcher’s personality, which, despite being counter-intuitive to three, worked just fine. The stresses others associate with the role were perks to him.He loved the fact an innings could start second ball or on the second day. Even if it was the former, he preferred it to opening because those extra five minutes were “enough to get the karma right”. Most instructive was how he regarded the variety of uncertainty as “perfect”. He looked upon first-drop like a snooker player arriving to the table after a missed pot – a unique combination of ball placings and frame situations to be negotiated immediately. Or else.”It was always a different start,” says Butcher. “And as I’ve come to know myself better, not having the same thing to do all the time is a very, very handy thing for me.”If you think about that relatively logically – if you put someone who is naturally not the most disciplined in the world into a role where that is very much required, you get the best out of them in those circumstances.”In any venture I’ve done, I’ve found that if the emphasis is on something other than myself, I’m more likely to get a good result. You take on responsibility for other people rather than just yourself and it becomes an easier thing to do.”Nasser Hussain’s time at No. 3 was something of a rite of passage for him. And he didn’t enjoy waiting to bat. “I was a nervous watcher because I cared so much about getting runs”•Getty Images”That sounds very Butch,” laughs Nasser Hussain in the Lord’s media dining room when the above quote is read to him.”He had such a calm persona for a number three. The early wicket wouldn’t faze him. Even silly things – he used to refuse nightwatchman to stay at three. He’d say, ‘If I go in and get out, I can go out this evening. And if I don’t, I’m 20 not out.’ And he wasn’t a bullshitter. He meant it. He was perfect.”It was Hussain who gave Butcher his coveted position at No. 3 – because Hussain was done with it. The top order was constantly in its own state of flux amid the chaos of an ever-changing XI. Hussain, out of duty and pride, chained himself to three to offer stability. By the 2001 summer, he rightly untethered from it, and he would have done even if Butcher had not run with it.”Whether I did it or didn’t do it, did it well or did it badly, before I did it or after I did it, you always viewed it as such a key position,” Hussain says. “It suited me, and also taking responsibility. You’re captain, you bat – why don’t you take that responsibility? Look at the way Stokes does it. Don’t ask someone to do something you’re not prepared to do yourself. I’d have been asking someone else to do my job, which was at No. 3.”Hussain’s first go there famously came against India in 1996, following a second three-year gap from Test cricket. Umpire Darrell Hair neglected to spot a glove down the leg side, allowing him to register a career-resuscitating 128.Unlike Butcher, he had never thought about three. When informed that he would bat there for that Edgbaston Test, he was shocked. “I hadn’t batted at three, either for Essex or England previously. It was my way back in the side, but the worst part of my day was the wait to bat. I was a nervous watcher because I cared so much about getting runs.”Initially, three suited me – get your pads on. Often with Atherton, we’ve lost that wicket early,” he jokes. “So the waiting time was short. Three, then, suited my temperament.”Hussain went on to give it up, as part of what he describes as the usual bell curve on “the graph of being an England captain”; the initial boost of pride and the security of your position, before the pressure of the job takes hold and begins to weigh too heavy. “Suddenly the anxiety of waiting to bat becomes so low on your list that I slid down the order.”In 2000, a year before moving down for Butcher, Hussain came out fighting in the press during a particularly awful patch of form. Prior to the fourth Test against West Indies, he rallied against calls to give up the spot. Amid the usual underperforming-cricketer’s bluff of feeling technically fine (he was averaging 13 at that point of the series, which eventually dipped to 10.16) was mention of how, even in this grim patch, he deserved respect for his service at three.Jacob Bethell received plaudits for doing the job in New Zealand•Getty Images”After David Gower, there were nine or so people tried at number three,” Hussain said on the eve of that match at Headingley. “But four years ago, I stepped in and have got seven hundreds in 40 Test matches with an average of near 40.” It was actually 12 players tried at three in the period after Gower’s final Test there – the first of the 1990-91 Ashes.Twenty-five years removed, Hussain makes an important distinction. It was captaincy, rather than three, that was dragging him down. “Often in my era, you came in at six and you moved up the order. And hence, if you’re moving up the order, you should be getting better if you know what I mean?” he says. “I think that weighs on you a bit, that if you’re England’s No. 3, being ‘average’ just won’t cut it, either for you, in the team, in the public eye or in the press.”But honestly, it was my own expectancy of how I wanted to do well. I never viewed the position as the poisoned chalice.”It is at this point that Hussain asks for his numbers at three. He’s shocked to hear he did it 65 times across 40 Tests.”I don’t view myself as a No. 3. But actually, Jamo [Steve James] wrote in the about Ollie Pope, and there was a list of England No. 3s on it – and I was featured. And I thought, ‘Well, yeah, I was one of England’s No. 3s.'”He takes stock a second time when he hears he averaged 40.55 in the role. “If you look at those stats – and I very rarely piss in my own pocket – but I did quite well. It is now something I do look back on with pride that I did not let the position down. You can survive as captain – as I did, averaging 10 one year! – but I didn’t let that position down, really.”That Hussain, for all his status in the game, is humbled at how he performed there underlines the status of No. 3, at least in previous eras. Gower, similarly, was taken aback by just how good he was. “Right, so that’s five points better than normal,” he says of his 49.41. “Interesting… well I guess I should have another go?” he jokes, with a nod and a wink at the current Pope-Bethell predicament (which this England set-up does not regard as a predicament at all).”It probably takes something like this to put it all together,” Gower says, “put some figures on it, for me to go, ‘Oh, it actually wasn’t so bad, was it?'” Even Moeen, who signed off his Test career with three innings at three at the end of the 2023 Ashes – making one fifty and averaging 31 – wonders what might have been.”It was mainly done because I thought it was best for the team. But from a personal point of view, it was to prove to myself a little bit that I was still good enough to bat three. I left thinking ‘Man, if I was given that a bit more for a bit longer, I definitely could have done it.'”The ones that did it aren’t sure how well they did it. The ones that didn’t wish they had done it more. As for those doing it now? Perhaps it is healthier they do not know how much what they are doing used to once mean.

One Photo Perfectly Depicts Wild Range of Emotions in Shocking Ending to Game 6

Those three words were shouted in living rooms and typed out in group chats all over the world Friday night in the closing moments of the Dodgers’ 3–1 win over the Blue Jays in Game 6 of the World Series.

Trailing by two runs at Rogers Centre, the Blue Jays nearly completed a comeback in the bottom of the ninth. With a runner on first base and nobody out, Addison Barger smacked a gapper to left-center field for extra bases. It would’ve easily scored pinch-runner Myles Straw from first, but the ball got wedged in between the warning track dirt and the padded wall. It was ruled a ground-rule double, putting Straw at third and Barger at second.

The Blue Jays didn’t end up scoring a run. Tyler Glasnow got Ernie Clement to pop out, and Andrés Giménez lined into a double play with outfielder Kiké Hernández doubling off Barger at second base to end the game.

In the blink of an eye, Toronto went from likely making it a one-run game with nobody out to, whoops, three outs and we’re heading to Game 7.

In all the chaos, Getty Images photographer Mark Blinch caught the perfect snapshot from the perspective of the outfield. In one frame, Betts is pictured flying through the air into the outstretched arms of Hernández, and infielder Miguel Rojas is in the dirt looking like he can’t believe what he just witnessed. Meanwhile, Barger is on second base, realizing his baserunning mistake just cost the Blue Jays a chance to tie or walk-off winners in Game 6.

The Dodgers forced a Game 7 with their 3–1 win over the Blue Jays on Friday night. / Mark Blinch/Getty Images

They say a photo is worth 1,000 words? This one might be worth 1,000 emotions.

Following that wild ending, the Dodgers and Blue Jays will run it back Saturday night for a winner-take-all Game 7—MLB’s first in the World Series since the Nationals defeated the Astros in 2019.

First pitch for Game 7 is scheduled for 8 p.m. ET at Rogers Centre.

Tamim: Mushfiqur's 100th Test 'should be celebrated by every Bangladesh cricket lover'

Here’s what Mominul, Whatmore and others had to say ahead of Mushfiqur’s milestone Test

Mohammad Isam18-Nov-2025Tamim Iqbal”It is a humongous achievement for Mushfiq. He is someone who genuinely deserves to play 100 Tests for Bangladesh. Many international cricketers who debuted after him, have already retired playing more than hundred Tests. There was a time when Bangladesh played only a few Tests in more than two years.”It wouldn’t be possible to play so many Tests without having a long career. At the same time, discipline, hard work and vision were also necessary. This achievement should be celebrated by every cricket lover of this country. Mushfiq should be praised and celebrated throughout this Test match. He should be free of judgment from this match, whether he scores 20 or 200.Related

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“I have played with him for 17-18 years. I have seen him get big runs, but I have never seen him get tired after a long innings. I have seen other cricketers get tired after scoring big hundreds, but never Mushfiq. The way he prepares himself, and his hunger. It is built in him or he has worked to build it within him. I think he will have his hunger even in the last game in his career.”Mominul Haque”I still can’t believe that someone from the Bangladesh team has played for 20 years, and is about to complete 100 Tests. I am so pleased to share the dressing room with such a legend for so many years.”I sometimes think that he leads a very boring life. How can a person be so disciplined and dedicated to cricket? We could never be like him. He is very quiet off the field. He is disciplined about his food, sleep, etc. I don’t think we will ever get someone so dedicated and disciplined to his craft.Mushfiqur Rahim and Mominul Haque have played 65 Tests together•BCB”He does so many small things so well. I think he is a proactive individual. He is very organised. He does specific training. Mushfiq knows exactly what he wants to do. Like after this Test series, I am sure he will start working on the Pakistan bowling attack. Even though it is three months away. I think top players plan well ahead. He has tremendous attention to details.”Dav Whatmore”Mushfiq is someone who knew exactly what he wanted to achieve and was self-motivated and disciplined to achieve. I am very happy to see him stand the test of time, of his ups and downs as well as recovering from injuries. Since I left in 2007, I did follow Mushy’s career periodically. Along with Shakib [Al Hasan] and later Tamim [Iqbal], he began to make his country proud and did so well on the 50-over game as well. His slog-sweep is legendary!”Chandika Hathurusinghe”As Mushfiqur Rahim walks out to play his 100th Test match, Bangladesh cricket celebrates not just a milestone, but a man whose impact on our game goes far beyond statistics. I have had the privilege of coaching Mushfiq in two different periods of Bangladesh cricket–first from 2014 to 2017, and again from 2023 to 2024–and what remains constant is his unwavering professionalism, commitment, and leadership.”Mushfiqur is one of the most meticulous cricketers I have ever worked with. His preparation is world-class–intentional, disciplined, and consistent every single day. Whether we were playing at home in Mirpur or away in foreign conditions, Mushfiq never allowed standards to drop. He arrives early, studies conditions, and makes sure every session has purpose. For younger players, simply observing him is an education in what it means to be a true professional.Hathurusinghe: Bangladesh cricket is richer because of Mushfiqur•Associated Press”Beyond his technical skill and mental resilience, what stands out most is his character. Mushfiq is one of the most trustworthy and genuine leaders I’ve had in any team I have coached around the world. He sets the cultural tone. He leads through action, not words. When he speaks, players listen – not because of seniority, but because they know his intentions are always for the team.”Reaching 100 Test matches is a monumental achievement for any cricketer, but for someone who has represented Bangladesh with such pride and humility, it feels particularly special. Mushfiqur Rahim has carried the hopes of a nation with grace, discipline, and unwavering dedication. His journey is not just a testament to talent – it is a story of relentless hard work and a deep love for the game.”As he takes this historic step in his career, I congratulate him not only as his former coach, but also as someone who has immense respect for the professional and the person he is. Bangladesh cricket is richer because of him, and his legacy will inspire generations to come. Congratulations, Mushfiq. You deserve every bit of this moment.”Habibul Bashar”He is a true legend of the game. I am really, really proud of Mushfiqur Rahim. He did a fantastic job. It is a huge deal. You have to perform to play a hundred Tests. To go through the grind for so long. You reach a point when your heart doesn’t want, your body doesn’t want to continue. You reach a point when you tell yourself. ‘I have had enough’. I don’t think the phrase ‘I have had enough’ exists in Mushfiqur Rahim. He is Mr Cricket, our Mike Hussey.”We also have to bear in mind that Bangladesh doesn’t play a lot of Tests, like England, India or Australia. I think holding onto the dedication and interest is a huge achievement in itself. I think his passion makes it special, and makes him stand apart from the rest of the players. I wish he continues for longer.”

4/10 star had his worst game in an Arsenal shirt vs Aston Villa

Arsenal have been the best team in the Premier League this season, but defeat at Aston Villa has put a dampener on the feel-good factor, reducing their advantage at the summit to just two points following Manchester City’s win over Sunderland.

In truth, perhaps this was a step too far for Mikel Arteta’s men. The fixture schedule has been relentless, and Gabriel Magalhaes, William Saliba and Cristhian Mosquera all missed out at Villa Park due to injury.

And Villa, to their credit, are among the most in-form teams in Europe right now, claiming their seventh win in a row across all competitions against the Premier League table-toppers.

But this feels like familiar territory for the Gunners, and there were several players in particular who flattered to deceive.

Arsenal's worst performers vs Aston Villa

On many outings this season, Arsenal have repelled opponents and struck clinically to pile up the points, so balanced and secure is Arteta’s system.

But they emerged from Stamford Bridge last weekend with just a point after something of a slugfest, and the midweek win over Brentford has clearly taken something out of the Londoners, who battled tooth and nail against a well-oiled and energetic Aston Villa side but to no avail.

Up top, Mikel Merino has been an incredible moonlit success since arriving at the Emirates, with the midfield-turned-forward having scored four goals and supplied three assists when stepping up into the danger area this season. However, Unai Emery’s team marshalled him well, anonymous in the first half save for one blundered attempt to find the surging Bukayo Saka.

Viktor Gyokeres and Noni Madueke both changed Arsenal’s attacking dimensions in the second half, but neither enjoyed the most fruitful of appearances, with Gyokeres in particular struggling for service, albeit making his physicality and mobile presence known in Merino’s stead after the break.

For his part, Arteta showcased his shrewd and calculated in-game management by making a half-time change, which swiftly paid off, Leandro Trossard coming up trumps once again after Saka’s strike was deflected.

But the Spanish manager will be frustrated that one starting member failed to make the most of their opportunity, having drifted through the opening 45.

4/10 star produced his worst game for Arsenal

Arsenal have been a world-class unit this season, and they have been reinforced with some top talent this summer. Eberechi Eze is one of the arrivals, a superstar in the English game and a £67m signing from Crystal Palace. However, he wasn’t at his best against Aston Villa.

Let’s not forget, it was a matter of days ago that Arsenal informed Eze he was their Player of the Month for November, having bagged a hat-trick in the north London Derby and settled into his berth.

But, in spite of this, the England international still hasn’t struck a consistent vein of form in the final third, and his tough afternoon in the Midlands served as evidence that he needs to raise his game, having been such a fleet-footed and talismanic force for Oliver Glasner at Palace.

Against Villa, the 27-year-old flattered to deceive, with football.london even handing him a 4/10 match rating after an ineffectual and short-lived outing, hooked at the break for Trossard, who scored. In all likelihood, he failed to showcase any of his many qualities, and for that reason, probably endured his toughest game since joining.

Minutes played

45′

Goals

0

Assists

0

Touches

13

Shots (on target)

0 (0)

Accurate passes

7/9 (78%)

Chances created

0

Dribbles

1/1

Ball recoveries

0

Tackles won

0/0

Duels won

2/5

With Martin Odegaard fit once again, Eze has been forced into a wider berth. Could it be that he is at full throttle when creating and influencing from the middle? His pace lends itself to a wide role, but then so does his athleticism and physicality work well on the flank.

Eze is a passionate player. It is telling that his only goals in the Premier League this season have come against Crystal Palace, his former club, and Spurs in the derby, with Thomas Frank coming close to signing him before Arsenal swooped down.

Eze needs to channel his creativity and incisiveness in the box. He needs to iron out the wrinkles. But first, Arteta may want to relegate him to the bench, rekindling the fire to take that step up to the level he has shown he is capable of.

Sterling 2.0: Berta flop already looks like he'll never make it at Arsenal

It is not looking good for the Arsenal star so far this season.

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Premier League club owner accused of running secret £600m betting syndicate fronted by Nigel Farage's aide

Tony Bloom, who is the majority owner and chairman of Premier League club Brighton & Hove Albion, has been accused of running a 'secret £600 million ($800m) betting syndicate', with some of the accounts used alleged to belong to a former chief of staff of Reform UK MP Nigel Farage.

Farage aide fronted Bloom’s betting syndicate, court hears

A high court document has alleged that George Cottrell, a close associate of Reform leader Farage, was in charge of a major gambling syndicate that was "given control" of his betting accounts. It is also alleged Cottrell acted as a "stalking horse", as report, for a syndicate involving Bloom, according to the public documents filed at the high court. A 19-page file is part of an active dispute between Bloom and Ryan Dudfield, a former associate whose lawyers argue is owed gambling profits in the estimate region of £189m ($250m). The collective is known as Starlizard Betting Syndicate and is said to make around £600m each year in winnings, with bets being placed on the accounts of "footballers, sportsmen and businessmen", the documents claim.

AdvertisementAFP'Cottrell lost large sums of money'

"Cottrell was not a particularly successful gambler, and frequently lost large sums of money," it is further added, and "Mr Cottrell had given control of his betting accounts to Mr Bloom and the Syndicate so that it was not necessary for bets to be sent to Mr Cottrell for him to place". While the syndicates total winnings are unknown, Dudfield has claimed he could be owed as much as $17.5m, as a profits-share deal apparently entitles him to 7% of its winnings.

"The claimant was told…that the syndicate’s use of Mr Cottrell’s betting accounts had ceased," the documents allege. "In fact Mr McAleavy and Mr Cottrell both knew that the Syndicate was continuing to make use of Mr Cottrell’s betting accounts and they both knew that very significant profits had/could be made as a result of the bets that had been placed and were to be placed."

Who is Brighton owner Tony Bloom?

Brighton chairman Bloom is one of the world's most successful gamblers, having built a large amount of his fortune through poker and other related activities in the industry. A longtime Seagulls fan, Bloom became the club's chairman in 2009 and soon secured a 75% shareholding stake of the club, investing £93m to aid the development of the AMEX Stadium. He has helped the south coast club rise from an average League One team to Premier League regulars, with the Albion impressing around Europe with their vastly successful scouting system. Brighton have made considerable profits after signing and selling the likes of Moises Caicedo, Alexis Mac Allister, Yves Bissouma, Joao Pedro, Marc Cucurella and Ben White. His side enjoyed a positive first season under Fabian Hurzeler last term, finishing eighth and only four points off the European qualification places, and could go as high as third in the Premier League table on Wednesday night if they manage to beat Aston Villa.

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Lawyers who are acting on behalf of Cottrell and Bloom have been approached for comment, while Bloom is yet to file a defence against the claim. As for Brighton's on-field matters, they will soon head into a hectic festive schedule packed with fixtures. After their clash with Villa, they take on West Ham United, Liverpool, Sunderland, Arsenal and West Ham again before 2026 rolls in. 

Deepti, Shafali star as India savour World Cup glory

Laura Wolvaardt backed up a century in the semi-final with another one in the final but South Africa fell short in a chase of 299

Karthik Krishnaswamy02-Nov-2025

The Indian team lifts the World Cup Trophy•ICC/Getty Images

This had been India’s World Cup all along. As hosts. As the emerging global powerhouse of women’s cricket. As the team that has pushed the sport’s hegemonic force harder than any other, defeating it twice in semi-finals. As the team whose time had been too long in coming.On Sunday, India made it their World Cup by winning it. Shafali Verma capped an extraordinary week with an extraordinary display in the final: 87 off 78 balls to set up a total of 298 for 7, and two unexpected wickets of characteristic cheek at a crucial juncture in a chase that threatened more than once to turn into a nailbiter. Deepti Sharma, a world-class offspinner who has raised her batting to a new level this year, backed up a run-a-ball half-century with a five-wicket haul that combined old-school overspin with new-age defensive skills. India won by 52 runs, and that margin disguised how much tension this final contained.This was a meeting of two teams nursing histories of heartbreak, and one had to lose. That fate was South Africa’s, cruelly for their captain Laura Wolvaardt, the tournament’s highest run-getter, who followed a career-defining semi-final century with an innings just as good. This was anyone’s game as long as she was in, given South Africa’s immense depth, until she was seventh out for 101 off 98 balls, miscuing Deepti high into the Navi Mumbai night.Nadine de Klerk, the match-winner in the league-stage meeting between these teams, kept faint hopes alive with her hitting, but 78 to get with only Nos. 10 and 11 for company was too much of an ask even for her.Laura Wolvaardt finished 571 tournament runs, new World Cup record•ICC/Getty ImagesSouth Africa won what looked to be an important toss, but the dew that Navi Mumbai has always brought to run-chases didn’t quite materialise, possibly because the showers that pushed the match back by two hours brought temperatures down well before night fell.This equalised conditions for both teams, and India, in the end, had personnel better suited to a pitch where the ball stopped and gripped: more in-form batters adept at risk-free manipulation of spin, and spinners who posed a greater attacking threat. As long as dew didn’t complicate Deepti and Shree Charani’s job, South Africa were going to find it difficult to chase 299 on this pitch.Related

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The chase put India’s innings in perspective. Their total was the second-highest ever achieved in a Women’s World Cup final, but given the events of Thursday’s semi-final on the same ground, and given South Africa’s depth, it looked less than intimidating.And recent events were fresh in the mind. India had been 200 for 3 after 35 overs. They only scored 98 in their last 15 overs, and only 69 in their last 10.But the key passages may have come earlier.When the skies cleared and the match began, Shafali and Smriti Mandhana got off to start as ominous as Australia’s on Thursday; 58 for no loss in eight overs. Ayabonga Khaka struggled to control the sometimes extravagant swing she found, and Marizanne Kapp didn’t find much at all with her new ball. Both erred frequently.Shafali Verma made her highest ODI score in the World Cup final•AFP/Getty ImagesShafali, stepping out to the seamers whenever she could, drove and flicked her way to five fours in her first 19 balls, and Mandhana, less overtly aggressive, had unfurled her two favourite shots, the back-cut and the cover drive, against Khaka in a 14-run sixth over.But South Africa pulled things back courtesy de Klerk’s straighter lines and left-arm spinner Nonkululeko Mlaba’s pace variations, with India only scoring 13 runs in the five overs from the ninth to the 13th.The boundaries began to flow again thereafter, though, with Shafali launching de Klerk down the ground for the first six of the innings in the 15th over, but just when India seemed to be pulling away from South Africa’s reach, Mandhana was out edging a late-cut to the keeper, bringing a 104-run opening stand to an end.This pull-push continued all the way through the innings, in conditions where neither the bowlers nor batters could quite get on top. A tiring, cramping Shafali fell after adding 16 runs to her previous ODI best of 71*, holing out while looking to hit straight and big. Jemimah Rodrigues, Harmanpreet and Amanjot Kaur all got off to starts but couldn’t convert, two of them falling to balls that seemed to stop on the pitch.India’s lack of a big finish owed a lot to how well South Africa exploited this tendency of the pitch, with Khaka making up for her expensive new-ball spell (3-0-29-0) by conceding just 29 runs in her last seven overs while picking up the key wickets of Shafali, Rodrigues and Richa Ghosh.Ayabonga Khaka picked up three big wickets•Getty ImagesGhosh walked in at 245 for 5 in the 44th over and launched her second ball for an effortless six over the covers. She remained the only India batter to defy the conditions and hit the old ball cleanly through the line, pouncing on South Africa’s shift in strategy from stump-to-stump cutters to yorker attempts that came with a smaller margin for error.Khaka’s dismissal of Ghosh in the 49th over, however, seemed to even up the contest once more. Right through that over, Khaka kept cramping Ghosh with pinpoint yorkers that followed her attempts to manufacture room, before a last-ball flick ended up in deep backward square leg’s hands.De Klerk followed up with a final over in which Deepti and new batter Radha Yadav were only able to take singles, and India had ended up two short of 300.Deepti had been a busy presence through the last 20 overs of the innings, slog-sweeping with authority when she could, and keeping the strike turning over when she couldn’t. She didn’t quite find the next gear, however, to lift India to the 320-plus total they had seemed set for for so long.The magnitude of India’s 298, however, began looking clear from the time they began defending it. Their seamers didn’t make the line and length errors that South Africa’s did with the new ball, with Renuka Singh causing problems in particular with her booming inswing. She unsuccessfully reviewed a not-out lbw appeal against Tazmin Brits early on, and then nearly had her spoon one to a cleverly positioned short mid-on.DY Patil Stadium was a sea of blue on Sunday•ICC/Getty ImagesBut it took a brilliant bit of fielding for India to get their breakthrough, with Amanjot pouncing to her wrong side from midwicket and throwing down the stumps at the bowler’s end to find Brits short while attempting a quick single.Two overs later, South Africa were two down, as Anneke Bosch ended a miserable tournament with a six-ball duck, misreading Charani’s length and getting trapped right in front while playing back to a ball of fullish length.Wolvaardt, though, was already on 35 off 30, and already looking ominous, having broken free of early pressure with a series of leg-side swats and a clean, straight six off Deepti. Just when she needed a partner to stay in with her, she found one in Sune Luus, whose trademark mix of square and fine sweeps quickly began putting India back under pressure.But just when the third-wicket stand had crossed the half-century mark, India found their golden arm. Shafali, who had taken just the one wicket with her part-time offspin in 30 previous ODIs, sauntered to the crease and prised out Luus with her second ball, delivering something like a slow legcutter or a carrom ball without the finger flick. Expecting turn in one direction and finding it in another, Luus closed her bat face and popped back a return catch. Kept on for another over, she struck again with her first ball, this time turning an offbreak big to have Kapp strangled down the leg side.Deepti Sharma was named Player of the Tournament•ICC/Getty ImagesWith parts of Mumbai experiencing rain at that moment, South Africa had been ahead of the DLS par score before Luus’ dismissal. At 123 for 4 in the 23rd over, they were well behind it.And they slipped further behind when Sinalo Jafta, batting ahead of more proven, more powerful names despite an ODI average in the mid-teens, began to dot up against the spinners. By the time she spooned Deepti to midwicket, she had scored 16 off 29 and 25 off 44 with Wolvaardt.But even with 151 required from 123 balls, this match wasn’t done. Annerie Dercksen silenced a packed stadium with back-to-back sixes off Radha, the first off a high full-toss no-balled for height. Wolvaardt ended Shafali’s spell – perhaps ambitiously stretched into a seventh over – with a pair of fours drilled through the covers and down the ground.With 11 overs to go, South Africa needed 92.But they still had the tournament’s highest wicket-taker, and an end-overs ace, to contend with. Deepti, in the second over of a new spell, produced a quick yorker out of nowhere that Dercksen couldn’t put bat to. And then, in her next over, she slowed one down, inviting Wolvaardt to go big. Dip produced the mishit, but it still needed to be taken, and Amanjot, walking in from deep midwicket, did on the third – or was it the fourth? – attempt, falling to the floor but somehow holding on.Three balls later, Deepti’s white-ball smarts put India another massive step closer, a quicker, cross-seam ball beating Tryon to rap her front pad; given out on the field, DRS upheld it on umpire’s call.There was still work to do, and still nerves to get past, but the World Cup, so elusive for so many years, was beginning to loom into India’s view.

Famously Frugal Pirates Were Willing to Outspend Phillies in Kyle Schwarber Pursuit

Before Kyle Schwarber re-signed with the Phillies on a five-year, $150 million deal, the slugger—one of the top free agents on the market—was garnering interest from a number of teams including the Reds, Orioles and Pirates.

The Pirates, surprisingly, might have been the most serious team outside of Philadelphia bidding for the slugger’s services. Tom Verducci reported Tuesday that according to sources, both the Pirates and Orioles were also offering Schwarber deals in the five-year, $150 million range, and that the Pirates “indicated a willingness to go higher.”

Related: MLB Winter Meetings Live Blog—Phillies Shatter Record With Schwarber Signing

While Schwarber ended up choosing to return to Philadelphia after spending the previous four seasons with the team, the Pirates’ reported offer does display a different competitiveness by their front office. It was previously known that the Pirates had interest in Schwarber, but given their history of low spending in free agency, the fact that they were offering Schwarber was not initially treated as very serious. The Pirates being willing to offer more than he signed for with the Phillies instead shows the contrary, that the Pirates might actually be trying to field a team that can truly compete—even if it means paying a high price to do so.

It makes sense for the Pirates to make this pursuit. After all, they have a franchise piece in ace Paul Skenes, who is coming off his first Cy Young-winning campaign in only his second season. Despite rumors and assertions that Pittsburgh should trade the ace if they don’t make moves to compete, Skenes has expressed that he wants to remain in Pittsburgh and help the Pirates win. Given the Pirates haven’t made the postseason in a decade and Skenes is locked in with Pittsburgh through 2029, they’d be wise not to let his tenure as a Pirate go to waste.

In turn, the Pirates appear to be prioritizing building a winning team around the star pitcher. The Pirates have already traded pitcher Johan Oviedo for promising hitter Jhostynxon Garcia this offseason, and have since looked at some high-priced free agents. It’s unclear whether Pittsburgh will manage to land any of the top players available via free agency or trade, but their pursuit of Schwarber signals a step in the right direction for a franchise that has spent much of this century in the cellar of the National League Central.

Root unperturbed by 'challenge' of facing pink-ball master Starc

England’s key batter won’t dwell on Perth dismissals, despite poor head-to-head record

Vithushan Ehantharajah30-Nov-2025England’s first training session at the Gabba on Sunday, ahead of the second Ashes Test, featured a couple of unfamiliar “dog-throwers”.With the Lions taking part in the Prime Ministers’ XI match in Canberra, Matthew Potts and Josh Tongue with them, and the bowlers resting up after Saturday’s session at Allan Border Field – only Ben Stokes sent deliveries down – net bowlers and coaches were working overtime. As were two new faces in England stash.They were drafted in from the Sunshine Coast by bowling coach David Saker as reinforcements. And it was no coincidence there was a left-hander in there.After Mitchell Starc blasted through England in the first Test at Perth to put Australia 1-0 up, the extra focus was a no-brainer. The tourists had no answers for Starc’s brilliance as he finished with 10 in the match. They will need to find some ahead of the day-night Test, because no one does it better than the 35-year-old in this novelty off-shoot of the longest format.Related

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No bowler has anywhere near as many as Starc’s 81 pink-ball wickets at 17.08, nor his experience of 14 Tests with various iterations of the lighter Kookaburra. Like cocktails on a beach, he is a class apart when the sun sets. And with half of each day’s play expected to take place under lights, there is unlikely to be a period not suited to his game.As is England’s way, the onus is on individuals to work out their own ways of combating Starc. And it was noteworthy that one of England’s greatest problem-solvers, Joe Root, hogged a left-handed thrower during the afternoon session, trying to workshop a method against a familiar foe.The pair have played each other 23 times – red and pink – and Starc has the slight upper hand in their ongoing battle.Test cricket’s second-most productive run-scorer averages 34.9 against Starc, who has removed Root 10 times in Tests, including twice last week.”I think the first innings, to be honest, it was a pretty good ball,” Root said of his dismissal for a duck on day one, twisted around and edging to third slip. “Nipped across you from straight in. I wasn’t looking to whip it through square leg or anything like that. It was just one of those things you can get on a lively wicket. In England that probably doesn’t carry, it drops short with soft hands. It’s just one of the things you have to wear.”In the second innings, Root felt he started well “being quite busy and proactive” before edging a drive onto his stumps for 8 from 11 deliveries. The third batter dismissed in a run-less six balls that turned the Test on its head. “I just made a slight error of judgement and it costs you. You could play and miss at that, or it goes between stumps and keeper and goes for four, and you never think about it again.”Joe Root trains at the Gabba•Getty ImagesFine margins? Or, whisper it – does Root have a Starc problem? Both can be true, of course. Likewise, the fact that since adding the wobble seam delivery to his repertoire, Starc has been able to challenge both edges of the bat, regardless of whether he is faced with a right- or left-hander. Supplemented by his pace, angle and swing, he was able to cover for the loss of Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood in the first Test, and may do again in the second.”Clearly the more he’s played, the more experience he’s getting, and the more skills he’s developed,” Root said. “He’s a fine bowler and has been for a long time – and that’s never changed. They’ve had a couple of injuries, and he’s had to step up and he did that very well in the last game. Our challenge will be, can we counter that this week?”Root is optimistic solutions can be found, even in Starc’s day-night domain, and sees no reason why the bowler’s strengths cannot be managed to a degree. It is worth noting, Starc’s average with the pink ball at the Gabba is a solid yet unspectacular 29.00, with 14 dismissals across six innings.”It’s understanding all of the different tools he might have and then how are you going to counter that both in a positive manner and in allowing yourself to do it for a long period of time. Just being clear individually in how you want to go about scoring your runs and readying yourself as best you can is going to be the key.”With two days of practice, and information due to come their way from Canberra, England are fairly happy with the current batch of pink balls, even if Root thinks day-night matches are unnecessary for an Ashes series. Having played in all seven of England’s previous ones, he will need to draw on that experience, and share it with team-mates, if the tourists are to dent Australia’s impressive record in the side-format, which currently reads 13 wins out of 14. That one loss came here at the Gabba, against West Indies in 2024.”It felt pretty good when facing it. I think it’s [the black seam] actually a nice way of really focusing on the ball. Look hard at that seam and give you as many cues as you can from that point of release.”Of course, it’s going to have its different challenges and nuances from the red ball, but that’s all part and parcel of it. Can we be better at it than Australia? That’s the question and the challenge ahead of us.”

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