'The smaller teams want to play more, but they can't because the cash is not there'

Alistair Campbell talks about the tyranny of the TV rights cricket economy and why it’s not realistic to expect the weaker teams to progress in all forms of the game

Interview by Saurabh Somani25-Jan-2020Alistair Campbell knows Zimbabwe cricket better than most. He had a decade-long career with the national team, was among the country’s most successful captains, and later took on administrative roles with Zimbabwe Cricket and spent time as a chief selector of the national sides. Now a globe-trotting commentator when he is not running his cricket academy in Zimbabwe, Campbell keeps a close eye on world cricket, particularly on how the smaller nations are faring, and retains a deep affection and concern for his home country. He spoke to ESPNcricinfo about the realities of cricket’s financing model, and the potential road ahead for the weaker teams, Zimbabwe included.You said as far back as 2015 that Zimbabwe could be lost to cricket if things didn’t change drastically.
You say things in the spirit of the moment and emotionally. I’m so passionate and care so much about Zimbabwe cricket that when things aren’t going right or I see them progressing in a way that is not going to end well, I get a bit emotional.It almost came true. Zimbabwe were almost lost to cricket last year.
Yeah, it did. The last few months have been well documented, about being thrown out of the ICC. But that wasn’t Zimbabwe Cricket’s fault, that was government becoming involved. But at the end of the day it’s the players and supporters who have [borne] all the stuff that’s happened.I just hope that it’s a wake-up call for our administration and for the ICC to say, “How can we help you get this right again?” Because world cricket needs a strong Zimbabwe, it needs cricket to be strong in that part of the world, in Africa.ALSO READ: Zimbabwe suspended by ICC over ‘government interference’Everybody is going through their trials and tribulations. I mean, South African cricket, every day I read an adverse article. But what Zimbabwe could have done, and can do a lot better insofar as their structures and player pathways are concerned, is to get their cricketing structure [up to scratch] to make sure they are more competitive at the highest level.You have a good player base and there’s talent there. If there’s lots of raw material, why are we not better? One thing is, we don’t play enough top-class cricket consistently. But this year, I’ve seen the FTP [Future Tours Programme] and it’s one of the best FTPs for a long time.I just think that we don’t have the right amount of talent coming through of the right standard that can feed into the clubs and franchise first-class teams. That gap needs to be bridged and resources need to be put in to make sure that we can compete.

I don’t think anybody can sit in front of you with a straight face and say that the way it stands, there’s going to be any meaningful progression from the [smaller] nations

The other nations are catching up or have surpassed us. Afghanistan have been rags to riches, unbelievable progress. Bangladesh have proven themselves on the international stage. Then the likes of Ireland, Scotland. And Nepal – their domestic games, there’s 10,000 people watching! That’s good for world cricket, that all of these nations are coming up.Yes, Zimbabwe cricket has regressed – not enough talent realised, and early retirements. The likes of Tatenda Taibu retiring when he was 29, and a lot of well-documented fighting between board and players, that sort of thing. But I also think that other nations have progressed [in contrast].Did you think the suspension by the ICC last year was too harsh? The ultimate losers were the players.
I think it could have been handled a bit better. If ICC knew they were going to suspend Zimbabwe because they had breached whatever article it was, they could have said so. Our sports minister, Kirsty Coventry, decorated Olympian, is an approachable person. This wasn’t some, you know, deep, secret intervention. She was just trying to make things better. As the governing body, the Sports and Recreation Commission, they suspended the board [in June 2019] because they didn’t agree with how things were being run. Now [the ICC ban has] been lifted but there was six months of going on in Zimbabwe. No salaries, no cricket. Crazy, crazy, crazy that in this day and age you can’t intervene and say, “Hold on guys, you can’t do it this way.”ALSO READ: Experiencing the pain of Zimbabwe cricket through Tatenda Taibu’s eyesThings seemed to be looking up after the ban, but now it appears the first-class competition is on hold?
I think a few rounds were played, but from what I gather, the ICC’s funding hasn’t resumed yet. They gave a bit of money to settle players’ arrears and bills, but the bulk of the funding to run cricket has not been released. The ICC wanted to go there and they wanted a full PricewaterhouseCoopers report as to where the previous funding had gone and a proper audit. My sources tell me that after these two Test matches [against Sri Lanka], funding will resume. So then the programme can carry on again.Are there enough young people taking up the game in Zimbabwe? It seems like it should be a lucrative option to make a career in cricket?
Definitely it is a better living than most others. But cricket is not like football, where you just need a ball to play the game. In cricket you need a bat, gloves, pad, boots… suddenly it all starts adding up. To [players from] poor households, it’s not possible. To get them playing at a proper level where they can become professionals, you’ve got to have resources for that, structures. At the moment [they aren’t enough].Why aren’t the structures in place? Zimbabwe was a Full Member and was receiving ICC money for many years.
It should be better, yes. Why is it not there? It’s been spent on fixtures and players and salaries. All the stuff that comes with running a business, being a corporate.The price of top-flight cricket: Afghanistan’s Test match against West Indies last year cost them a fair chunk of their ICC grant money•AFPWhen you’re an Associate country, the ICC’s paying for your flights, accommodation [when you tour], and now, suddenly, like Ireland and Afghanistan are seeing, they say, “Okay, you’re big boys. Here’s your money, sort your own problems out.” Now they need a CEO, they need secretaries, this and that, and suddenly it’s a big corporate [operation].I don’t think people quite understand how costly it is to host a game of cricket if you don’t have a proper TV rights contract. Take the Afghanistan v West Indies game in Lucknow. It finished in two and a half days, but all the people working on it have been booked for the five days. The grounds, the staff, the food, everything. So yes, they have played a Test match, but it’s probably cost them US$200,000 to $300,000. Perhaps more. And if your yearly grant is to the tune of $4 million, that means you have spent close to 10% of your budget on playing one Test match!A lot of countries like Zimbabwe, Afghanistan, Ireland, Scotland, Netherlands want to play more but cannot because the cash is not there. It’s not that they don’t want to play cricket, but they can’t play because they don’t have enough cash to host.What makes it so costly to host a cricket tour?
If you host, you pay for the hotel, the buses, the security, the facilities. When Zimbabwe, Afghanistan, Ireland – they’re now with the big boys – want to host, say, West Indies or India, they’ll need to send people beforehand to check the facilities out. The hotel needs to be five-star, it needs facilities. They’ll need specific balls for the warm-ups. One Kookaburra ball is about $150, and you need about 50 for practice. You don’t begrudge them that because it’s professional sport, so you have to have the best equipment. So when you play with the big boys, the costs escalate.Then there’s television. The broadcaster might want a 12-camera or 16-camera production. I don’t think production is less than $30,000-40,000 a . That’s for a bog-standard production. So for a Test match, just for television that’s about $200,000 at least. You have to sell the TV rights [for more than that]. Not many people take it. They’ll take the content and say, “If we get any money from advertising revenue, we’ll share it with you.” Unless you play against India. Or unless you have your own domestic market. The lesser nations with no lucrative TV deals cannot survive on just the ICC grants and play meaningful cricket against everybody. It’s not possible.

I don’t think anybody can sit in front of you with a straight face and say that the way it stands, there’s going to be any meaningful progression from the [smaller] nations

It’s important to get it on TV. So many success stories have come by someone saying, “I saw my hero on TV.”Once upon a time the ICC had a Test grant [Test match fund], I think it was $10 million [over eight years], that they put aside for subsidising Test matches for the “lesser” nations. To help them out, because it’s costly to host a Test match. They’ve withdrawn that now and said, “No, you guys should be able to make your own plan.”Zimbabwe, Ireland and Afghanistan – for them to play more cricket, with the odd matches against some of the bigger nations, it’s not possible without the infusion of cash. The current grant [which amounts to approximately $94 million out of the ICC’s projected earnings of $2.7 billion for the 2016-23 TV rights cycle] is probably enough to run your infrastructure, first-class tournaments, pay your players, and run an organisation. But it’s not possible, with that amount of money, to host and play as much cricket as you should be playing to improve.And yet, Zimbabwe are hosting Sri Lanka for two Tests.
() That’s going to make a big hole in the budget. But it’s a sort of catch-22 isn’t it? You know that you’re making a loss, and it might impact some of your further tours, but you’re eager to play Test cricket. These opportunities don’t arise [often], so you can’t cancel it. You have to go ahead and try to make a plan.But the bulk of the cost is the television production, and they’re doing a cut-back production and live streaming, as opposed to a full production. That’s an option the ICC have said is acceptable, so you’ll get a lot of smaller nations live streaming as opposed to a full television production.Campbell favours a structure where the ICC bankrolls a certain amount of international cricket every year for the weaker teams•Arif Ali/AFP/Getty ImagesYou saw with this Sri Lanka tour, there were no warm-up games, it’s very congested. There is still going to be a loss, though, and the powers that be will have had to cut a few other bits and pieces off their budget for the year. It’s just how you can reduce the quantum of that loss and absorb it.What’s the way out? Is there a way to bootstrap one’s way through a tough period and wait for larger rewards?
Well, Zimbabwe’s going to try it now. Their FTP is really good. They’re travelling to Australia for three one-dayers. That’s just going to cost them airfares. You can say, “We’re not going business class, we’ll go economy.” You can keep costs down.There’s also a home and away against Pakistan. I think India are coming to Zimbabwe – they’ll make money from that, TV rights in Zimbabwe. It’s a lucrative tour for them. They can probably get through this year because India’s coming. But if there’s no India tour, then probably they’d be scratching around for cash to try and host.Is there a corner you turn?
I say this tongue in cheek, but the only way is to play against India. Everyone wants to play against India. Everyone says, “Play India two games and it solves our problems for the next two years.” But there’s only 365 days in a year, and players need rest. If India do agree to play you, they’ll sometimes rest some of their senior players. And then the TV companies are going, “No, he’s not playing so we can’t pay that much.”India could say, “Look guys, our players need the rest. We’ve got lots of money, so we’ll pay you and we won’t come there.” ()But the only real way is, there needs to be an increase [in revenue]. If you’re not paying your players, and if you produce a really good player, they’ll start playing in other leagues or leave. If a Steven Smith comes out of Zimbabwe, he might not get as much money as he thinks he’s worth. So he goes, “No thanks, I’m going to go sign an IPL deal and other deals.” If Zimbabwe then say no, they won’t give him a no-objection certificate, he’ll say he won’t sign a contract with Zimbabwe. It’s a slippery slope. As soon as you start to get better, it means you’ve got better players, but then you have to pay more players and pay them better!

It’s a slippery slope. As soon as you start to get better, it means you’ve got better players, but then you have to pay more players and pay them better!

If Zimbabwe are suddenly beating everybody, it doesn’t increase their TV rights because those TV rights are based on your domestic market. You’ve got to have people in your domestic market paying to watch you play. That’s how you generate cash. It’s sort of like a ceiling – these nations can’t progress any further than where they are because of the commercial constraints.So then it seems like cricket is fated to be, unofficially at least, a two-tier sport? The top half is always going to be a bit out of reach of the bottom half.
You might have the odd game that’s an upset and everyone goes, “You see, they’re competitive.” But that’s the nature of life and sport. Occasionally Zimbabwe beat Australia, like they did at the inaugural T20 World Cup. But if Zimbabwe or Afghanistan have to play India or Australia in a Test match, the games would be finished in two and a half days.You can be competitive in the white-ball format, particularly T20. One person can make a difference on a day. There will be those upsets, there will be the World Cups where everyone is together, like the T20 World Cup. It’s “Rah rah, 16 nations, everyone is playing and it’s nice.” But if you actually peel all that back and say, “Are Zimbabwe, Ireland and Afghanistan progressing as Test nations?” No.In the one-day and T20 stuff, it’s easier to get everyone involved. We all know why there were only ten teams at the [50-over] World Cup – because India needed to play more games. That generates more cash, so everyone can get paid. It’s quid pro quo, really. So all that stuff going around about why there should have been more teams there – well, if India play less games, there’s less money! So smell the coffee.Take the Afghanistan v West Indies Test. It had no meaning or context. It’s lovely for guys to play Test cricket. Rahkeem Cornwall [did well]. Shamarh Brooks got a hundred – he’s got a Test match hundred, you can’t take that away from him. Amir Hamza, five wickets. But in the greater scheme of Afghanistan cricket, could that $250,000 have been better spent?That Test match is finished in two and a half days. There’s no back-up to that. It’s not a series, they’re not playing another Test in two weeks’ time. They’re not playing games and constantly improving. So you play two Test matches a year and they cost you about half a million dollars. How on earth is that benefiting anybody?”World cricket needs a strong Zimbabwe, it needs cricket to be strong in that part of the world, in Africa”•AFPMaybe the ICC [can give] you a base programme: that they are going to fund, say, four Tests guaranteed, ten one-dayers and four T20Is, so you’re guaranteed 25 days of cricket a year. The ICC underwrites it. After that, you get your grant and sort out your own bilateral series. Then guys will be playing [a good amount of cricket] a year.The next step is to talk about how we can have promotion-relegation. And the ICC can guarantee that the funding won’t change for those guys [who get relegated]. Because a lot of the nations do their budgets in line with the grants, so you can have a development programme for a long time ahead, but suddenly you get chucked out of the Test Championship and you’ve got no money.At the moment I don’t think anybody can sit in front of you with a straight face and say that the way it stands, there’s going to be any meaningful progression from those lower nations. It’s not possible when you don’t play any cricket.ALSO READ: Zimbabwe to scale back on Test cricket at homeMaybe the solution is, we tell Virat Kohli, “Look, we need you 365 days in a year. You might lead India A teams but you have to be there and tour various countries.” That way they’ll get television deals!If India went and played three T20Is in Ireland, Ireland would be able to budget for the next two years. For Afghanistan, [India] don’t even have to go there. They can be in their own country, go to Lucknow [Afghanistan’s designated home venue] for a week. Play three T20Is and Afghanistan cricket are sorted. That’s a simplistic plan… but it might be better than big ICC meetings, boardrooms and vetoes.I just think at the moment, a meaningful FTP is not possible in the current budget that the smaller countries have. It’s only possible with the intervention from proper TV rights or if ICC give you a supplementary playing budget.

There’s only 365 days in a year, and players need rest. If India do agree to play you, they’ll sometimes rest some of their senior players. And then the TV companies say, “No, he’s not playing, so we can’t pay that much”

What’s the way forward for Zimbabwe?
Prioritise. When you shrink your budget in any business, you’ve got to do that.Player pathway is critical. A guy that’s talented, how do you get him to first-class cricket and then to international cricket? That player pathway is not clear-cut right now. Club structures and facilities aren’t good enough. Just a simple thing like games getting rained off or people not being able to get to stadiums because of transport problems. Why doesn’t Zimbabwe Cricket provide transport? A set of covers is no more than $3000 or 4000. Little things like that.Start with your best 30 or 40 cricketers and have three first-class sides. And then you can expand from there. But have those playing and the amateur structure below that.For me, right now Test cricket is a drain on resources [for Zimbabwe]. If I was in charge, I would say we have to concentrate on white-ball cricket. We have to get to the 2023 World Cup. Is it a realistic goal to be in the top eight by then so you qualify automatically? Yes, it is. We have to automatically qualify for all the T20 World Cups – also a realistic goal. Let’s concentrate there.You can’t focus on all three formats. You don’t have the resources to do that.You should have your own domestic T20 competition. Try and get some more ex-players involved.Finally, putting aside the economics of it all, how does it feel as a former captain to see Test cricket back in Zimbabwe?
Well it’s the ultimate, you know? It’s a heck of a thing. My only concern, as I mentioned earlier, is that I wish it had more context, like the World Test Championship that the big guys play for.Even if it’s a second tier, there should be promotion-relegation. I don’t mind starting with the top eight [for the WTC] but then the bottom five should have their own championship, and the winner of that gets promoted to the top and whoever comes last in the top eight gets relegated. If there was that sort of context, it would be marvellous.

The ride hasn't been easy, but it's time now for Scotland's greatest moment under the sun

Having waited so long for that first World Cup win, Scotland have now strung together four in a row. They believe this is just the beginning…

Alan Gardner24-Oct-2021Scotland and World Cups has not exactly been a recipe for success over the years. It took them 21 attempts between 1999 and 2016, across six different tournaments in the 50-over and T20 formats, to win a game at limited-overs cricket’s highest level – and that a first-round match against Hong Kong with qualification already beyond both sides.Such heartache was very much in keeping with the national character. Scotland’s football team has a longer, slightly more respectable history at World Cups, but nevertheless last qualified for one in 1998, when the anthem that accompanied them to France was Del Amitri’s “Don’t Come Home Too Soon” (a plea that sadly went unheeded).In Oman over the last week, however, the cricketers refused to contemplate going home early. In the process they have written a fresh page in Scotland’s sporting history. Their three wins in Group B included knocking over a Full Member in Bangladesh – gaining some measure of revenge for a narrow defeat at Edinburgh’s Grange ground in the 1999 World Cup – and saw Scotland emphatically through to the Super 12s.Related

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Before the start of the second stage, England captain Eoin Morgan called them “the team of the tournament so far”. Having waited so long for that first World Cup win, they have now strung together four in a row.Reaching the second round of a global ICC tournament for the first time must rank as Scotland’s greatest achievement since being granted Associate membership in 1994. For Preston Mommsen, who captained Scotland at the 2015 World Cup and the World T20 a year later, “this is the proudest moment” in cricket.”For me it’s comfortably now the pinnacle of Scottish cricket in terms of what we’ve achieved in the past,” he told ESPNcricinfo from the UAE, where he is commentating at the T20 World Cup. “The highest [point] we’ve reached, to make it through to a second round of a World Cup event in these sort of foreign conditions is testament to how far Scotland has come as a cricketing nation.”Scotland made a noise by beating Bangladesh in their first match – quite literally, as a full-throated team rendition of “Flower of Scotland” interrupted the official post-match press conference and left Mahmudullah purse-lipped, looking like he’d just been offered a plate of haggis. Victory over Oman sealed Scotland’s progression as group winners and left Kyle Coetzer, Scotland’s current captain and playing in his fourth ICC tournament, seeming somewhat overwhelmed.”For Cricket Scotland and back home it’s huge,” Coetzer said, “the opportunity to play on the biggest stage, the opportunity to test ourselves against the best, and grow the game back home. People are watching, the following has been immense.”

Cricket Scotland’s chief executive, Gus Mackay, was one of those watching on expectantly from the UK – having spent the day in meetings in London, he caught the final moments in a pub on Chancery Lane. Given how tight the margins are in Associate cricket, Mackay said he has had “everything crossed” for success in Oman and the UAE.Progression to the second round of a World Cup brings with it numerous benefits, from raising public awareness of the sport in Scotland to the more tangible prize of a guaranteed spot at the 2022 tournament in Australia – giving the board some certainty and meaning Scotland can start to plan ahead, as well as try to tap new revenue streams. As Mackay puts it: “My job now is to capitalise on this moment, and work on our enhanced reputation and the commercial opportunities that lie ahead.”Rewind 12 months and the picture was significantly bleaker. The Covid-19 pandemic hit Scotland harder than most cricket nations, with their programme of international fixtures completely torn up: between December 2019 and May 2021, the men’s team did not play a single senior game. Planned fixtures against New Zealand, Australia and Sri Lanka, as well as two rounds of the World Cup League 2, were mothballed.Cricket Scotland has an annual turnover is around £2.3m – a fraction of a Full Member board such as the ECB – and receives most of its funding through the ICC, as well as some support from Sport Scotland. Covid cost them around £500,000 in lost revenue in 2020, as well as forcing several players on to alternative – and thankfully temporary – career paths. But it also sharpened Scotland’s focus on the importance of the rescheduled 2021 T20 World Cup.”These things don’t happen overnight,” Mackay said. “This is 18 months of planning, putting structures in place – and, to be honest, Covid’s probably forced us into some of that. And I think there was also this real champing at the bit by the players who hadn’t played international cricket to just get going again. So in a strange way, Covid’s probably helped.”In September, Scotland played their first home fixtures in more than two years, beaten 2-1 in a T20I series with Zimbabwe. But by then, the blueprint for the T20 World Cup was already in place. Success in the first round was based on rigorous physical preparation and familiarity with the conditions, having arrived in Muscat several weeks beforehand for World Cup League 2 fixtures against Oman and Papua New Guinea.Greaves was instrumental in Scotland bossing Bangladesh last week•ICC via GettyMommsen suggested that losing to Zimbabwe before departing from Edinburgh provided a timely “wake-up call” and said he had been impressed with Scotland’s fitness and fielding during wins against Bangladesh, Papua New Guinea and Oman.”It’s been hot here but they’ve coped very well with the tough conditions. I think the outfield fielding has been so far the best on display. Some of the catches they’ve taken, under lights in very difficult fielding conditions, comes from a good base of fitness, confidence in the body and being able to perform under pressure, and under fatigue. Credit to the backroom staff, the guys are in great shape and have handled that very well.”It’s just very pleasing to see the results now coming to fruition because that would have been 18-24 months of solid behind-the-scenes graft. People aren’t seeing the work they do, day in and day out, training through the winter, in a cold Edinburgh.”Cricket Scotland had strengthened backroom support in advance by recruiting Jonathan Trott, the former England batter, as a consultant, as well as appointing a wellbeing manager. Louise Finlayson has worked with Scotland for several years, but was given a specific brief to help look after players in the “managed environments” brought on by Covid – which includes using an app to monitor their levels of happiness and stress.Scotland also sent an expanded party out to Oman, allowing for added competition and cover in case of injuries – something the board was only able to afford to do because the eight members of the coaching and support staff agreed to fly economy class, with the players in business. “That shows how the management team put the team first and it brings a really cohesive unit together when you’ve got people making sacrifices,” Mackay said.While playing ODIs as a precursor to a T20 tournament might not sound ideal, the extended trip helped Scotland to get acclimatised and build a strong sense of purpose, with Coetzer putting their success down to “a real togetherness within our squad”.Past failures have played their part, too. The core of Scotland’s side – players such as Coetzer, Calum MacLeod, Richie Berrington, Matt Cross, Michael Leask, Josh Davey and Safyaan Sharif – has been in place for some time, and can call on the memory of narrow defeats to Afghanistan and Zimbabwe in Nagpur at the 2016 World T20.”That really hurt for a lot of us,” Mommsen said. “Both of those games we played good cricket, had moments to seize control, but for one reason or another we weren’t able to do that. It was quite clear that the experience wasn’t quite there in terms of being under the pump on a world stage, when you’re playing for a place in the next round. But the guys that were there in 2016, they’ve really stood up. They’ve made the most of those experiences and possibly the regrets of 2016.”

“Probably a week ago there’s a lot of people, particularly in Scotland, who didn’t know Scotland were in a World Cup. They certainly do now, because of what we’ve achieved.”Cricket Scotland CEO Mackay

The star of the victory over Bangladesh, however, was a 31-year-old allrounder forged in the Scottish club scene and playing only his second T20I. Chris Greaves was born in South Africa but turned out for the likes of Glenrothes, Forfarshire and Caledonian Highlanders over the course of almost a decade in Scotland and spent the 2021 summer travelling down to Whitburn, near Sunderland, to play in the North East Premier League.Greaves previously earned a living as a caddy at St Andrew’s before turning to delivering parcels for Amazon during the pandemic but had been on the radar for some time, playing for Scotland A and working with Toby Bailey, the national performance coach, before making his full international debut earlier this month.”I have a huge amount of admiration for him for hanging on for so long and working towards a goal that was clearly there for him from the beginning,” said Mommsen, who made a similar journey from South Africa to Scotland as a young man. “He wanted to play international cricket, he wanted to represent Scotland at the highest stage and what a way he’s done that. He’s ploughed away in Scottish cricket leagues for a number of years now and he’s finally reaping the rewards.”Scotland will be hoping for further rewards, too. Overcoming their World Cup hoodoo can only help strengthen aspirations towards Full Membership, something which Cricket Scotland would like to achieve “as soon as possible” but is likelier to fall within the next ICC rights cycle, from 2023-2030. A more competitive team should help secure fixtures, with Mackay hoping to agree visits by two of the four Test-playing nations – New Zealand, India, South Africa and Pakistan – due to tour the British Isles next year.They also have five more opportunities to make an impression in the UAE, with spinner Mark Watt jokingly warning that Virat Kohli “should be worried” about the prospect of taking on Scotland. Before India, they face old foes Afghanistan and fellow Associates Namibia. “Who knows, if they can go two from two, with three incredibly difficult games to go after that. But you sneak another win and then a bit of net run rate and, who knows,” Mommsen said. “So, yeah, the guys will be dreaming.”And while Covid regulations mean there is unlikely to be a Tartan Army descending on Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Sharjah, signs of awakening interest are there – Gray-Nicolls, who manufacture Scotland’s kit, tweeted on Friday that they had sold out of their first run of replica shirts.”More importantly it’s what this does for the game in Scotland,” Mackay added. “Probably a week ago there’s a lot of people, particularly in Scotland, who didn’t know Scotland were in a World Cup. They certainly do now, because of what we’ve achieved.”

Trey Yesavage Admits to Doing the Most Relatable Thing on His Phone Before Game 5 Gem

The Blue Jays are headed back to Toronto with a 3-2 lead over the Dodgers in what has been an excellent World Series thus far. Game 5's hero was unexpected, too.

Rookie pitcher Trey Yesavage got the starting nod for the pivotal Game 5 on Wednesday night and was spectacular. The 22-year-old righty struck out 12 batters in seven innings to set a new World Series record and gave up only one run. The legendary outing led to a critical Blue Jays win and will go down in the history books no matter what happens next. On top of it all, the young pitcher had a funny and relatable admission after the game that gave fans everywhere a good laugh.

About an hour before his start, Yesavage was captured staring intently at his phone with headphones on during the Fox Sports pregame broadcast. The clip apparently made the rounds on social media as an example of how "locked in" Yesavage was before he dominated the Dodgers.

It turns out he saw that and admitted he was not actually locked in on anything. Instead, he was just scrolling TikTok and Instagram.

"I saw something on Instagram that someone took a video of me on my phone saying I was locked in," Yesavage said, via ESPN. "But I was just doomscrolling on TikTok and Instagram reels. I just keep it as chill as possible. I don't change anything I say to myself, but I'm also just here to go to work. I try not to think about anything."

In today's modern society, the blank stare Yesavage had on his face means he's either completely focused on something or he's just swiping through videos. In this instance, it was the latter.

Boy, did it work out. Yesavage came up huge for his team, an unlikely hero amidst the sea of extremely well-paid stars who dot both rosters in this Fall Classic. His work is probably done this season but he can scroll easy knowing he delivered.

Depth, variety give Lucknow Super Giants formidable first XI

A lack of bench strength, especially with the bat, could be a weakness over a long season

Sreshth Shah20-Mar-2022Potential first XI1 KL Rahul (capt), 2 Quinton de Kock (wk), 3 Manish Pandey, 4 Marcus Stoinis, 5 Deepak Hooda, 6 Krunal Pandya, 7 Jason Holder, 8 K Gowtham, 9 Ravi Bishnoi, 10 Avesh Khan, 11 Dushmantha ChameeraAvailabilitySigned for INR 7.5 crore at the auction, England quick Mark Wood has been ruled out of the entire season with an elbow injury sustained in the West Indies. The team has named the Australian slower-ball specialist Andrew Tye as his replacement. Marcus Stoinis, Jason Holder and Kyle Mayers are also expected to be available only after the first week of the IPL due to their respective national commitments.BattingQuinton de Kock can be aggressive in the powerplay and can play the long innings too. But whether KL Rahul chooses to anchor or go all-out is the big question.Related

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Punjab Kings boast batting muscle but bowling lacks international experience

Delhi Capitals have solid first XI but player availability a concern

With Manish Pandey, who has gone a strike rate of 127.52 in the last three IPL seasons, likely to slot in at No. 3, Rahul could possibly be the second powerplay attacker alongside de Kock, leaving Pandey to hold one end up if an early wicket falls.In Stoinis and Deepak Hooda, Lucknow Super Giants have players who can attack from ball one, and a left-hand option in Krunal Pandya along with Holder to cap off the batting order gives Super Giants the flexibility to exploit any available match-up. A deep line-up could also allow the likes of Rahul and Pandey to go harder at the top than they did at their earlier franchises, which both suffered from a lack of depth.As the season progresses, and depending on how the team balances out, Stoinis could also open the batting – as he did with Delhi Capitals as a one-off, and has regularly done with Melbourne Stars in the Big Bash League.But that’s about it for the batting. Beyond the first-choice players, Super Giants lack solid back-up options other than Evin Lewis. He could be a like-for-like switch for de Kock since Rahul can keep wickets. The other choices are Mayers, who has T20 strike rate of 116 and is an unknown IPL quantity, and Manan Vohra, who generally bats at top of the order, an area where Super Giants are well-stocked.ESPNcricinfo LtdBowlingSuper Giants’ bowling options might make other teams envious. They have eight bowlers in their potential first XI. Avesh Khan and Dushmantha Chameera bring pace, Holder offers control and poses problems with his high release point, Stoinis bowls cutters that can be useful at the death, and there is a smorgasbord of spin options with wristspinner Ravi Bishnoi, offspinner K Gowtham, left-arm spinner Krunal and the part-time offbreaks of Hooda.Beyond the first XI, Indian quick Ankit Rajpoot is a like-for-like replacement for the Sri Lankan Chameera, in case Super Giants want to bring in an extra overseas batter like Lewis or Mayers. Tye’s pace variations, meanwhile, make him a useful option on slower pitches.Shahbaz Nadeem is another experienced left-arm spin option, while left-arm seamer Mohsin Khan from Uttar Pradesh, who has spent considerable time with Mumbai Indians, could offer something different. He has an impressive average of 19.33 and an economy rate of 7.08 in 26 T20 games.Ravi Bishnoi, who has now made his India debut, was the emerging player of the tournament in IPL 2020•BCCIYoung player to watch out forAt 21, wristspinner Bishnoi is the most exciting young prospect in the team, and one who has a realistic chance of being a regular in the XI. He was given a massive boost of confidence after being retained pre-auction for INR 4 crore, and is now part of India’s T20I squad too, and won the Player-of-the-Match award on international debut.Last season, he went for 25 runs or fewer – in four-over spells – in six of his seven outings for Punjab Kings, and his quick-arm mix of predominantly googlies with the odd legbreak thrown in makes him hard to put away. He attacks the right-handers’ stumps, and uses his wrong’un to make left-handers reach for the ball and take the leg side out of the equation.Bishnoi was the emerging player of the tournament in IPL 2020, his first season, and is a livewire on the field.Coaching staffAndy Flower (head coach), Vijay Dahiya (assistant coach), Gautam Gambhir (mentor) and Andy Bichel (bowling coach)Poll

Mar 25 The piece was updated after Andrew Tye was named as Mark Wood’s replacement.

Gillette Cup took Sussex captain's fancy – and delivered a maiden trophy

New competition appealed to Ted Dexter, whose raffish unorthodoxy reflected the atmosphere in Brighton on a lively Saturday evening

Paul Edwards11-Jun-2020OId Trafford, May 1-2, 1963
ScorecardHove, June 12, 1963
ScorecardLord’s, September 7, 1963
ScorecardSexual intercourse did not begin in 1963, as Philip Larkin well knew. That was partly his point in the poem “Annus Mirabilis.” However, a “new Knock-Out competition”, as Wisden primly described it, did get under way that summer and it pounded to a sweaty climax on the first Saturday in September, when Sussex beat Worcestershire by 14 runs at Lord’s. The final ended in twilight and there was heavy drizzle falling when Bob Carter was run out for 2 with only ten balls left in the match. Carter’s team had needed just 169 in 65 overs but Tony Buss’s 3 for 39 in his 15-over allotment had removed both openers and shown how testing batting would continue to be on the damp pitch. Then the three late wickets taken by the callow 21-year-old fast bowler John Snow had appeared decisive before Roy Booth’s hitting forced Ted Dexter, the Sussex captain, to put all his men on the boundary. As revolutions go, it might not seem much to write home about, but that is often the way of it in England. We don’t storm Bastilles; we start a new cricket competition with odd rules and celebrate with a cup of Earl Grey.Some readers might query how far-reaching the changes were. What was this malarkey about 65 overs, all the men on the boundary and a 15-over allotment? And surely not even Psalm 55’s raging wind and tempest could prevent a side overhauling 168 at only 2.6 runs an over. The answer, of course, is that you had to watch cricket nearly 60 years ago to see how difficult it was for players who had only known three-day championship cricket to adapt to the new competition. One or two counties barely tried; they thought the thing beneath their professional dignity.Sussex succeeded and won their first ever trophy because the whole affair appealed to Dexter, whose raffish unorthodoxy rather reflected the atmosphere in Brighton on a lively Saturday evening. The Sussex skipper thought about the tactics that might be required in a match where 170 for 9 would always beat 165 for 3 and instructed his attack accordingly, although even those directives sound quaint today: “As for the bowlers I asked nothing more of them than to bowl every ball to hit the stumps. Wide on the off side was a no-no. Short of a length with the ball going over the top was a no-no. Up and straight allowed me to set fielders according to the strengths and weaknesses of all the different batsmen.”Snow, who was playing his first limited-overs match, followed those instructions fairly precisely, castling both Doug Slade and Norman Gifford as the evening faded into murk. But the vital wicket of Tom Graveney had been taken much earlier when Ron Headley had been tied down by Alan Oakman’s off-spin and a frustrated Graveney had holed out to Dexter at long-on off Oakman, who finished the match with figures of 1 for 17 from 13 overs. Yes, it was a foreign country.Yet if much of this looks very strange and staid when viewed from our momentary modernity, one-day, knock-out cricket was plainly an appealing novelty to many of the game’s supporters in 1963. A brief glance at the structure of the previous season suggests why this was so. In 1962 Yorkshire won the County Championship and were one of eight counties to play 32 three-day matches; the other nine played 28 and the title was decided on average points per game. There were no other competitions of any note at all in the English summer, nor had there ever been. However, Yorkshire also played first-class matches against MCC (twice), the ancient universities and the Pakistan tourists, whose own 35-match programme had begun at Arundel on April 28 and ended in Sunderland on September 10, three weeks after the end of the final Test at The Oval.ALSO READ: Surridge’s Surrey claim the hat-trick during dominant 1950sNow much of this cricket was of very high quality and many games were well-attended, but they did not pay the bills. Since this was England a series of committees had been set up over the previous decade to investigate the situation and by the early 1960s it was discovered that the counties’ expenditure was exceeding normal cricket income by an average of £120,000 a year. The new competition was, in part, an attempt to deal with this shortfall by staging games that could be finished in a day and in which the number of runs scored was the sole determinant of victory. What was more, the competition was to be sponsored by Gillette, whose name the 1964 Wisden could not steel itself to print. The shaving company underwrote the competition with £6,500, with £50 (about £900 now) going to the man of the match in each game and £1889 (£33,500) to the winners. But even in the year following the abolition of the distinction between amateurs and professionals, much of the old authority remained. Earlier in the week of the final the Sussex players had been told by the Club secretary, Lt. Col. George Grimston, that he would be trousering the prize money as the county needed the cash. In fairness, it probably did. Dexter’s men received a bonus in their salary instead.The revolution appeared a relatively modest affair. The Gillette Cup would comprise only 16 matches, with a preliminary game reducing the 17 first-class counties by one and a straight knockout format being followed thereafter. Peter Marner became the competition’s first centurion and followed his 121 against Leicestershire with 3 for 49 to win the man-of-the-match award and a gold medal, which was presented to him by Frank Woolley on the Old Trafford outfield. Marner may have appreciated the fifty quid even more; this was still an era in which some professional cricketers travelled to their work by public transport.Most of those 16 matches in 1963 resulted in relatively comfortable victories. Eleven were won by the side batting first and only three of those by a margin of fewer than 20 runs. It was hardly surprising that teams had yet to master the intricacies of an over-limit run-chase. On the other hand, setting a target was proved tricky as well. The biggest total chased down was the 159 Yorkshire overhauled in 55 overs to beat Nottinghamshire in the first round at Acklam Park, Middlesbrough. Fred Trueman made 21 batting at No. 4 in that game but Brian Close forsook such off-the-wall antics when he took his side to Hove for the quarter-final, a game which encapsulated all that was vibrant and successful about the new format.

“While talking to the Lancashire players earlier in the season about how they would approach the game, they said that first of all they would go to Raymond’s Revue Bar in Soho”Alan Oakman

There were 15,000 people crammed into the County Ground when Close chose to field first, his decision perhaps influenced by the sea-mists which drifted in throughout the day. Jim Parks, though, saw matters with perfect clarity and made 90 in his side’s 292 all out in 64 overs. Trueman finished with none for 40 from 14 and Tony Nicholson, one of the most highly regarded seamers on the circuit, went for 84 runs in 15 overs, in one of which Parks twice smacked him over the covers for six. The new format was proving a midwife to innovation.But Yorkshire were not out of it. Struggling at one stage on 100 for 5, they were rescued by Geoff Boycott, who batted superbly for 71 before being run out when trying to keep the strike. Some might think both the innings and its ending in Boycott’s first List A game offered a pithy portent of his whole career but Ian Thomson’s hard, flat throw from third man was a tiny sign of the improvement in fielding that one-day cricket would bring. Sussex got home by 22 runs and there is a photograph of Parks being presented with his medal by Alec Bedser. Another wave of mist is covering the ground.So to Lord’s and the first of the September occasions that were to become a poignant highlight of every summer. For those watching on television, the Gillette Final always marked the end of summer’s lease. In later years some teams would prepare for such occasions by getting an early night but such strictures were not in place in 1963.”While talking to the Lancashire players earlier in the season about how they would approach the game, they said that first of all they would go to Raymond’s Revue Bar in Soho,” recalled Oakman. “Don Bates, Ken Suttle and I agreed…and we were watching the show when a half-naked dancer walked up the aisle with a large snake hanging round her neck. She stopped by Don Bates and asked if he would like to stroke it. He nearly passed out.”Next morning there were 25,000 spectators in Lord’s, one of them the nine-year-old future Sussex captain, Johnny Barclay. The banners and favours appalled some MCC members but when the Daily Mirror’s chief sports writer, Peter Wilson reported on the match he marvelled that “Lord’s, the temple of tradition” could have become “a reasonable replica of Wembley…a sell-out with rosettes, singing, cheers, jeers and counter-cheers. This triumphant sporting experiment… may not have been cricket to the purists but by golly it was just the stuff the doctor ordered.”Whatever some thought, there was no going back. Perhaps the patient became a trifle addicted to their medicine but by 1972 there was another one-day competition, the Benson and Hedges Cup, and the 40-over John Player Sunday League. Captains learned the value of spinners, fielding regulations prevented blanket defence of boundaries, the revolution gathered pace. And it may be that the wheel is still in spin but those who seek to saturate cricket with such matches might remember Dexter’s observation in 2013 that Sussex’s Gillette Cup victories in 1963 and 1964 “were as nothing compared to the three Championship wins in five years”. Perhaps Ted was being a shade hard on himself but it’s important to note the trophies the players prize most highly. “Sweet moderation / Heart of this nation” observes Billy Bragg in one of his finest songs. Damn right. Match from the Day

King, Ainsworth combine in Scorchers' thrilling win; Knight-Bates pair maintain Thunder's strong start

Perth Scorchers 108 (Hinkley 32, King 23, Capsey 5-25) beat Melbourne Renegades 106 for 8 (Dottin 40, King 3-23, Ainsworth 2-18, Devine 2-22) by two runsAlana King’s all-round contributions proved decisive in a low-scoring thriller at the WACA as hosts Perth Scorchers completed a two-run win over Melbourne Renegades while defending only 108.King first scored a crucial 15-ball 23 for the Scorchers from No. 8 amid a batting collapse triggered by the Renegades pair of Milly Illingworth and Hayley Matthews (2 for 15 apiece). Alice Capsey then ran through the tail to claim her career-best figures of 5 for 25 while skittling the Scorchers for 108.However, the Renegades’ batting failed to complement their bowling effort, losing wickets through their innings. Needing 15 runs off the last three overs – 11 off two overs and eight off the final six balls – they failed to hit a single boundary and finished their innings on 106 for 8.The pressure was put on Renegades early in the chase by seamer Chloe Ainsworth when she dismissed opener Courtney Webb and first-down Capsey for first-ball ducks in the first over. Sophie Devine and King then accounted for Naomi Stalenberg and Matthews respectively, and when Amy Edgar removed Georgia Wareham cheaply too, Renegades were 47 for 5 in the ninth over.Deandra Dottin counterattacked with a 27-ball 40 that included three fours and three sixes from No. 6 to lift the Renegades briefly, but King sent her back for the second of her three wickets. King also removed Illingworth in the 18th over to finish with 3 for 23.Tasked with defending 10 runs off the last two overs, Edgar and Ebony Hoskin closed out the game for the Scorchers, conceding only eight singles. Sarah Coyte, who finished unbeaten on a 31-ball 21, needed three for a tie or a boundary for a win off the final ball, but Hoskin kept the last delivery down to just one.Heather Knight played another vital hand•Getty Images

England captain Heather Knight cracked an unbeaten half-century and Sam Bates snared 4 for 25 to lead Sydney Thunder to a 19-run WBBL victory over Brisbane Heat at the WACA Ground.Knight, Phoebe Litchfield, and Chamari Athapaththu, all fired to lift the Thunder to a formidable 170 for 5. In reply, Charli Knott and Grace Harris threatened to pull off the run chase, but the Heat were eventually bowled out for 151 after Bates weaved her magic.After being sent in to bat, Thunder were 13 for 0 in the third over when Georgia Voll was dropped by Laura Harris on 2. Voll would go on to score 22, but more importantly she combined with Athapaththu for a quick-fire 52-run opening stand to give Thunder the perfect platform to launch.Athapaththu and Litchfield cracked seven boundaries apiece, and Knight went into overdrive later in the innings as Heat’s bowlers struggled to contain the star-studded battling line-up.Heat spinner Jess Jonassen was superb with 3 for 22 from her four overs, and Shikha Pandey was economical. But the rest of the bowlers struggled, with Grace Parsons and Nadine de Klerk copping the brunt of the punishment.Heat needed to make a fast start to their run chase, and opener Grace Harris received three slices of luck during her blistering knock. She was on 5 when she gloved a spinning Bates delivery through to the keeper. The appeal was turned down, and Thunder decided not to review it, but replays showed it clearly came off her glove. Harris was then dropped on 26 and 32, but was eventually out when she was caught in the deep from a Taneale Peschel full toss.Knott cracked six fours and a six to notch her maiden WBBL half-century and give Heat a chance, but their victory hopes came crumbling down when she was bowled by Bates who now has 12 wickets from four games in what has been a sizzling start to the season for the 28-year-old.”I don’t know if there’s a real secret behind [my form]. It’s nice to be contributing finally,” Bates told . “I had a pretty ordinary season last year, so I reflected quite a bit on that. I changed some little things and they’re paying off, which is nice.”

'You don't know the half' – Aston Villa star Tyrone Mings shares pointed message as academy product Jacob Ramsey completes £44m Newcastle transfer

Aston Villa stars Tyrone Mings and John McGinn have spoken out following Jacob Ramsey’s £44 million ($60m) move to Newcastle United, with both players making emotional statements about the homegrown midfielder’s departure. The transfer was undertaken as the Villans struggle with Profit and Sustainability Regulations (PSR) and the move sparked strong reactions inside the dressing room.

Ramsey joins Newcastle in £44m move from VillaMings and McGinn share emotional statements on exitVilla forced into sale amid PSR compliance pressuresFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Ramsey has completed a £44m transfer from Aston Villa to Newcastle after coming through the youth system and making 176 appearances for the Midlands side. The 24-year-old midfielder was sold as part of the Villans’ push to comply with PSR, with the deal representing pure profit due to his academy status. Ramsey’s departure marks one of the most high-profile sales in recent years for Villa. However, both Mings and McGinn are unhappy with the state of football.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportWHAT MINGS AND MCGINN SAID

Tyrone Mings urged supporters not to criticise Ramsey, writing on Instagram: "Don't wanna hear any bad words or anything negative on his name. You don't know the half (of it). Till the bitter end lil bro. Go smash it."

Captain John McGinn also paid tribute, adding: "Always humble, respectful and willing to learn. It’s been a privilege to share the dressing room with you and enjoy some special moments together on the pitch. A sad day losing a top player and person and one of our own, but it seems to be the way football is set up these days."

THE BIGGER PICTURE

Aston Villa’s sale of Ramsey highlights the increasing impact of financial regulations on Premier League clubs. The midfielder was an important part of Unai Emery’s squad but was moved on as Villa balance their books following UEFA fines for overspending. With his departure, the Villans must now adapt without one of their most talented academy graduates.

Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT FOR RAMSEY?

Ramsey will look to establish himself in Eddie Howe’s Newcastle midfield as the Magpies push for Champions League qualification yet again. Meanwhile, Villa will continue to focus on squad stability and financial compliance as the transfer window progresses. Supporters will be watching closely to see how Emery reshapes his side after the loss of a key player.

How to Watch the FIFA Club World Cup for Free

The 2025 FIFA Club World Cup is now upon us, with the new-look format scheduled to get underway on June 14 and end on July 13.

There are 32 teams battling it out to win the first edition of the newly expanded competition, which will take place in the United States of America.

12 stadiums across 11 states will host games, with the likes of Lionel Messi, Kylian Mbappe, Erling Haaland and Jude Bellingham some of the top superstars fighting for a place in the final at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey.

  • Watch the FIFA Club World Cup live and on-demand here

What is the new FIFA Club World Cup?

Previously, the Club World Cup would take place mid-season and only be formed of up to seven sides, with Manchester City winning the most recent iteration at the end of 2023.

However, 32 teams have qualified in the new format, and the competition will only take place every four years, similar to the international FIFA World Cup.

In total, there will be 63 games over 29 days and there promises to be incredible match-ups, unmissable clashes and must watch football at the highest level.

Where can I watch the 2025 Club World Cup?

One of the main questions fans will want to know is where to watch the 2025 Club World Cup. Well, you can watch the unmissable 2025 FIFA Club World Cup for free on DAZN – the global home of football.

DAZN has secured the exclusive broadcasting rights for the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 and will broadcast all of the matches live, available worldwide in 14 languages. Whether it be on a Smart TV, mobile, streaming stick, or games console, the DAZN app will provide the ultimate viewing experience.

Already a DAZN subscriber? Great, the Club World Cup will already be included as part of your membership. However, new customers can sign up for free using an email address, and will then be able to watch all the action.

  • FIFA Club World Cup

    Current Champions

    Manchester City

    Founded

    2000

    Most Championships

    Real Madrid (5)

  • DAZN

    Watch all FIFA Club World Cup games free on DAZN. The biggest clubs and the best players in the world compete in the FIFA Club World Cup.

    Watch Every Game Live on DAZN

List of qualified teams for 2025 Club World Cup

32 of the best club teams around the world have qualified for the tournament. Europe have the most clubs with 12, spaces which were allocated based on Champions League performances since 2020/21.

There are six teams from South America, four clubs each from Asia, Africa and North America, one from Oceania and Inter Miami representing the USA as host nation.

Europe

  • Manchester City
  • Real Madrid
  • Chelsea
  • Bayern Munich
  • Paris Saint-Germain
  • Inter Milan
  • FC Porto
  • Benfica
  • Borussia Dortmund
  • Juventus
  • Red Bull Salzburg
  • Atletico Madrid

Africa

  • Al Ahly
  • Wydad
  • Esperance de Tunis
  • Mamelodi Sundowns

Asia

  • Al Hilal
  • Urawa Red Diamonds
  • Al Ain
  • Ulsan HD

North America

  • Monterrey
  • Seattle Sounders
  • Pachuca
  • Inter Miami
  • Los Angeles FC

Oceania

  • Auckland City

South America

  • Palmeiras
  • Flamengo
  • Fluminense
  • River Plate
  • Boca Juniors
  • Botafogo

Club World Cup groups and format

In total, there are eight groups of four teams in the Club World Cup, with each team playing three group games.

The top two teams in each group will qualify to the last 16, where the tournament will enter the knockout rounds. Quarter-finals, semi-finals and the final will follow, but there is no third/fourth play-off game at the Club World Cup.

The quarter-finals will take place across July 4 and 5 with the two semi-finals on July 8 and 9. The tournament will end with a spectacular showpiece final on Sunday July 13, featuring a half-time show by J Balvin, Doja Cat and Tems.

FIFA Club World Cup Groups

Group

Teams

A

Palmeiras, FC Porto, Al Ahly, Inter Miami

B

Paris St-Germain, Atletico Madrid, Botafogo, Seattle Sounders

C

Bayern Munich, Auckland City, Boca Juniors, Benfica

D

Flamengo, Esperance de Tunis, Chelsea, Los Angeles FC

E

River Plate, Urawa Red Diamonds, Monterrey, Inter Milan

F

Fluminense, Borussia Dortmund, Ulsan, Mamelodi Sundowns

G

Manchester City, Wydad, Al Ain, Juventus

H

Real Madrid, Al Hilal, Pachuca, RB Salzburg

West Ham in pole position to sign midfielder who won 120 duels in 2024/25

West Ham United are on the hunt for arrivals and now find themselves in pole position to sign a talented midfielder from the continent, according to a report.

West Ham look for improvement ahead of next season

There are a lot of mitigating factors behind the Hammers’ poor campaign last time out, and James Ward-Prowse believes West Ham need to reflect ahead of the new season to ensure there is no repeat scenario next time out.

He stated: “We know it’s not been anywhere near the level that we know we can produce. In the years gone by, the club’s been used to European triumphs and the campaigns they’ve had.

“So for us not to be able to do that or deliver that again is disappointing. I’m sure we’ll have a period of reflection over the summer to look at what we can improve for next season.”

Inevitably, signings will be necessary for Graham Potter and company to navigate another full-on Premier League campaign, so who have the Hammers got their eye on with the window now well underway?

AC Milan midfielder Yunus Musah is said to be a West Ham target despite interest from Serie A champions Napoli amid reports that they have cooled their admiration for the United States international.

He'd perfectly replace Kudus: West Ham submit bid for £17m "creative force"

Kudus seems set to leave West Ham United this summer.

ByJoe Nuttall Jun 25, 2025

Plenty of work is there to be done as the Irons’ hierarchy look to bring the good times back to the London Stadium. However, rebuilds require patience, so it remains to be seen how Potter opts to reshape his side.

Stepping into the market, West Ham are now reportedly in pole position to sign a powerful midfielder who is attracting plenty of interest from elsewhere.

Tavolieri: West Ham in pole position to sign Raphael Onyedika

According to journalist Sacha Tavolieri, West Ham are in pole position to sign Club Brugge midfielder Raphael Onyedika despite rival interest from Everton in the Nigeria international.

The Jupiler Pro League outfit want around £25.5 million before agreeing to any sale, and it is said that the Hammers have the most concrete attachment to the 24-year-old at this point.

Operating as a protector of the back four, Onyedika registered two goals and two assists in 52 appearances across all competitions last term, and he also won no fewer than 120 duels on league duty.

Freshening up the engine room will be a key priority for Potter this summer and the man in question certainly fits the bill as someone who could help to elevate the Hammers should they manage to push a deal over the line.

الاتحاد الدولي لليد يكشف كيف تفوقت مصر على إسبانيا في نصف نهائي كأس العالم تحت 17 عامًا

أشاد موقع الاتحاد الدولي لكرة اليد بفوز منتخب مصر الدراماتيكي في الدور نصف النهائي على حساب منتخب إسبانيا بنتيجة 31-28 ليصعد إلى نهائي كأس العالم لكرة اليد تحت 17 عاماً لعام 2025.

وكان منتخب مصر ونظيره الإسباني قد تزعما مجموعتيهما، وتنافسا على مكان في نهائي البطولة، ليضرب الفائز موعداً مع منتخب ألمانيا بالفعل.

وكتب موقع الاتحاد الدولي لكرة القدم عبر موقعه الرسمي: “أظهر منتخب إسبانيا أفضليته على حساب منتخب مصر في الدور التمهيدي، حيث تفوق عليه بـ42 هدفاً لكن المنتخب الوطني أظهر قدرته على صناعة المفاجأة وتفوق في أول 30 دقيقة” .

وأضاف أيضاً: “بدأ منتخب مصر المباراة بشكل أفضل، حيث منع إسبانيا من التسجيل في أول أربع دقائق وثلاث ثواني، وامتلك المنتخب الأوروبي حارس مرمى رائع وهو ألفارو كيسادا الذي قدم شوطا أول رائعا بنسبة تصديات بلغت 43%”.

أقرأ أيضاً..منتخب مصر يهزم إسبانيا وتأهل إلى نهائي كأس العالم لكرة اليد تحت 17 عامًا

وحول حارس منتخب إسبانيا ذكر موقع الاتحاد: “أنقذ كيسادا أربع فرص متتالية وغطى على افتقار منتخب اللاروخا للكفاءة الهجومية التي توقفت عند 39% في الشوط الأول، وارتكبت مصر بعض الأخطاء حيث بلغت كفاءتها الهجومية 36% وقد استحوذ المنتخب الوطني على الكرة لفترة أطول”.

وواصل أيضاً: “أهدر الظهير الأيمن لمنتخب مصر يوسف أحمد ست تسديدات من أصل سبعة في الشوط الأول، وسجل عبد الرحمن الجمل ومؤمن بكير سبعة أهداف معاً، بينما كان لمنتخب إسبانيا سبعة هدافين مختلفين، وسجل بابلو سانشيز خمسة أهداف وقد تعادل الفريقان بعد 30 دقيقة بنتيجة 12:12”.

وتابع موقع الاتحاد الدولي: “في الشوط الثاني تغير مجرى المباراة ولم ينجح حارس مرمى منتخب إسبانيا في التصدي لأي فرصة وازدادت ثقة مصر، في الوقت الذي بدأ فيه الظهير الأيمن أحمد بالتسجيل فقد أضاف بكير هدفين آخرين لتفتتح تقدمها بنتيجة 20:18”.

وسلط موقع الاتحاد الدولى على نقطة تحول أخرى في المباراة: “جاءت نقطة تحول أخرى لإسبانيا استمرت لأكثر من سبع دقائق، وقد استغلتها مصر على أكمل وجه وتعرض مدافع إسبانيا إيريك أنسلمو للطرد مباشرة بسبب ارتكابه خطأ قوي وهو ما أعاق زملاءه في الدفاع أيضاً.

وأشاد موقع الاتحاد بأداء منتخب مصر: المنتخب المصري لعب هذه المباراة بإتقان، وقاموا بتغطية المساحات بشكل ممتاز وشهدت المباراة تألق حارس المرمى عبد الملك مبروك حيث تصدى 10 تصديات بنسبة نجاح تصل إلى 27%، وقام ببعض التصديات في الوقت المناسب مما عزز فرص مصر في التأهل للنهائي” .

وأكد موقع الاتحاد الدولي: “حقق منتخب مصر الفوز بنتيجة رائعة بعد أن فات الآوان لمنتخب إسبانيا، وجاء أداء المنتخب الوطني بشكل متكامل ومثالي وناضج وجاء الفوز بنتيجة 31:28 ليكون الرابع على التوالي” .

وسيلتقي منتخب مصر مع منتخب ألمانيا في النهائي وهو الثالث لها في بطولة العالم بعد نهائي بطولة العالم للشباب عام 1993 ونهائي بطولة العالم للشباب عام 2019.

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