PCB to launch 'connection camp' in a bid to rebrand cricket in Pakistan

The board has compared it to the kind of review England undertook in 2015 after their group stage exit at the ODI World Cup that year

Danyal Rasool09-Sep-2024The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) is set to undertake a wholesale review of all aspects of international and domestic cricket in a bid to “restore the pride and excellence” of Pakistan cricket.For the review, the opening form of which will be a meeting called a “connection camp”, the board will invite both head coaches Gary Kirsten and Jason Gillespie to Lahore, with chairman Mohsin Naqvi also in attendance. Several centrally contracted cricketers, including both international captains Shan Masood and Babar Azam, will attend the camp, which will be held on September 23. The goals of the camp involve a rebrand of the kind of cricket Pakistan play across formats right down to grassroots levels, with a view to reverse the steady decline in international performances from the Pakistan national side across formats of late.The formation of the camp is the idea of the PCB chairman himself. It is not understood to be designed around specific, short-term concerns such as any proposed changes to the men’s national captaincy in either format, or the squad selection for any upcoming series. Its scale, instead, is a rather more ambitious review. Privately, PCB officials have compared it to the kind of review England undertook in 2015 following their group stage exit at the ODI World Cup that year. Held as the gold standard for the speed at which the cultural reset was achieved, England went on to become the number one ranked white-ball side, and won the 2019 ODI World Cup and the 2022 T20 World Cup.Related

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The specifics around how they achieve that are somewhat less clear, but Naqvi believes the connection camp is the first step towards reversing the course of the national side. The PCB feels it needs the camp to set out a unified vision and shared purpose, and to understand how it is perceived by fellow cricketing nations, as well as its own fans.It is not surprising to see why the comparison with the England review appeals to the PCB. Its success was achieved at great speed, with a series against New Zealand immediately following that disastrous World Cup demonstrating how quickly a tide could be turned.One significant challenge is the quality of talent Pakistan can draw from. After their cultural reset, England were able to draw from a pool that has come to be seen as their white-ball golden generation, while just last month, Naqvi acknowledged Pakistan’s reserves of talent in domestic cricket were worryingly low, dampening the prospect of a quick reversal.The PCB has also gone all in on the domestic one-day competition, rebranded as the Champions One-Day Cup. It is set to be held in Faisalabad from September 12 to 29, a week before the start of Pakistan’s Test series against England, with the connection camp taking place on a rest day during the tournament. Naqvi expressed confidence this tournament would be able to begin restocking the domestic player pool, and with the connection camp, he believes he has the opportunity to reshape the board’s vision.There is, however, recognition that any such discussion, camp or meeting will be met with huge scepticism from the fans. The PCB is understood to accept there is a massive gulf of trust between the board and the game’s followers, who do not believe Pakistan cricket is heading in the right direction, or indeed that the right people are running it. While the camp looks to begin bridging that trust, the only tangible way to do that will involve better results on the field in international cricket.

Farhan Ahmed, Rehan's younger brother, signs for Nottinghamshire aged 16

Farhan Ahmed, the England Under-19 offspinner and younger brother of Rehan Ahmed, has signed a three-and-a-half year deal with Nottinghamshire, his first senior contract with the county.Farhan, 16, is the second Academy product to sign permanent terms with the club in recent months, after Freddie McCann joined the playing staff in November, and comes after a run of appearances for the club’s Second XI, in between his academic studies, over the past two seasons.”There is no doubt that this is an exciting time for Farhan and the club,” Peter Moores, Nottinghamshire’s head coach, said. “He is a player with bags of talent and a high ceiling in the game. He’s a grounded individual, though, and he knows the work starts now for him to fulfil that potential in the years ahead.”He’s focused on forging his own path in the game, and he’ll have our full support as he begins to do that.”Like his elder brother Rehan – who was England’s youngest Test debutant, aged 18 years and 126 days, when he played at Karachi in December 2022 – Farhan was just 15 when he featured in England’s Under-19 World Cup campaign in South Africa in January.”I’m obviously very happy and excited to have signed this contract – it is something I’ve been working towards since I started playing cricket,” Farhan said. “For it to be for my home county is a dream come true, too. The history of the club is clear, and to be part of it myself is something I am looking forward to.”I’ve seen other players make that step from the Academy onto the pro staff then play first-team cricket, which gives me confidence that I can do the same in the years ahead.”Equally, I don’t want to look too far ahead. I’ll do my best to take every chance I’m given and keep improving as a player in all aspects, while I hope I can help put Nottinghamshire in winning positions when I get the opportunities.”Farhan joined Nottinghamshore’s academy in 2022, having taken 86 wickets in 57 games for the county’s Under-18s.”Farhan has been with us for seven years now, and his talent has been obvious across that time,” Matt Wood, the Elite Pathway Manager, said. “He is a clever bowler – he’s very mature in that sense – and his trajectory over the last couple of years has been exceptional.”It’ll be another step up for him to play regularly with the senior squad, but his focus and attitude is second to none, and that’ll help him in that transition.”

Pereira already has a "superb" Cunha replacement at Wolves

Will Wolverhampton Wanderers require a major summer rebuild?

Wolves were in the relegation zone when Vítor Pereira was appointed in December, but he managed to win ten of his 22 Premier League fixtures in charge, including leading the club to their first six-match winning streak in the top division since October 1970.

This saw the Old Gold finish 16th, 17 points clear of the drop zone, but, with many of their key assets coveted by other clubs, it is set to be a busy summer at Molineux.

That has all started with Matheus Cunha’s departure.

Why Matheus Cunha was a wanted man

On Sunday afternoon, it was officially announced that Cunha had joined Manchester United, the Red Devils paying his reported £62.5m release clause.

This is obviously a blow for Wolves because, as Matt Furniss of Opta’s the Analyst outlines, he has been Wolves’ ‘most influential player’ across the last two seasons, describing Cunha as a ‘revelation’ and praising his consistent ability to over-perform his xG statistics.

Meantime, Steve Madeley of the Athletic notes that the Brazilian has undoubtedly been ‘Wolves’ player of the season’, adding that very rarely is an entire campaign linked ‘so intrinsically to one player’, with Cunha always the main character, ‘for better and worse’.

Since making him move from Atlético Madrid permanent for £44m two summers ago, Cunha has scored 31 goals in 72 appearances for the club, numbers that are going to be difficult for anyone to replicate.

However, is a current member of the Wolverhampton Wanderers squad primed and ready to become the main man?

Wolves' unsung hero ready to step-up after Cunha

When Wolves signed Jørgen Strand Larsen last summer from Celta Vigo, initially on loan but with a £23m obligation to buy, there was very little fanfare, it is fair to say.

Thus, the Norwegian striker certainly surpassed all expectations, scoring 14 Premier League goals, meaning only nine players across the entire division managed more.

The Premier League’s all-time record goalscorer Alan Shearer praised Strand Larsen’s performance during a vital 2-1 victory at Ipswich in April, saying “his hold-up play was excellent… his touch and his control were superb”, adding “I actually think they’ve looked a better team” without Cunha during his four-match suspension.

Meantime, manager Pereira described his form as “fantastic”, adding “he helped the team” a lot.

Nevertheless, the key question remains: does Strand Larsen have the quality to be Wolves’ main man for goals now that Cunha has departed?

Well, let’s compare the duo in an attempt to answer this question.

Appearances

35

33

Minutes

2,603

2,603

Goals

14

15

Assists

4

6

Shots

54

110

Shots on target %

61.1%

40%

Goals – xG

+3.7

+6.4

Big chances missed

13

2

Big chances created

6

13

Shot-creating actions

42

132

Goal-creating actions

6

16

Aerial duels won

67

13

Touches per 90

26

54

% of touches in opposition box

15%

8%

As the table outlines, Cunha’s statistics are largely more impressive, which shouldn’t be too surprising, given that he’s the one who has just earned a big-money move to Manchester United.

However, what the table also crystallises is the fact that they are very different types of centre-forward.

Ryan Benson of Opta’s the Analyst labelled Strand Larsen a ‘fox in the box’, documenting how he is a classic target man whose ‘presence alone keeps centre-backs occupied’, an assertion that is supported by the data, with 15% of his touches coming in the opposition penalty area, nearly double the ratio of Cunha.

While the Brazilian ranked second in the Premier League this season for non-penalty goals – xG, his teammate was not too far behind, sat seventh for the same metric.

Strand Larsen also ranked sixth for aerial duels won amongst strikers, albeit his big chances missed tally of 13 leaves room for improvement.

Nevertheless, still only 25 years old, the Norwegian has all the attributes to be a successful centre-forward in this league, so is well-equipped to fill the massive void vacated by the outgoing Cunha.

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Rangers: 49ers "dream" manager target is the "favourite" for Ibrox job

Rangers and the 49ers Enterprises’ “dream” manager target is now the “favourite” for the Ibrox job, according to a new update.

Rangers manager rumours as Ferguson vows to make club “better”

Barry Ferguson has been the man tasked with leading the Gers on an interim basis until the end of the season after Philippe Clement was dismissed back in February.

He has had some impressive wins away at Fenerbahce and Celtic, however, there have also been some disappointing Ibrox defeats in the Scottish Premiership to Motherwell and Hibernian.

Asked in recent weeks about taking the Rangers job on a permanent basis, Ferguson said he would “make my club a better club” if given the opportunity by the 49ers Enterprises.

“I enjoyed my role at Rangers before, and if that’s not going to be managing, then hopefully I’ll just go back to that and enjoy what I was doing. If I get the job, I will make my club a better club. If I don’t get the job I will still support the club.

“I know what this club needs. I want what’s best for Rangers Football Club. I got an opportunity I never thought I would get, and I’ve enjoyed every single second of it. Some of the results I’ve not enjoyed, they have hurt me. I enjoy the challenge of it, because it is a big challenge.

“I always will back myself. I might not be everybody’s cup of tea, but I know I can do the job alongside the staff that I’ve brought in, but we just need to wait and see.”

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However, the 49ers have a number of manager targets in mind, with Steven Gerrard, Marco Rose and Sean Dyche all heavily linked with moves to Glasgow.

Now, an update has emerged on one of the aforementioned trio regarding the Rangers job.

Steven Gerrard “favourite” to be next Rangers manger

According to Football Insider reporter Pete O’Rourke, Gerrard is now in pole position and the leading contender to take over at Rangers. The former Gers boss is “favourite” ahead of the likes of Rose to arrive in Glasgow this summer, with the 49ers making Gerrard their top target.

Nathan Patterson, Steven Gerrard

In fact, it was reported back in February that Gerrard was Rangers and the 49ers’ “dream appointment”, and the 44-year-old has been out of work since January after leaving Al-Ettifaq.

Should Gerrard return to Rangers, it will be a decision which former right-back Alan Hutton can get on board with. When recently asked if Gerrard coming back to Rangers would excite him, Hutton said: “Yeah, yeah, I think it does. “I mean, does a manager coming back for the second time, does it always work?

“Possibly not, but I think he knows the club, what it’s all about, what the fans are like, the expectation, he knows everything. He’s won the league there, and that’s the be-all and end-all, so he knows how to get it done.”

Games

192

Wins

124

Draws

41

Losses

27

Players used

65

Titles

1

A video of Gerrard declaring his love for Rangers has also gone viral recently, and by the looks of things, a return to Ibrox ahead of the 2025/26 season is well and truly on the cards.

Romano: Ipswich Town eyeing move to sign "fast" new Liam Delap replacement

Ipswich Town have their eyes on a “fast” new forward to replace Liam Delap, according to transfer expert Fabrizio Romano.

Ipswich Town could lose Delap for £30m if relegated

The Tractor Boys suffered a damaging Premier League defeat last time out to relegation rivals Wolves at Portman Road, a result that leaves them 12 points from safety.

Delap was once again on the scoresheet, netting his 12th top-flight goal of the campaign, and he has been a real shining light under Kieran McKenna after signing from Manchester City last summer.

Chelsea vs Ipswich

April 13

Ipswich vs Arsenal

April 20

Newcastle vs Ipswich

April 26

Everton vs Ipswich

May 3

Ipswich vs Brentford

May 10

Leicester vs Ipswich

May 18

Ipswich vs West Ham

May 25

However, with Ipswich on course for an immediate return to the Championship, Delap could remain in the Premier League with a number of clubs keen on his services.

He has a release clause of £40m in his current Ipswich contract, however, that will drop to just £30m should the Tractor Boys go down.

Therefore, Ipswich may soon be on the search for an attacking addition to replace Delap, and there have been claims that Hearts captain Lawrence Shankland could be that man. Now, Romano has named a new potential target ahead of the 2025/26 season.

Ipswich Town eyeing move for Sheffield United forward Ryan One

According to Romano, Ipswich Town have been keeping an eye on Sheffield United forward Ryan One this season, with the teenager on the club’s shortlist to replace Delap.

“Understand Ipswich Town have been monitoring Ryan One’s performances at Sheffield United. He’s one of the names on the shortlist if Liam Delap leaves the club in the summer.”

One, who stands at 6ft 2, made the move to the Blades from Scottish side Hamilton back in 2023. The 18-year-old can play as a striker or as a winger and has represented Scotland at youth level. He’s made 11 appearances in the Championship and scored his first senior goal against Bristol City last year.

Sheffield United boss Chris Wilder praised the club for bringing One to Bramall Lane, saying earlier in the campaign: “It’s a great spot by (then-head of recruitment) Paul Mitchell and the board needs appreciating for spending a couple of quid on a real unknown player.

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“It’s important we nurture players through our academy. That’s something I’ve been delighted with, the young players coming in, the way we’ve changed our style as well.”

One has also previously been dubbed as “fast” and a “craftsman” by scout and academy coach Ioannis Kyrapoglou, and by the looks of things, a move to Portman Road could be one to keep an eye on.

Why Bumrah's IPL 2025 could be the greatest IPL for a bowler

In a year with the most 200-plus totals and the highest economy rate, Bumrah has towered over all other bowlers

Sidharth Monga31-May-20252:13

Moody: Ridiculous how far ahead of the rest Bumrah is

People on X have been calling him Josh Hazlegod since Ashes 2017-18, but it is Mumbai Indians (MI) that have got the closest to a religious experience. You can almost always neatly divide any given match of MI, any given campaign, or their entire IPL history into Before Bumrah and Anno Domini.In hindsight, MI made a mistake at the toss in the Eliminator against Gujarat Titans (GT), had to fight heavy dew and were being carted all around; GT’s run rate at the end of the 14th over was higher than the asking rate, and they had eight wickets in hand. And then appeared the lord, Jasprit Bumrah. The miracle of Bumrah created what might yet be the image of IPL 2025: Washington Sundar in a variation of the spreadeagle having failed to negate a yorker, and his stumps all over the place.In this year’s IPL, Bumrah missed the first four matches. MI won only one of those. Since Burmah’s introduction to this year’s IPL, they have won eight out of 11 matches. Basically, that is the same number of losses in the four matches Before Bumrah and 11 matches after his return.Related

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Overall, MI had zero titles in five years Before Bumrah; they are now gunning for the sixth one in 13 seasons with him in the side.There is no mistaking correlation with causation here. Even in a format with as limited agency for bowlers as T20, Bumrah creates a massive impact. The overall economy rate and average in all T20 matches involving Bumrah are 8.12 and 27.7, respectively. Bumrah, though, has gone at 6.86 and 20.09. When you are that much better than what the average bowler is doing in the same conditions, you can create a massive impact even in T20. Bumrah’s teams have to be really ordinary for him not to have an impact on the result. They usually aren’t.This year has been extra special for Bumrah. Bear in mind, it has been the year with the most 200-plus totals and the highest economy rate, and will end up with the most sixes. Among those who have bowled at least 25 balls in this IPL, Bumrah holds the best economy rate: 6.36 per over as against the overall 9.61. To turn in his most economical IPL ever in the big 2025 is phenomenal. Only three bowlers with as many or more wickets than him are still alive in the tournament.T20 is a format where batters hit you regardless, making it difficult to define what a good ball is, or to ascertain cause and effect. That’s not the case with Bumrah, though. Just one look at his pitch map, and you know why he has done well. A total of 43.41% of Bumrah’s deliveries have been full tosses, yorkers, or in the 2-4m bin. These can safely be assumed to be attempted yorkers. His unique action gives Bumrah the opposite of dip – the lift, which makes it difficult to line up any error in attempted yorkers.The miracle Bumrah created, what might yet be the image of this IPL•BCCITo have that higher margin for error because of a physical irregularity is one thing, but to hammer it home so beautifully is another. Bumrah’s full tosses have gone at just 7.42 runs per over (11.58 for all other fast bowlers), his yorkers at 5.49 per over (6.66 for others) and 2-4m deliveries at 5 per over (8.2 for others). Others have bowled only 22% of their deliveries in these three zones because if they miss their yorker, they get punished.The worst region to bowl in this year’s IPL has been 4-6m, which is the aggressive good length on a seaming pitch but just a slot ball on the T20 pancakes. Bumrah has veered into that zone only 7.75% of the time for 8.1 runs an over, while others have made the mistake nearly twice: 13.83% for an economy rate of 11.82.Bumrah has basically bowled defensive good lengths or hard lengths or attempted yorkers 36.82% of the time. This is incredible control over what you want to do. Hyperextension gives you certain benefits, but not this rate of execution and awareness of your game and the game in general.2:58

Cricinformed: Bumrah, the gold standard for a T20 bowler

Apart from the lift on his on-pace deliveries, Bumrah generates alarming dip and cut on the slower ones. He is streets ahead of the slower balls bowled by other bowlers. For others, only those slower balls that end up as yorkers have gone for under a-run-a-ball. For Bumrah, the whole band from 0-8m, plus 10-12m, is under a-run-a-ball. His slower balls in the slot have yielded a batting strike rate of just 50.Against his next opponents, Punjab Kings (PBKS), Bumrah bowled four overs for just 23 runs earlier in the season even as PBKS chased down 185. Against Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB), who are in the final, Bumrah went for just 29 runs in his four overs even as they scored a match-winning 221.So, for MI to win the title, they have to beat the two rare sides that have risen above Bumrah in the league stages. In both those matches, both Trent Boult and Mitchell Santner went either for or above ten runs an over. That tells you the scale of heavy lifting the batters have to do off the others.In a batters’ format, in a year that belongs to batters more than any other, Bumrah has two possible shots at making this arguably the greatest IPL for a bowler despite missing the first four matches. Still, there are many things that can go wrong: the toss, the dew, bad day for others around him, or a batting failure, but Bumrah is not likely to be one of them.

Is the top of the order still the best place to bat in the Hundred?

The white ball has swung prodigiously in the men’s competition, and openers have struggled to counter it

Matt Roller21-Aug-2023Ask any batter around the world where the best place to bat is in T20 cricket and they will give you the same answer: the top of the order. The field is up, with only two men outside the ring, and the new ball’s hardness means that you get better value for your shots than at any other stage of the innings.Yet something strange is happening. For years, openers have had the best records of any batting positions, leading the way in terms of both average and strike rate. But in the men’s Hundred, openers are struggling. They are scoring more slowly than No. 3s, and averaging nearly 10% less than them. It invites the question: what is going on?Openers themselves believe that the reason they are struggling is due to the ball. “The Hundred ball seems to be swinging a bit more than the T20 ball,” Alex Hales said last week. “The ball is slightly different,” explained Will Jacks. “We’ve found consistently that they swing more in the first few sets.”

Phil Salt believes that some “indifferent” pitches have contributed. “It’s been a theme in this competition,” he said, after ending a lean run with 86 off 32 balls against Trent Rockets. “[Due to] a combination of the wickets and the balls doing more at the top of the innings, there are not many top-order batters in the most runs column.”Salt is right: heading into the final round of group games, his opening partner Jos Buttler is the Hundred’s leading run-scorer, but only two of the top six – Jacks is the other – have opened the batting. Heinrich Klaasen, Colin Munro, Jordan Cox and Jamie Overton have predominantly batted in the second half of the innings, against an older ball.For a sense of how difficult this season has been for openers, consider the quality of the eight batters who have opened at least three times and have averaged less than 20: Jason Roy, Devon Conway, Ben Duckett, Hales, Will Smeed, Zak Crawley, Jonny Bairstow and Dawid Malan.What is so different about the ball? Players across the tournament have competing theories: some believe there is an extra layer of lacquer on it compared to the one used in the Blast, while others have suggested the seam is slightly narrower, or that the quarter-seam is stitched differently.Is the ball swinging more than usual in the Hundred?•Alex Davidson/Getty ImagesKookaburra, the ball’s manufacturer, told ESPNcricinfo that the specifications are “exactly the same” and that the only difference is the branding: the Hundred ball has a large ‘H’ logo imprinted on its side. But players are convinced there is a difference: Jacks wondered “whether it’s the bit where it actually has the ‘H’ on the ball that makes it swing more.”Perhaps atmospheric conditions have also played a role: the majority of men’s Hundred games are played under floodlights and much of the first two weeks of the competition were played under cloud cover and between rain showers. The weather has generally been cool, which is generally more conducive to lateral movement.Either way, the ball-tracking data is unequivocal: according to CricViz, there has been more swing in the Powerplay in the Hundred this season than in any other T20 tournament on record in England and Wales. On average, the ball has swung 1.02 degrees in the first 25 balls of Hundred innings this season, compared to 0.81 degrees in televised Blast games.Dan Worrall has been prolific with the new ball in the Hundred•ECB/Getty ImagesAnd Powerplay averages have dipped significantly for seam bowlers. In the Blast, seamers collectively averaged 31.00 runs per wicket in the Powerplay, with a combined economy rate of 8.63; in the Hundred, those numbers have dropped to 25.14 and 8.46 respectively, according to ESPNcricinfo’s data. Seamers are taking Powerplay wickets more regularly, and conceding fewer runs.Of course, Powerplays in the Hundred and the Blast are not one and the same. In the Blast, they last 36 balls (30% of the innings), of which any given bowler can bowl up to 18 balls (50% of the Powerplay); by the end of the Powerplay, it is rare for the ball still to be swinging. In the Hundred, Powerplays last 25 balls (25% of the innings), of which any given bowler can bowl up to 20 balls (80%).That means there is a more prominent role for specialist new-ball bowlers. Take Dan Worrall. Surrey’s depth meant that he was only used once in the Blast this year but he has been a revelation for London Spirit, bowling 86% of his balls in the Powerplay. He has taken nine Powerplay wickets, the most of any bowler, and on Sunday night became the first man to bowl 20 of the first 25 balls in a Hundred game.

The movement on offer with the new ball has pushed captains away from the once-popular trend of bowling spin in the Powerplay. In the Blast, 17% of balls in the Powerplay were bowled by spinners; in the Hundred, that figure is just below 10%. Seamers are getting on top, and staying there – and with a higher concentration of talent, there is no let-up.Batters can also get stuck on strike more easily in the Hundred, since end changes take place less frequently – every 10 balls, as opposed to every six – than in T20s. If a bowler gets on top of a batter, there is no respite: Salt and Crawley have both been dismissed for 2 off 11 this season after finding themselves unable to get off strike.So whether it is down to the ball, the weather, the format or random variation, one thing seems clear: in the Hundred, the top of the order is no longer the best place to bat.

Scott Boland: 'It means a lot to join a pretty small club'

Fourth Indigenous cricketer to play for Australia thought his Test chance might have gone

Alex Malcolm26-Dec-2021On November 6, Scott Boland sat in the Ponsford stand of an empty MCG with three journalists and was asked about what he thought of his Test prospects.”I know there are so many good fast bowlers around,” Boland said, “it’s going to be hard for me to get a crack but all I can do is just keep doing what I’ve been doing for the last few years. If the opportunity comes I’ll be really, really happy.”On Boxing Day, the 32-year-old Victorian received his Baggy Green from Josh Hazlewood and took his first Test wicket in front of 57,100 fans. It was a moment he admitted that he thought might have passed him by a few years ago.Related

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“Definitely,” Boland said after play on day one in Melbourne. “I probably felt two or three years ago I wasn’t bowling as well as I know I could.”Boland played 14 ODIs and three T20Is for Australia in 2016 but had dropped off the selectors’ radar.Following an excellent 2020-21 Sheffield Shield season, Australia’s chairman of selectors, George Bailey, spoke to Boland ahead of the 2021-22 season and told him was doing the right things. But even by the second Shield game in early November, Boland had not been given any indication he would be part of the extended Australia/Australia A squad that needed to quarantine in Queensland.But after taking 8 for 89 against New South Wales at the MCG Bailey rang again to confirm that Boland would be in the Australia A squad to face the England Lions and that he would be a chance to be called up to the Test squad for the MCG or SCG Tests given his superb record at the grounds.Then the stars aligned with Pat Cummins being ruled out of Adelaide, which led to both Jhye Richardson and Michael Neser playing while Boland was flown in on short notice to carry the drinks. On day five in Adelaide Boland was told he would be added to the Test squad for Melbourne and the rest is history.Boland’s debut is even more significant given he is just the second Indigenous male behind Jason Gillespie, and the fourth Indigenous Australian behind women’s representatives Faith Thomas and Ash Gardner, to play Test cricket for Australia.ESPNcricinfo Ltd”I’m pretty proud,” Boland said. “My family’s very proud as well. It means a lot to join a pretty small club and hopefully, it is just the start of something big for the Indigenous community in cricket. If I can be a role model for young Indigenous kids to want to play cricket, I think the Indigenous community in [Australian rules football] and rugby is so big, hopefully, one day, the Aboriginals in cricket can be just as big.”Cricket Australia’s Indigenous advisory chair Justin Mohamed believes Boland can become an inspiration for a community that has been badly under-represented in elite-level cricket in Australia.”It’s a magnificent day for Scott,” Mohamed said. “It’s a magnificent day for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders because he’s obviously representing himself and his family but also a representation of people who are so proud it could happen on such a significant day.”Aboriginal people, where they’ve excelled, they’ve gone to sports where they feel there’s an opportunity like [Australian rules football], rugby league, boxing. For some reason, that hasn’t been seen as a genuine opportunity in cricket and that’s what we’re hoping to change.”You hear of cricketers that have come through that came to the MCG and watched Dennis Lillee or Jeff Thompson who inspired them. You hear of athletes who said they saw Cathy Freeman in 2000 [at the Sydney Olympics] and that’s inspired them to be the next Olympian. Hopefully, there will be the six, eight, or 10-year-old watching something like this and saying ‘that’s what I want to do’.”

Mike Trout Agreed to Special Request From Fan Who Caught 400th Home Run Ball

On Saturday Mike Trout hit a big career milestone. The Angels superstar mashed his 400th career home run, an absolute monster of a 485-foot shot against the Rockies at Coors Field. It was a cool moment for the former MVP amidst a down season in Los Angeles— and he capped the night off with a very classy gesture for the fan who caught the ball.

Per ESPN the fan caught the home run ball while attending the game with his family. He was willing to give the milestone baseball back to the superstar, but had one special request: to play a game of catch. Trout obliged, playing catch with the fan on the field after the 3-0 Angels win over the Rockies.

A really cool gesture from Trout and undoubtedly an incredible special moment for the fan. Trout also gave the fan's family three signed baseballs and two signed bats.

"Once they get older and realize, that'll be an awesome memory for the dad to tell the kids, to experience that," Trout said of playing catch with the fan. "I know how I felt when I went to a ballgame with my dad."

The homer was Trout's 22nd of the year for the 70-85 Angels. He'll try to hit No. 401 against the Rockies on Sunday with first pitch set 3:10 p.m. ET.

India-South Africa Guwahati Test to have tea break before lunch

The BCCI took the decision due to the fast-fading light in north-east India

Nagraj Gollapudi11-Nov-2025Due to early sunrise and sunset in Guwahati, the second Test between India and South Africa will see players having tea first followed by lunch. Normally, tea prior to supper is a routine followed in day-night Tests, but the BCCI took the special decision for a day Test in Guwahati due to the fast fading light in north-east India.The Test, which starts from November 22, will be the first Test match in Guwahati, which recently hosted several matches in the women’s ODI World Cup. BCCI secretary Devajit Saikia, who is from Guwahati, confirmed the Test would start half an hour earlier than the norm for red-ball Tests in India, including the first Test in Kolkata, which will begin at 9.30am IST.The toss in Guwahati will be at 8.30am IST, with the first session between 9 and 11am, followed by a 20-minute tea break. Lunch will be between 1.20 and 2 pm with the final session scheduled till 4 PM, with an extra half-hour if needed.Related

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According to Saikia, having lunch at 11 after the end of first session would have been too early for players, and hence the BCCI decided to tweak the session timings.”It is a practical decision,” Saikia told ESPNcricinfo. “In winters, sunrise and sunset are very early here in north-east India. By 4pm the (day)light recedes and you can’t play much after. Because of that we have decided to start early, so play will start at 9 am.”The series starts Friday at Eden Gardens, where a special gold-plated coin, with insignia of BCCI and Cricket South Africa on each side, will be used at the toss.

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