Orioles to Hire Craig Albernaz As New Manager

The Orioles fired Brandon Hyde early into the 2025 MLB season after limping to a 15–28 start. Now, Baltimore is closing in on a deal for his replacement.

According to ESPN's Jeff Passan, the Orioles are set to name Craig Albernaz as their new manager. The 42-year-old is the associate manager for the Guardians, having been in that role since 2024. Previously, he was the bench coach for Cleveland. Before that, he'd served as a bullpen coach for the Giants and spent time managing in the Rays' minor-league system.

Albernaz was reportedly a sought-after managerial candidate for a number of MLB teams this offseason, but he'll ultimately head to Baltimore to take the reins of a team that is just two years removed from winning 101 games in the regular season.

Before starting his coaching career, Albernaz was a catcher in Tampa Bay's farm system from 2006 to 2013 and joined the Tigers' system in 2014. He never played in an MLB game.

Hyde had been the Orioles' manager since 2019. The team made the postseason twice in his tenure, but never won a single playoff game. He was ousted in May following the team's poor start and was replaced by interim manager Tony Mansolino. Mansolino was a candidate to be named the full-time manager, but it seems Baltimore's front office was more impressed by Albernaz.

Albernaz inherits an Orioles roster with plenty of young, exciting talent including former top prospects in Jackson Holliday, Adley Rutschman, Gunnar Henderson and Samuel Basallo.

مورينيو يرد بشكل قاطع على عودته لتدريب ريال مدريد

أوضح المدير الفني لفريق بنفيكا، جوزيه مورينيو، موقفه من إمكانية العودة إلى نادي ريال مدريد من جديد، لتولي مسؤولية تدريب الفريق الملكي، خلفًا لـ تشابي ألونسو حال الإطاحة به من منصبه الحالي.

وتحوم الشكوك بقوة حول مستقبل تشابي ألونسو رفقة ريال مدريد، حيث انتشرت تكهنات مؤخرًا حول إمكانية الإطاحة به من منصبه كمدرب للفريق، بسبب تذبذب مستوى الفريق تحت قيادته، وعلاقته المتوترة مع العديد من اللاعبين.

وظهرت تقارير صحفية تربط أكثر من اسم بإمكانية خلافة تشابي ألونسو في تدريب ريال مدريد، مثل يورجن كلوب وزين الدين زيدان، وكالعادة ظهر اسم جوزيه مورينيو في هذا السياق.

اقرأ أيضًا.. ريال مدريد يتلقى صدمة قوية قبل مباراة مانشستر سيتي في دوري أبطال أوروبا

وسُئل مدرب بنفيكا الحالي عن الشائعات التي تربطه بالعودة إلى ريال مدريد، حيث كان رده واضحًا للغاية، حيث نفى كل تلك الشائعات وأغلق باب العودة إلى البرنابيو.

وسُئل مورينيو من جانب صحفي عن ذلك الأمر، حيث أوضح البرتغالي بإيماءات، أنه لا يريد سماع أي شيء عن تلك الشائعات.

وقال مورينيو، في تصريحاته التي نشرتها صحيفة “موندو ديبورتيفو” الإسبانية: “ليس الأمر أنني بحاجة إلى إغلاقه، بل إنه مُغلق بالفعل، إنه أمر مغلق، أنت من فتحه”، اختتم ضاحكًا.

Zubeldía deve voltar a ter titulares em Vitória x São Paulo; veja possível escalação

MatériaMais Notícias

O São Paulo venceu o Águia de Marabá nesta semana utilizando um time reserva, mas o técnico Luis Zubeldía deve promover o retorno dos titulares à escalação, em jogo contra o Vitória. A partida vale pelo Campeonato Brasileiro e acontece neste domingo (5).

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➡️ Siga o Lance! São Paulo no WhatsApp e acompanhe todas as notícias do Tricolor

➡️ Oh Tricolor! Com R$100 no Lance! Betting, você ganha R$640 se o São Paulo vencer os dois tempos contra o Vitória

O Tricolor enfrenta o time nordestino buscando manter a invencibilidade de quatro jogos. Foram três vitórias e um empate no período, por Brasileirão, Libertadores e Copa do Brasil.

Após descansar os principais atletas, Zubeldía contará com a volta de jogadores como Rafael, Arboleda, Luciano e Calleri. Líderes do time, eles não jogaram contra o Águia de Marabá, na Copa do Brasil.

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Em relação aos desfalques, o treinador argentino segue sem Rafinha, Welington, Lucas Moura, Wellington Rato e Pablo Maia para a rodada. Todos estão lesionados. James Rodríguez também é incógnita.

Uma provável escalação do São Paulo para o jogo diante do Vitória tem: Rafael, Alan Franco, Arboleda e Ferraresi; Igor Vinícius, Alisson, Bobadilla e Michel Araújo; Luciano, André Silva e Calleri.

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A partida entre São Paulo e Vitória é válida pela quinta rodada do Brasileirão e acontece a partir das 16h, no Barradão, em Salvador (BA).

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MLB Playoff Odds for Every Team in the Wild Card Hunt (Yankees Fading Fast)

There are fewer than two months left in the 2025 MLB regular season, and the playoff races in the American and National Leagues are really starting to heat up. 

In the American League, five teams are within five games of the final wild card spot, while the No. 4 team – the Texas Rangers – is just a half-game out of the third spot. A lot could change in the next few months, especially with teams like the Minnesota Twins and Tampa Bay Rays selling at the deadline, but there likely will be a team – or two – that misses the playoffs that was expected to make it in.

In the National League, the top wild card teams (New York, Chicago and San Diego) seem pretty set in stone, but the Cincinnati Reds (three games back) are still within striking distance with plenty of games to go.

Here’s a look at the playoff odds for every team in the hunt, and a few storylines to watch when considering bets for these playoff markets. 

American League Playoff Odds

Division Leaders

  • Toronto Blue Jays: -2500
  • Detroit Tigers: -5000
  • Houston Astros: -1000

Toronto (19 games over .500), Detroit (17 games over .500), and Houston (14 games over .500) all appear to be locks to make the playoffs in the 2025 season.

Detroit has a seven-game cushion in the AL Central – the largest of these three division winners – which is why oddsmakers have it priced at -5000 to reach the playoffs for the second straight season.

It would be relatively surprising to see any of these teams fall out of the race, especially since they’d slot in pretty high in the wild card standings if a team were to overtake them in the division. 

Wild Card Race

  • Boston Red Sox: -450
  • Seattle Mariners: -360
  • New York Yankees: -330
  • Texas Rangers: +115
  • Cleveland Guardians: +320
  • Kansas City Royals: +650
  • Tampa Bay Rays: +950
  • Minnesota Twins: +1800
  • Los Angeles Angels: +2500
  • Baltimore Orioles: +5000

The AL wild card race is going to be extremely fun to watch down the stretch of the season.

Entering Wednesday’s action, the Texas Rangers could overtake the New York Yankees, who are just a half-game ahead of them in the standings. New York has played under .500 ball over the last few months, and despite some trade deadline moves, it is fading fast in this market.

Oddsmakers project the Yankees to be the team that is currently holding a spot to be the closest one to drop out (-330 to make the postseason). 

While Cleveland, Minnesota, and others are long shots to make the playoffs, Texas is a team to watch since it has been elite at home (36-20) and still has 25 games at Globe Life Field left in the 2025 season. 

National League Playoff Odds

Division Leaders

  • Philadelphia Phillies: -3000
  • Los Angeles Dodgers: -20000
  • Milwaukee Brewers: -10000

All three of these division leaders appear to be locked into a playoff spot, as the implied probability for Philadelphia (the team with the worst odds) to make the playoffs is 96.77 percent.

There’s a chance that all three of these teams could lose their spot atop the division (Milwaukee has the largest lead at four games), but they’d all just fall into a wild card spot, barring a crazy run from the Reds or another fringe wild card team. 

Wild Card Race

  • Chicago Cubs: -1400
  • New York Mets: -650
  • San Diego Padres: -575
  • Cincinnati Reds: +250
  • San Francisco Giants: +600
  • St. Louis Cardinals: +1100
  • Arizona Diamondbacks: +2500
  • Miami Marlins: +3000
  • Atlanta Braves: +5000

There is a lot less intrigue in the National League, as the Reds – who made some big moves at the deadline to acquire Ke’Bryan Hayes, Zack Littell, and others – are the only team that seems to have a chance to supplant New York, Chicago, or San Diego.

However, there is a lot of time left for a team like the Giants or Cardinals (both hovering around .500) to get hot and make some inroads in this race.

For now, Cincinnati is the only team at plus money that I’d consider in the NL playoff market. 

WFAN Host Questions Juan Soto's Age Amid Yankees, Mets Rant

In the ever-growing cross-city rivalry between the Mets and the Yankees, Juan Soto's mega-contract he signed this offseason—sending him from the Bronx to Queens—is only the latest blip on the radar.

The deal, a 15-year, $765 million pact, keeps the four-time All-Star with the Mets through 2039 and through his age-40 season … at least we think.

In a recent appearance on , host Brandon Tierney went on a bit of a rant about Soto's transition from pinstripes to orange and blue—and in doing so, questioned if the outfielder is really as young as we think he is:

"If you gave me a chance to put him on the Yankees right now, for the contract he signed with the Mets, or the contract that the Yankees offered, my answer would be … I'm good," he said. "Pass."

"Now I'm not good to the point where I'm feeling good about the Yankees team," Tierney continued. "And that's a Cashman thing, but 15 years of this? Honestly, does he look 26 [years old]? … When you're 26, you still have a youthful glow … I think that there's a chance, a good chance, he's not 26. I'll say it. Whatever."

What is this, ?

Tierney went on to dig himself deeper, saying that, while he doesn't want to give his theory any more credence, Soto may be closer to age 30.

Quite the interesting hill to die on.

The Mets are just 1-9 in their last 10 games as they cling on to the final National League wild-card spot with just over a month to go in the 2025 season. Soto leads New York in home runs with 29 and is batting .252 with 69 RBIs.

'I don't have to be the captain to take on a leadership role for South Africa'

David Miller on taking more responsibility, the 2023 World Cup, and working with Mark Boucher

Firdose Moonda29-Apr-2020In 2010, David Miller entered international cricket as a confident 20-year-old with a reputation of being a big-hitter and a rhyme to match his style. “If it’s the v, it’s in the tree; if it’s in the arc, it’s out the park,” he said, repeating a phrase his father had taught him. For five years, he thrilled with cheeky cameos before finally getting his first international hundred. Today, Miller is the most experienced member of South Africa’s ODI side. He has played in two 50-over World Cups, two Champions Trophies and two T20 World Cups, and is a few matches away from becoming the country’s most-capped T20I player.He spoke about his new-found seniority in the side, his lesser-known love for the longest format, and the legacy he hopes to leave behind.Last summer was a particularly tough one for South African cricket, with only one series win from the five at home. Lungi Ngidi recently revealed it was a pep talk by you that sparked the turnaround and ultimately led to the ODI series win against Australia. Can you tell us a little more about that?
It was during the first match of the ODI series in Paarl. Everyone knows what had gone on with Cricket South Africa and the number of retirements we’ve had, and that we have a new crop of players in the team. I always thought, even with all those things, we were in a great space because we had a lot of guys who have been around the block, even though not at international level. They are all very experienced domestically. So I just told them that now is the time we need confidence and self-belief to go forward and we need a shift in mindset.With respect, international cricket is just another game. I said to the guys that all of them have been there before and played in must-win situations at domestic level. All that’s changed is the situation has heightened. I told them that everyone is capable of performing, everyone deserves to be here, and it’s about not waiting for a Quinton de Kock or David Miller to score the runs. Or even for Dale Steyn or Faf du Plessis to come back. This is the game now and we’ve got to play it. I think when that realisation that they can do it happened, things changed.ALSO READ: 2019: South African cricket’s annus horribilisIt sounds like you have really stepped up into a position of seniority. Are you surprised your name has not come up much in captaincy discussions?
I enjoy being a leader, and off the field and during practices, I like to help the guys. When I came up, there were a lot of leaders around and I learnt a lot from them. Then there comes a time when you have to step up and you realise you can lead too. After the 2019 World Cup, I had some time to reflect and I realised that maybe because I always had senior players around me, I didn’t necessarily need to step up, but now that they are gone, it’s my responsibility to lead. So I changed my mindset.I don’t have to be the captain to take on a leadership role. Quinton de Kock is a good captain. He doesn’t overcomplicate things and he gives us a sense of calm. He is also very switched on in the field and knows what he wants from his bowlers and his field placings. He is street-smart and it helps having some senior guys from the domestic scene, like Rassie van der Dussen and Jon-Jon Smuts, around. That’s helped me too.When you look back at the fallout from the World Cup, and given you had already stopped playing first-class cricket, did you consider walking away from international cricket and becoming a T20 freelancer?
With a World Cup, we know that only one team can win, but the way we played and the number of things that didn’t go our way – it was really tough.I thought about things a lot. My priority is still South Africa. I love playing for the country and I love the challenge of playing against the best in the world, so it’s never been an option for me to give it up. I know that I play in a few leagues, but that’s always outside of my national duties. And I am only 30. I still feel like I have a huge amount to offer.David Miller made 64 in the first ODI against Australia in Paarl. South Africa went on to win the series 3-0•AFP/Getty Images Does that mean you might consider changing your decision to retire from first-class cricket? You averaged 67 and 44.37 in the last two seasons you played in, so do you think there’s a chance you could come back and push for a Test place, especially as batting is such a big focus?
I’ve never been one to rush into decisions, so when I made the decision to stop playing first-class cricket, I had thought about it for a long time. I knew I didn’t start well in my first-class career and that had pushed me to the back of the pecking order, which was fair enough. I also knew I couldn’t pick and choose between T20 and first-class, so that’s when I made the decision. But things can change and there may still be hope. I might have to have a discussion with Graeme Smith and Mark Boucher and it could be a possibility.Do you enjoy red-ball cricket?
I absolutely love it. I still love watching Test cricket and I always wanted to play Tests. That was my goal growing up. And after my start, I found that in the last few years of my first-class career, I was scoring heaps and I was really enjoying it. I think I got better as I got older. I was building my innings better.Time in the middle has been a consideration for you even in limited-overs cricket, where you sometimes get to the crease with just a few overs or balls left and are expected to make a big impact. Would you like to have time to set up your innings or the chance to bat longer?
I’ve always wanted to bat higher, but at the same time, I felt really privileged to be playing. As you move on in your career, you want more responsibility and more time to get set and then finish off. We all have dreams, but it is also about what’s best for the team.ALSO READ: Mark Boucher excited ‘to see the guys grow a bit’ in white-ball cricketHow have you dealt with the expectation that comes with being labelled a finisher?

It’s part of the position that I play, so I’ve become thick-skinned. No one has to tell me that I should have won a game because I am the first one to know that I should have. It’s taken time for me to get used to that role and to what gets said about you when things don’t go your way, but then, on the other side, when the rewards come, they are so high that it makes it worthwhile.How do you train for the role? Is it just about big hitting?
Power-hitting and clearing the rope are things I worked hard on earlier in my career. But now, mentally I am in a great space, so I am working on a few other things. It makes a big difference having Mark Boucher around. He has taught us that the game is always evolving. Guys are getting quicker and smarter, and if you don’t keep working to get better, you will fall away. He has got us working on different skills and shots and putting myself under pressure in the nets so that I am prepared for different game-day scenarios.Has your game progressed more under Boucher than other coaches?
He is so experienced and has played for so long, and him and I have had similar roles in the middle order, so I can pick his brain. He is honest and open, but he is also cut-throat, which you want as a player. There’s no beating around the bush. You know exactly where you stand.”The IPL is a cut above the rest, in terms of pressure. In every game, you are playing in front of 40,000 to 90,000 people. Then, off the field and in hotels, there are a lot of demands”•BCCI What are the big goals for the rest of your career?
The 2023 World Cup is one of my goals and I am excited for what we can do in that tournament. We have a group that is in a similar space – a lot of young guys who are all a similar age and we know they will be available. It’s not a case of a whole lot of guys retiring after two years. It’s almost like we can grow for the next four years and it’s only a matter of time before things click.So you think South Africa have a chance at the 2023 World Cup?
We are right up there talent-wise and we produce a lot of good players. Maybe what we’ve lacked is pressure in domestic cricket, because we don’t draw the crowds that other countries get and that plays a big role in helping you cope with pressure. That could be something we need to look at and it’s started with the Mzansi Super League.You’ve played in various leagues around the world. Could you describe the differences in the leagues you have played in? And do you intend to continue playing in them?
All the leagues are unique. The ones I have played in most are the IPL and the CPL. The IPL is a cut above the rest, in terms of pressure, which is what you want. In every game, you are playing in front of 40,000 to 90,000 people. Then, off the field and in hotels, there are a lot of demands, from the public and the owners, so there’s a lot going on.The CPL has a bit more flexibility. They call it the biggest party in sport and I guess it is. I do hope to keep playing, but moving into the latter part of my career, I want to play as much as I can but also listen to my body.ALSO READ: Alternative Universe: South Africa win the 2015 World CupWhat has been the highlight of your career so far?
The 2015 World Cup, which might be surprising. It was disappointing to lose and maybe we played some average cricket through the competition, but it was just a really good team vibe and a really good time in my career. I felt like I was playing well and the environment was good and the two months we spent in Australia and New Zealand were really special, even after how it ended. So hopefully we can create something similar again.Although you’re very excited to play cricket, we know live sport is unlikely to return for a while. How are you coping with the current lockdown?
It’s tough. I’ve got a back garden, so I am doing some workouts there, and I’ve got a passage, so I am hitting tennis balls, which takes me back to my days as a youngster. But that’s it. It’s frustrating because going into the nets is also a release for me. It gets me in a good space and it’s what I love, but I can’t do that at the moment. But I also know we are all in the same boat, so it’s just about dealing with it for now. And once the lockdown ends, we can see what we can do in terms of team camps and hopefully we can get going again.

Everton Weekes and the call of the inner artist

Vaneisa Baksh celebrates a cricketing life lived to its fullest

Vaneisa Baksh05-Jul-2020Cricket was always the backdrop, but it was hardly what we talked about. My memories of Sir Everton Weekes nestle within his unpretentious appreciation of beauty, art and the intellect. This is where I will go to find the man I came to know five years ago.His cricketing years had long passed, but he had not paused. Like a puddle that filled itself until it became a shimmering lake, this extraordinary gentleman lived every minute of his life so fully that death after 95 years and 126 days could have been the only force powerful enough to stop him.He didn’t fear death; at 90, his practical mind had already calculated its proximity, but vigilant as ever, he kept an eye out, “I listen to the obituary notices, not to find out if I am there, to see if I recognise anyone, because I don’t suppose I’d be listening to the obituary notice if I am there.” He was so tickled by his humour that it took him a few moments to muse, “Why would I do a thing like that?”He knew how full his life had been and he celebrated that. “To put all those years together, one would say you’re over a hundred and fifty, but it doesn’t work that way. A lot of these things can be done within a time frame, but that is a way of giving back for what the country has done for you. I enjoyed every moment of it.”This, to me, is what he would want us to do. When an icon departs, especially when it symbolizes the end of a cherished era, it is natural to feel the loss more acutely. But we could not ask one more day of him–from the moment his beloved world started shrinking and he could no longer engage his free will–it would be too selfish.His life was everything but selfish. Born into poverty, he knew what it meant to be without–times when food was scarce, clothes were ragged, and one knew the doors that would never open for you. He had a remarkably succinct way of vividly depicting complexity. Did he and Frank Worrell visit each other’s homes as children?”We were too far apart really. I didn’t visit his. He didn’t visit mine. And there was not a lot of visiting in those days. I don’t think there was enough mauby to go around …and lemonade; money was fairly scarce. There wasn’t a lot of entertaining.”He emerged from those circumstances simply by yielding to the call of his inner artist. He knew his lowly childhood disqualified him in Barbados for the path that Worrell and Clyde Walcott had, but he accepted that. At 13, he was playing for the Barbados Cricket League (BCL); at 14 his formal schooling ended; at 17 he entered the army. In the years between, he was content to play his cricket, go fishing with friends to get money to buy matinee tickets and to pass the time reading. It was Worrell who pushed him to believe there could be more.Everton Weekes flicks one to leg•William Vanderson/Hulton Archive/Getty ImagesThe elements of his life that gave him the most pleasure were the ones that appealed to the artist in him. First, the cricket. Nothing gave him more joy than plastering bowling. He could read a ball, he could read a field, and he was determined to bat forever. Fortunately, cricket enabled everything else. It exposed him to a world that would not ordinarily have come his way.He loved music, particularly jazz, after Dizzy Gillespie blew him away on his first visit to New York in 1947. He became a collector. In 2016, when I first visited his home, a large piano dominated the living room. A sophisticated sound system covered an entire wall. Books, vinyl records, video tapes and trophies were abundant among the beautifully crafted wooden furniture. The house, I was told, was named Balcony Rock, after a Dave Brubeck composition.What were his pastimes? Apart from coaching and mentoring, he generously gave his time to serving on committees and commissions. He was a champion bridge player. He feasted on literature. He reveled in food and drink. He told me he could cook anything, and he enjoyed entertaining, something unheard of in his childhood. He loved to dance; the three Ws were known for putting down the latest moves. He would go swimming every morning at six until he was around 90. Even then, he continued driving himself everywhere. He was a true intellectual, happy to enjoy stimulating conversation, although he disliked small talk.In his later years, he enjoyed his solitude and developed a measured air, appreciating what he found and dismissing the banal and the vexatious with his dry wit.”I remember one night I was catching a bus from Rochdale to Bacup. Frank dropped me there. And you could hear them whispering, the people on the bus. I suppose they were discussing something to do with colour… and a little argument ensued from these two or three people. One of the gentlemen mustered up enough courage to ask me which part of India I was from. I told him I was from the West Indies, and I didn’t pay much attention to them. Later when I was nearly getting off the bus, one of the chaps said, ‘but you have an English accent.’ The other said, ‘Oh, he must be from one of those African countries they have in India.'”It got more ridiculous and more ridiculous,” he said with a straight face, before allowing himself a chuckle.I could listen to him forever. I know he made five consecutive Test centuries and 15 in all. I know he was an amazingly gifted cricketer, but that is secondhand knowledge. What I saw firsthand was a marvellous human who started his journey with little, but left the world a truly remarkable legacy.Trinidad Express

How other sports are tackling cases of athletes testing positive for Covid-19

In addition to cricket, the pandemic has disrupted football, tennis, the NBA and Formula 1

Anirudh Menon29-Aug-20206:45

Newsroom: This will make people more careful going forward in the tournament

Cricket
At least ten members of the Chennai Super Kings IPL franchise, including an India player, tested positive for the coronavirus on August 28. On the next day, it emerged that another player, uncapped at the highest level, also tested positive. The infected persons, most of them being support-staff members or net bowlers, are understood to have been moved to a different hotel from the team hotel, and are being monitored by medical personnel behind closed doors.ALSO READ: CSK’s Chepauk camp in sharp focusThe IPL is set to start on September 19, but with Super Kings expected to play defending champions Mumbai Indians in the tournament opener, and with their start to training now delayed, it remains to be seen how the schedule is affected. Football
In Spain, a spike of positive cases at second division club Fuenlabrada caused a major disruption to the schedule. Fuenlabrada were forced to abandon their last league (against already relegated Deportivo La Coruna), a match in which a point would have secured their place in the playoffs. The league initially decided to cancel the fixture to keep the integrity of the playoff schedule, but after a furore it was played out three days later. Fuenlabrada lost, meaning Elche, in sixth place ahead of them, sneaked into the playoffs, which they duly won.In early August, the rescheduled Champions League suffered a scare when two Atletico Madrid players tested positive for covid-19. However, this happened before the squad travelled to Lisbon where the knockout stages were to take place. The two were placed under self-isolation at home, and after all other squad members tested negative, the team travelled to Lisbon and the tournament went on without any incident.Now, a number of footballers, returning from post-season holidays, have tested positive for covid-19, including Manchester United’s Paul Pogba and AS Roma’s Justin Kluivert. There are growing fears it may affect the scheduled restart of the domestic seasons in England, Spain, and Italy.Tennis
Novak Djokovic’s Adria Tour event – held during the middle of the worldwide lockdown in June – saw a number of high profile players, including himself, test positive for the virus. Controversy surrounded the tournament due to its apparent lack of coronavirus protocols.ATP and WTA then restarted their events this month, with the protocols in place. The crammed (re)schedule plans to have the US Open run from August 31 to September 13, followed almost immediately by the rescheduled French Open from September 21 to October 11.Novak Djokovic had contracted coronavirus and has since recovered•Getty ImagesThe US Open is going ahead despite the withdrawal of several high-profile names ,including defending champions Rafael Nadal and Bianca Andreescu, due to the apprehensions over covid-19. The tournament had already cancelled the qualifying rounds, the junior matches, and the mixed-doubles event.The players, meanwhile, have been placed in a bio-secure bubble at Flushing Meadows to minimse their chances of contraction. Testing will be conducted through the tournament, and anyone testing positive will be forced to withdraw.Baseball – MLB
The restart of baseball has been beset with postponements due to players testing positive for covid-19. Games across August and July were postponed while teams that did not have positive cases went ahead with their games. This ad-hoc approach seems to remain the plan for the MLB.Basketball – NBA
Multiple players tested positive immediately preceding and following the suspension of the league in March. The league resumed on July 30 with 22 teams in a bio-secure bubble at the Walt Disney World Resort, and there have not been any positive cases amongst the active players since.Motorsport – Formula 1
Racing Point driver Sergio Perez tested positive ahead of the British GP, and his place was taken by Nico Hulkenberg for the two races held at Silverstone. However, after testing negative, Perez returned to the circuit for the next race at the Spanish GP.

Rise of Anrich Nortje heralds new era of security for South Africa

Where once such success might have been accompanied by whispers of Kolpak, Nortje isn’t going anywhere

Firdose Moonda03-Jan-2021Let’s get this out of the way: of all the things CSA has to worry about, Anrich Nortje signing a Kolpak deal is not one of them.We’re mentioning it both because of his career-best haul and because it’s that time of year and against this opposition when South Africa’s most promising quicks have historically sprung surprises about the directions of their careers. Kyle Abbott signed off at Newlands during the New Year’s Test against Sri Lanka four years ago and Duanne Olivier’s last appearance came in February two years later, after an altogether different Sri Lankan side became the first Asian team to win a Test series in South Africa. But Nortje is staying – or at least he isn’t going to the UK.Britain’s now-concluded divorce from the European Union has brought the Kolpak-era to an end, and in fact makes Abbott and Olivier eligible to play for the country of the birth again, but unless the Major League in the United States can lure Nortje, he is all South Africa’s and thank goodness for it.Nortje is everything South Africa wants from a headline fast bowler. He gets the speedometer inching towards 150kph and occasionally beyond, he has a mean bouncer, and has shown an ability to adjust his lengths to bowling fuller when required. All that would be fearsome on its own, but it is even more effective when he is able to operate within an attack that provides a foil. That’s what South Africa showed on the opening day at the Wanderers.Related

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Despite their inexperience, Wiaan Mulder and Lutho Sipamla have adapted quickly to their roles and it was with their support that Nortje enjoyed most of his rewards. Mulder, specifically, described himself as a holding bowler in the first Test, which gives Nortje the freedom to “scatter it” a little, as Shaun Pollock put it, and invite the batsmen to attack even more. “It’s very important to bring the run rate down and bowl dot balls because that generally creates wickets,” Nortje said.Mulder’s miserliness brought rewards for himself first, with a pre-lunch spell of 3 for 1 in three overs, and for Nortje later. Post-lunch, with Mulder at one end, Nortje took 2 for 11 in four overs, bowling slightly fuller and getting both Niroshan Dickwella and Dasun Shanaka to play away from their bodies without moving their feet. He returned for two more to end the Sri Lanka innings with Sipamla working his end with deliveries outside off, one of which found Wanindu Hasaranga’s edge.Ultimately, South Africa didn’t do anything exceptional, which Nortje acknowledged. “We try to keep things as simple as possible. We are not trying to make miracles when we go out and bowl,” he said.And that, along with the way the opposition batted, makes it difficult to laud this effort, despite it producing Nortje’s career-best figures.Sri Lanka came into this match ripe for being railroaded. They are without seven first-choice players, they opted to bat first on a surface that has a reputation for being unkind to batsmen who are wary of bounce and even though it wasn’t as green as it could have been, in their two previous visits here, they have not managed to cross 200.Their approach quickly made clear they might fall short again. While there’s much to admire about attacking intent – and Kusal Perera showed that it can work – the Wanderers is a surface that demands batsmen are able to leave well. The wide ball, the half-volley and the ones that stray down leg, like those Lungi Ngidi delivered, can be punished but anything pitched up, on third, fourth and fifth stumps needs to be treated with care, and Sri Lanka didn’t do that.Wiaan Mulder took three wickets in as many overs before lunch on the first morning•AFP via Getty ImagesApart from Dimuth Karunaratne, done by a lifter, and Dushmantha Chameera, who was bounced out, the others threw their bats at deliveries they could have left alone. If they trusted their defences, perhaps they would have been more cautious and willing to spend time at the crease. Instead they opted for the same get-runs-before-you-get-out strategy they employed in Centurion. There, it brought them their highest total in South Africa against an attack that was still finding its feet. Here, they had no such luck.”At Centurion, we were maybe too wide at times and we bowled both sides of the wicket,” Nortje said. “Here, we wanted to keep it tight and get into the channel. That also created some opportunities. We want to have some bowling partnerships and try and get as many dots as possible and then they will have to look to score runs.”South Africa’s bowling still has a lot of work to do, particularly Ngidi who has not looked his best in this series, but they have found depth in their reserves and a balance to the XI that allows them to play four quicks, who are all wicket-takers. If Mulder and Sipamla stay injury-free, Ngidi finds form, Kagiso Rabada returns, Glenton Stuurman and Migael Pretorius get opportunities and Nortje continues to have a licence to thrill, South Africa will not just get freedom from Kolpak but may not even need to call on the Kolpak-returnees.Abbott, Olivier and Simon Harmer are the trio that come to mind immediately but all of them have been engaged as overseas players for their counties, which would limit their availability for South Africa. And that’s just the practicality of it. Their departures left a bitter taste in the mouths of administrators here and they would all need to find their way back into a team that has moved on, and also has transformation targets to adhere to. When they left, they all cited security, in both the financial and cricketing senses, as one of the main reasons for them leaving. With an IPL deal that can only increase and a fast-growing reputation as South Africa’s mean man, it’s Nortje who has those things now.

The India-England series will come down to a battle of the top orders

The inconsistency of England’s top three batsmen may tip the scales slightly in India’s favour

Ian Chappell31-Jan-2021No sooner is one serious challenge accepted and robustly brushed aside than another is on the doorstep.The upcoming India versus England Test series has the potential to be an enticing contest similar in intensity to the one recently completed in Australia.India will start as favourites after an exhilarating victory over Australia, overcoming all obstacles. When you add the name Virat Kohli to the batting order, the team suddenly assumes a bulletproof cloak. In also adding the names R Ashwin, Hardik Pandya and Ishant Sharma to the list of available players, India take on an unbeatable appearance.Likewise, England can point to improvements they can make to the side that won convincingly in Sri Lanka. The availability of a premium player in Ben Stokes who, like Pandya, provides all-round ability and selection flexibility, albeit at a higher level than the Indian, is a big plus. And Jofra Archer adds substantially to the quality of an already strong pace attack.However it’s the top of the England order, where another returning player, Rory Burns, will reside, that the scales tip in India’s favour.India’s top three feature an impressive Shubman Gill, a talented but flawed Rohit Sharma and the indomitable Cheteshwar Pujara, which places them well ahead of England’s top order.Dom Sibley possesses the grit and determination required for success at the highest level but there are questions about his technique against the best international bowlers. In India and Australia he will face two of the best in fairly quick succession so that question will be answered in the next 12 months.Burns is another in the same category as Sibley, and if both players fail the challenges England will be in trouble unless Joe Root continues to score at his current freakish level.Related

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Zak Crawley, like his Indian counterpart Gill, is talented and has great potential. Nevertheless his failure to contribute in Sri Lanka raises concerns that need to be put to rest quickly and there’s no better place or time to do that than in India.Unfortunately, any advantage England might gain from Root’s incredible form at No. 4 is immediately negated by India’s best batsman also holding down a similar position. Rarely does a series feature two such well-credentialed No. 4 batsmen.The middle order of both teams are a mixture of explosive stroke play with a touch of steadiness for good measure. Ajinkya Rahane, Rishabh Pant and the possible addition of Pandya have India well placed to take full advantage of any good start. The ability to swiftly accelerate the scoring is nearly as important to winning Test matches as the capability of taking 20 wickets.England are similarly placed with Stokes and Jos Buttler as their lethal weapons. The possible return of Ollie Pope would add some dependability to the threatening nature of that section of the batting order. However Buttler’s departure after just one Test and the possible return of Ravindra Jadeja to the Indian line-up would swing the scales further in favour of the home team.The presence of Archer, along with the skill and experience of stalwarts Jimmy Anderson and Stuart Broad, would normally provide England with an advantage in the pace department. However India’s improvement in that category is amply illustrated by their performance in matching Australia’s much-vaunted pace attack in two successive away series.Not only does India now have quality pace bowling but they also have it in comforting quantities following the depth displayed in Australia.For years now the rest of the cricketing world has rested uneasily in the fear that India would finally utilise its population advantage by nurturing and selecting its best talent. That day has finally arrived.These mouth-watering Test series are to be savoured. With all the challenges Test cricket faces – Covid-19 just being the latest – the future of the format is not guaranteed to be as generously giving as it has been in the last few months.

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