Palmeiras x Tombense: mais de 26 mil ingressos vendidos; saiba como comprar

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Palmeiras e Tombense se enfrentam nesta quarta-feira, às 20h, no Allianz Parque, pela terceira fase da Copa do Brasil. Desde a última segunda-feira não há mais exclusividade para sócios Avanti na compra das entradas. Na tarde desta terça, o clube anunciou mais de 26 mil ingressos vendidos.

> Veja tabela e classificação da Copa do Brasil-2023 clicando aqui

Atenção: para este jogo, o novo sistema de reconhecimento facial para acesso ao Allianz Parque estará em funcionamento nos setores Central Oeste, Superior Sul e Superior Oeste (Portão A), Superior Norte e Superior Leste (Portão B) e Central Leste (Portão C) somente para sócios Avanti e torcedores comuns – os demais palmeirenses que utilizam outro serviço para entrar na arena alviverde não passarão pela biometria facial. Nos outros setores do Allianz Parque, o acesso ocorrerá com o e-ticket ou o ingresso impresso.

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Os sócios-torcedores palmeirenses possuem os descontos previstos em cada plano e tiveram exclusividade na compra dos ingressos via internet até segunda (10), às 10h, quando começou a comercialização para o público em geral. A venda para os sócios Avanti foi dividida de acordo com a pontuação do rating de cada associado, classificados de zero a cinco estrelas. Para este jogo, não haverá o Setor Família, que geralmente oferece gratuidade para crianças de 0 a 5 anos de idade.

Caso ainda haja disponibilidade de ingressos, a venda física no Allianz Parque acontecerá somente no dia 12 de abril, data do jogo, das 12h até o intervalo da partida, nas bilheterias dos portões A (Rua Palestra Italia) e B (Avenida Francisco Matarazzo).

>Federação internacional faz nova lista dos 50 melhores times do mundo; veja ranking

A comercialização de entradas para associados e donos de cadeiras cativas aconteceu a partir de domingo (09), às 10h, até terça (11), às 10h, somente pelo site www.ingressospalmeiras.com.br. O setor de cobrança, localizado no 1º andar do prédio administrativo do clube social, não realizará mais a venda de ingressos físicos.

Confira os valores dos ingressos para a partida:

Gol Norte – R$ 60
Superior Norte e Sul – R$ 70
Superior Leste e Oeste – R$ 80
Gol Sul – R$ 90
Central Leste – R$ 110
Central Oeste – R$ 130

October 13 at the T20 World Cup: Injury concerns for Australia ahead of blockbuster game vs India

England, meanwhile, will be looking to maintain their winning start to the tournament when they take on Scotland

Sruthi Ravindranath12-Oct-2024

Danni Wyatt-Hodge is England’s top-scorer in the tournament•ICC/Getty Images

England vs ScotlandSharjah, 2pm local timeEngland squad: Heather Knight (capt), Lauren Bell, Maia Bouchier, Alice Capsey, Charlie Dean, Sophia Dunkley, Sophie Ecclestone, Danielle Gibson, Sarah Glenn, Bess Heath, Amy Jones (wk), Freya Kemp, Nat Sciver-Brunt, Linsey Smith, Danni WyattScotland squad: Kathryn Bryce (capt), Chloe Abel, Abbi Aitken-Drummond, Olivia Bell, Sarah Bryce (wk), Darcey Carter, Priyanaz Chatterji, Katherine Fraser, Saskia Horley, Lorna Jack, Ailsa Lister, Abtaha Maqsood, Megan McColl, Hannah Rainey, Rachel SlaterTournament form guide: England have won both matches they’ve played so far – against Bangladesh and South Africa – while Scotland are coming into the match having lost all three of their games.News brief: These teams will be facing each other for the first time in T20Is. England are coming into this match after a gap of five days, having last played against South Africa on Monday.Scotland are out of the semi-final race. The Group B table has three teams – England, West Indies and South Africa – still in contention for the semi-final, with England having the lowest net run rate among them. England will be looking to improve their NRR with a big win.”There was a little bit of illness at one point but I think hopefully everyone will be available,” England captain Heather Knight said of player availability ahead of the match.This will also be Scotland wicketkeeper-batter Lorna Jack-Brown’s last international match.Player to watch: Danni Wyatt-Hodge has been solid at top of the order for England. Chasing a tricky target of 125 on a slow Sharjah pitch, with left-arm spinners bowling from both ends, she dropped anchor after the early loss of Maia Bouchier and stitched a 64-run stand with Nat Sciver-Brunt. She finished with 43 in as many balls, which followed her Player-of-the-Match performance of 41 against Bangladesh.Harmanpreet Kaur’s 52 took India to a win against Sri Lanka•ICC via Getty Images

Australia vs IndiaSharjah, 6pm local timeAustralia squad: Alyssa Healy (capt & wk), Darcie Brown, Ashleigh Gardner, Kim Garth, Grace Harris, Alana King, Phoebe Litchfield, Tahlia McGrath, Sophie Molineux, Beth Mooney, Ellyse Perry, Megan Schutt, Annabel Sutherland, Tayla Vlaeminck, Georgia WarehamIndia squad: Harmanpreet Kaur (capt), Smriti Mandhana (vice-capt), Yastika Bhatia (wk), Shafali Verma, Deepti Sharma, Jemimah Rodrigues, Richa Ghosh (wk), Pooja Vastrakar, Arundhati Reddy, Renuka Singh, D Hemalatha, Asha Sobhana, Radha Yadav, Shreyanka Patil, S SajanaTournament form guide: Australia have three wins in three matches and are coming into this contest having comprehensively beaten Pakistan. With that win, they also all but sealed a semi-final spot thanks to their net run rate of 2.786. India have two wins in three games. In their previous match, they posted the highest total of the tournament so far – 172 for 3 – and in return bundled Sri Lanka out for 90 to post their biggest win by runs at the T20 World Cup.Related

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Vlaeminck dislocates shoulder on T20 World Cup return

News brief: Australia have major injury concerns heading into the crucial clash. Just four balls into the match against Pakistan, Tayla Vlaeminck was out with a right shoulder dislocation. To make things worse, captain Alyssa Healy suffered “an acute right foot injury” while batting on 37 as she hobbled off the field with Australia needing 14 runs to win. Both players went for scans on Saturday.India captain Harmanpreet Kaur, who had hurt her neck in the match against Pakistan, turned up with a pain-relief patch on the right side of her neck during the Sri Lanka match. She also didn’t take the field during the chase. Fast bowler Pooja Vastrakar bowled full-tilt before the Sri Lanka game but didn’t play.India will want a big win against Australia. If they win by more than 61 runs, they will move ahead of Australia, thereby automatically qualifying for the semi-final. In a case where India win by fewer than 60 runs, they will hope New Zealand win by a very small margin against Pakistan on Monday. For instance, if India make 150 against Australia and win by exactly 10 runs, New Zealand need to beat Pakistan by 28 runs defending 150 to go ahead of India’s NRR. If India lose to Australia by more than 17 runs while chasing a target of 151, then New Zealand’s NRR will be ahead of India, even if Pakistan beat New Zealand by just 1 run while defending 150.Overall, India have won just eight out of 34 T20Is they’ve played against Australia. Two of those wins came in the group-stage games of previous T20 World Cups, in 2018 and 2020.Players to watch: Two of their best batters finding their form bodes well for India heading into the big game. Harmanpreet and Mandhana’s collaborative effort against Pakistan boosted India’s NRR with the semi-final race heating up. Mandhana, after a cautious start to her innings, changed gears and took on Sri Lanka’s spinners to make 50 off 38 balls. Harmanpreet, continuing from where she’d left against Pakistan, played a classic, hitting eight fours and a six on her way to a 27-ball 52. It was just what India needed to reinvigorate their T20 World Cup campaign.

Germany 'miles' behind Slovakia in historic defeat as Julian Nagelsmann regrets prioritising ‘quality’ over players who ‘give their all’

Julian Nagelsmann has questioned his own selection policy after Germany's disastrous start to their World Cup qualifying campaign against Slovakia.

Germany lose 2-0 to Slovakia in World Cup qualifier openerNagelsmann questions reliance on “quality” over intensityGermany sit bottom of Group A with five games leftFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Germany slumped to a shock 2-0 defeat against Slovakia in their opening 2026 World Cup qualifier. Goals from David Hancko and David Strelec secured a famous victory for the home side. Despite dominating possession with 70 per cent of the ball, Germany managed just four shots on target compared to Slovakia's five. Following the match, manager Nagelsmann delivered a furious assessment, stating his side were "miles away from everything" and that the opponent brought "more footballing quality to the pitch." He heavily criticised his team's lack of "emotionality" and suggested he may need to rethink his selection strategy.

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The defeat is Germany's first ever away defeat in World Cup qualifying and puts immediate and significant pressure on Nagelsmann's team, who are now already on the back foot in their bid for automatic qualification for the World Cup. The national team coach accused his players of lacking passion, suggesting he made a mistake by picking the best players instead of those who want to win.

WHAT NAGELSMANN SAID

Speaking to , Nagelsmann said: "If we start with very simple things like emotionality, the opponent was simply miles ahead of us. That's a fact. And shockingly, on top of that, such an opponent brings more footballing quality to the pitch than we do. If we can't achieve this emotionality – and it was no different in Qatar, it was no different at the European Championship against Hungary, and not much different against Denmark – then we can close the book, because quality doesn't play a role."

He added: "It should have dawned on everyone that we're going to the World Cup and want to play a good role. Today we were miles away from everything, from good and evil. We weren't evil, by the way. 

"Maybe we just have to rely on less quality and instead on players who give their all, because that would have led to a better result today than if the best players had played. That's official.

"No, I don't have 150 German players at my disposal. I have confidence in the team, but everyone has to understand that. We have five games left, and we have to win them all, including against them. Otherwise, we'll be playing in the playoffs in March. If we want that, we have to perform like this."

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Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT FOR GERMANY?

Nagelsmann has warned that his team must win their remaining qualifiers to avoid the uncertainty of the play-offs in March 2026. The manager's public criticism of his squad's mentality could lead to significant personnel changes for the next match. Germany will now take on Northern Ireland, who enjoy the first spot on the table after the first round. 

£150k-per-week Arsenal star looks like the player Pepe was supposed to be

Before this summer, Mikel Arteta’s track record of bringing new forward players to Arsenal was pretty non-existent.

While the Spaniard has enjoyed spending the Kroenke’s money on bolstering the defence, very rarely have we seen the attacking ranks improved.

Indeed, up to 2025, the only out-and-out attackers Arteta had brought to the Emirates Stadium were Raheem Sterling, Kai Havertz, Gabriel Jesus, Leandro Trossard and Willian.

Even Havertz was initially listed as a midfielder when he first moved to north London.

Signed for £65m, the German is still the most expensive addition to the forward line since a certain Nicolas Pepe, a player who did not exactly thrive under Unai Emery or Arteta.

His story in the capital is a sad one, although he is now finding form at Villarreal in Spain.

The story of Nicolas Pepe's abject Arsenal career

In August 2019, Emery and and Co went big to seal the acquisition of Pepe from Lille in a deal worth £72m.

It was a landmark move, one that broke the club’s transfer record at the time. While it was a jaw-dropping sum of money, splashing out on Pepe did not necessarily look like an awful decision at the time.

Indeed, the Ivorian had scored 22 goals and supplied 11 assists in 38 Ligue 1 matches the previous campaign. He was undeniably one of the most exciting wingers in European football.

Unfortunately, it didn’t exactly go according to plan for the left-footed star who struggled with wild bouts of inconsistency during his time in England.

That said, if we solely look at the numbers, he didn’t have a truly terrible time at the Emirates. He registered an average of 16 goal involvements per season, producing eight goals and ten assists during his first campaign. He then scored 16 times during his second year at the club. That’s a brilliant tally, more goals than any Arsenal player scored in 2024/25 for context.

Based on that, you’d be forgiven for thinking that Pepe did well. Ultimately, however, he wasn’t worth the £72m paid.

Eventually leaving on a free transfer after playing just 681 league minutes in 2021/22, Arsenal reporter Charles Watts described the move as a “horrendous mistake”. An internal investigation was led into the signing, while the player himself declared that he contemplated retiring as a result of his time in London.

To make matters worse, Emery later declared that he didn’t even really want Pepe either. The man the Spaniard wanted was Wilfried Zaha.

Indeed, the now Aston Villa boss once stated: “Pepe is a good player but he needs time. When I was there he didn’t give me the performances. I was in favour of someone coming who knew the English league, more than anything so that he wouldn’t need a period of adaptation. I had a meeting with Zaha. He was the player I wanted because I could see that he won so many games on his own.”

Now in Spain and aged 30, he is enjoying his time with Villarreal immensely. He was named LaLiga’s Player of the Month for August, having scored two goals and registered an assist in his opening three games for the club.

Pepe may have been an expensive flop for the Gunners but six years on from his acquisition, Arsenal may well have signed a player who is everything that the Ivory Coast international promised to be.

Arsenal star is shades of Nicolas Pepe, but in a good way

Pepe had plenty of endearing traits. Standing at 6 foot, he had a rangy dribbling and running style.

His play style was packed with little body feints; he would roll the ball with one foot and then explode the other way in the blink of an eye. He was direct and difficult to deal with in and around the penalty area.

Left-footed as well, he was your classic inside forward from the right flank. As we all know, it didn’t really happen for him.

Well, in 2025, it looks as though Arsenal have found another Pepe, just with all the bad bits left out.

Hear us out, but that player is Noni Madueke, the club’s £55m arrival from Chelsea during the summer transfer window.

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Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

When Madueke first arrived at the club, certain but limited sections of the fanbase protested against his signing.

Seemingly fed up of signing players from Chelsea, the campaign read ‘No to Madueke’. Well, Arsenal said yes to Madueke and he’s been a captivating signing so far.

Like Pepe, he is left-footed and they both have a very similar dribbling style. We certainly saw that against Nottingham Forest on Saturday when Madueke terrorised Morato and Neco Williams at full-back.

The £150k-per-week England international completed a whopping five dribbles on the afternoon and his ability to trap the ball and then immediately run at players evoked memories of the best of Pepe.

He was remarkably direct, twisting the Forest full-backs this way and that. Hailed for his “electric” performance by Gunners writer, Adam Keys, it’s been a mighty fine start to life in the famous red and white for the 23-year-old.

The winger may not have found the net or assisted a goal yet, but the quality is clear. He is ready to explode in a way Pepe never managed to do.

Madueke was Arsenal’s most threatening player against Liverpool in the 1-0 defeat at Anfield and despite not registering a goal contribution on Saturday, once again looked like their most menacing player.

Perhaps, after all of these years, Arsenal are going to get the player Pepe promised to be, just for nearly £20m cheaper.

Arsenal star looks like their best bargain since the days of Henry & Vieira

Very rarely does a player feel like a bargain but Andrea Berta has struck gold on this one.

ByMatt Dawson Sep 15, 2025

Australia overcome past bruises with eye on World T20

Having relinquished both their limited-overs titles in successive years, the tri-series win assumes greater significance for Meg Lanning’s team as they head into the World T20 later this year

Annesha Ghosh in Mumbai01-Apr-2018The nine-time world champions came to India with their pride bruised after relinquishing both limited-overs titles in successive years. As if embarking on their first overseas assignment – since being knocked out in the semi-final of the World Cup last July – in the absence of their most-capped international player and, with a captain returning from a major injury, wasn’t enough.But Australia began the tour with a 3-0 sweep of the hosts in the ODIs. They dominated the T20I tri-series, restricting their opposition to totals of 152 or less in four out of five matches. And they were unstoppable in the final against England. This rousing display – with both bat and ball – was exactly what Meg Lanning and her team wanted with the World T20 coming up in November.”We were in such a good space throughout the series and it is nice to top off for the hard work that we’ve done,” Lanning said after Australia’s first T20I series win in three years. “[It was] Probably our most complete performance of the tournament. We had to make sure we finish it well.”Lanning was coming back after a seven-month lay-off from international cricket and was understandably below par in the ODIs, making only 75 runs in three innings. But she began showing signs of her unmistakable talent in the T20I tri-series and by the time the final came around, there was an air of inevitability about what was to come. On Saturday, the Australian captain made her second-highest T20I score smashing 88 not out off only 45 balls.”I was sort of getting back into it in the one-dayers,” Lanning said. “The T20 format kind of suited [my needs]. I could just come out and play freely. It allowed me to spend a little bit more time in the middle. And once I got going, I felt comfortable again. I was able to keep attacking and play my strokes.”Players from all three teams, including India medium-pacer Jhulan Goswami and England captain Heather Knight, have stated the new playing conditions, which came into effect in 2017, mandating the presence of only four fielders outside the ring, have titled the advantage in the batsman’s favour even further. But the exhibition Lanning put on during her 54-minute stay at the crease wasn’t a simple exploitation of the rules.In a demonstration of how to identify improbable angles on either side of the wicket, Lanning pierced near-non-existent gaps between long-leg and deep square leg. She plundered the arc spanning cover and backward point with an array of ingenious strokes and, all told, amassed 16 fours – two fewer than her personal best of 18. The strike-rate she generated – 195.53 – was superior to all her previous innings.”The key is to be clear where your strength areas are and try to hit the ball. With only the four fielders [on the boundary], you don’t have to hit the ball hard all the time,” Lanning said. “It’s about placement. For me, probably that’s what it is about as opposed to trying to hit sixes all the time. I was clear where I wanted to go to and I was able to go to my strengths.”

“It’s exciting. It’s a great round of cricket that everyone is playing. It’s fun to be playing in and hopefully it is a spectacle for the watcher as well.”Meg Lanning on the new rules for women’s T20Is

In keeping with the team’s new credo to “constantly play aggressive cricket”, she anchored Australia’s joint second-highest fourth-wicket stand, of 139, with fellow half-centurion Elyse Villani, at 11.58 runs per over. “We had to take a couple of overs to rebuild that a little bit. We still wanted to keep attacking. All we were speaking about was being very clear with our plans and knowing with each bowler coming on to bowl, where our go-to areas were. It was different for both of us. Out there, you don’t need to hit the ball too hard.”Australia’s title-winning campaign was about more than just dominant batting though. Three days after becoming the first Australian woman to take a hat-trick, fast bowler Megan Schutt consolidated her claim for the No. 1 position on the ICC bowling rankings.In a series where four of the top ten T20I totals were racked up – two by Australia alone – and the average economy rate was 8.11, Schutt gave away only 6.28 runs per over – the best among anyone who bowled five overs or more. In the Powerplay during the final, even when England went at 8.16, Schutt churned out seven dot balls in her two overs. Her reintroduction in the 18th over earned her three wickets for nine runs and she eventualy finished with career-best figures of 4-0-14-3, without conceding a single boundary.”The greatest thing about Schutter is that she can bowl at the start, in the middle overs and in the death,” Lanning said. “So it only depends on where we need her; [I] think we controlled them well in the middle there. You always felt like they are probably only a very good over from getting back into it. So we wanted to make sure we kept the foot on. And Schutter came in the end and finished the job off.In conditions where the hosts’ spinners struggled to find their footing – only Ashleigh Gardner finished among the top five wicket-takers – Schutt’s cutters and round-arm slower balls were testimony to an ever-increasing arsenal of variations, even after shortening of her run-up.”Unexpected is a better word,” Schutt said about finishing on top of the wickets chart and earning the distinction of Player of the Series. “But it is pretty pleasing. I didn’t know I had picked up so many wickets when I was out there. In T20, a lot is about the economy-rate. I was trying to use the conditions as much as I can and try and take as much pace off the ball as I could.”Schutt bowled more overs than anyone in the series – 17.4 – and Lanning was especially pleased with the fast bowler’s ability to think on her feet. “Megan has looked to adapt her game and try new things. We’ve been sort of forced into that. As a bowler, in these conditions, you sort of need to be able to take that head on and be pro-active and that’s probably been the best thing.”She has tried new things that we haven’t done before. We have had plans and if you are able to execute that, we’ll be successful. That’s been the key to her. And here, you get the sort of result when you do that.”Australia might have felt compelled to win this series since they will not be playing any T20Is until September – two months prior to the start of the World T20 – when they host New Zealand. And Lanning was pleased with the show they put on.”The game has changed massively in the last year,” she said. “Obviously, the four fielders outside make a massive difference. We’ve had batter-friendly conditions out here and it’s hard to tell if that’s the highest we’re going to be at but people are looking now to take the game on and push the envelope. It’s exciting. It’s a great round of cricket that everyone is playing. It’s fun to be playing in and hopefully it is a spectacle for the watcher as well.”While the cacophony in the fallout of the ball-tampering incident involving the Australian men’s team has been deafening, Lanning ensured that the attention remained focused where it should be. “As a group, we’ve just been focusing on what we can do [to wrap up a double series win here in India],” Lanning said, “and the group has done that very well and we haven’t worried about anything else other than trying to execute and try and play the cricket that we want to. It’s pleasing that we’ve been able to do that.

Mumbai overcome their death-overs nerves

They kept losing close games at the start of the tournament, but on Sunday they made sure they didn’t lose their way in the pressure moments

Vishal Dikshit at the Wankhede06-May-2018Mumbai Indians lost a number of close matches early in the season, largely because of their end-overs struggles while defending totals after losing the toss. Sunday evening was unfolding in similar fashion when Dinesh Karthik asked Mumbai to bat again, and the death overs played a vital role once more. This time, however, Mumbai won the clutch moments and kept their playoff hopes alive. What did they do differently?Bumrah and Hardik keep KKR quietEarlier in the tournament, Rohit Sharma had the cushion of two specialist death bowlers in Jasprit Bumrah and Mustafizur Rahman to defend totals. Now that Mumbai have dropped Mustafizur for Ben Cutting, the onus has fallen almost solely on Bumrah.KKR needed 54 off the last four overs with Karthik and Andre Russell at the crease. Bumrah had two overs in the bank. Rohit decided to give him the 17th and 19th overs and push the equation beyond KKR by the time the final over began.Bumrah gave his captain the perfect 17th over. To Karthik, he mostly bowled wide outside off, making him reach for the ball and denying him his favourite scoop over short fine leg. Against Russell, Bumrah avoided the full length he so relishes and cramped him with his angle into the body. The first three balls produced only singles, and with the pressure mounting, Russell top-edged another short ball from Bumrah, and Krunal Pandya pouched a spectacular catch running from short fine leg towards the square leg boundary.The baton passed on to Hardik, who had figures of 2 for 13 with one over remaining. KKR needed 43 from 18 balls, and Hardik bowled a succession of slower balls and cutters to Sunil Narine and Karthik. Apart from one wide ball that Karthik cut for four, there was hardly any pace onto the bat, and Karthik kept swinging hard and failing to connect cleanly.Only six came off that over, and even a 14-run 19th over from Bumrah – compounded by a drop from JP Duminy on the leg-side boundary – wasn’t enough to swing the momentum back in KKR’s favour.The short-ball planThe Wankhede pitch has plenty of bounce in it, but you need to know how to use it. Where KKR’s fast bowlers conceded 8.40 per over while pitching short or short of a good length, Mumbai’s quicks only went at 7.75.They bowled 29 of those short or shortish balls in the Powerplay, with Mitchell McClenaghan leading the way. In the third over, he kept bowling short despite having only one fielder back on the leg side – deep backward square leg – for Chris Lynn. Lynn pulled one short ball to the midwicket boundary, and another just wide of the man at short fine leg, but McClenaghan didn’t change either his length or his field. Off the fifth ball of the over, Lynn pulled again but straight into the hands of short fine leg.When Hardik returned for his second spell in the 14th over, KKR needed a gettable 69 from 42 balls with seven wickets in hand. He kept bowling back of a length and conceded only five in the over. The third ball was banged in short at Nitish Rana, angling across the left-hander. Looking to pull from outside off stump, he failed to get on top of the bounce and skied a top-edge to deep square leg.A batting-order rejigEver since his 94 against Royal Challengers Bangalore, Mumbai have maintained that Rohit Sharma will continue to bat at No. 4. On Sunday, though, he came out at No. 3, a position that has traditionally worked better for him. Mumbai also batted Hardik above Krunal, which hadn’t been the case early in the tournament. The opening stand had lasted nearly 10 overs, and when the second wicket fell, only 50 balls were left in the innings. When Hardik came in, Mumbai were losing some momentum, with Rohit falling for a run-a-ball 11 and a fatigued Suryakumar Yadav slowing down after a brisk start.Hardik got going quickly, lofting a one-handed six off his third ball, and failed to score off only three balls in a 20-ball innings. Even as the batsmen at the other end struggled to score quickly – JP Duminy finished on 13 off 11 – he went at a strike rate of 175, which proved crucial to Mumbai getting past 180.

Dodgers' Clayton Kershaw Unwittingly Participates in Funny Crowd Moment While on Mound

For what was apparently the second time in his career, Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw on Friday inadvertently timed the wind-up of his pitch with a group of fans doing the wave in the stands … though it would probably be more apt to say the crowd timed move to Kershaw's—not the other way around.

During the Dodgers' 6-5 win over the Washington Nationals, cameras caught a rapt group of spectators beginning "the wave" as Kershaw extended his arms in the air on the mound, preparing for his pitch. As a result of their smart timing, it looked as though Kershaw himself was participating in the crowd work … and not just, y'know, doing his job.

Watch that funny moment below:

Better yet, this isn't the first time Kershaw was in sync with some eager fans. According to MLB, it happened in 2022, as well, when the Dodgers were playing the San Diego Padres.

But as fun as Friday's antics were, they definitely should not dwarf a much more impressive milestone upon which the left-hander is rapidly approaching: he is now just eight strikeouts away from becoming the 20th pitcher in MLB history to record 3,000 career K's. Going into Friday night's game, he was 12 away, but subtracted four from that total during the win.

The Dodgers win was the opener of a three-game series vs. the Nats. Washington will have the chance to even things up come Saturday night at 10:10 p.m. ET.

Owners of Mumbai Indians, Delhi Capitals, RCB win bids to own Women's Premier League teams

The owners of men’s IPL teams Mumbai Indians, Delhi Capitals and Royal Challengers Bangalore, as well as the Adani Group and Capri Global, have won bids to own the five women’s IPL teams at the auction ahead of the inaugural edition to be played in March this year. The tournament will be known as the Women’s Premier League (WPL), and the teams will be based in Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru, Ahmedabad and Lucknow respectively.The winners were identified after opening sealed bids in Mumbai on Wednesday, with the BCCI fetching a record sum of INR 4669.99 crore (USD 572.78 million approx). The Ahmedabad team was sold for the highest price: INR 1289 crore (USD 158 million approx), followed by Mumbai (INR 912.99 crore/USD 111 million approx), Bengaluru (INR 901 crore/USD 110 million approx), Delhi (INR 810 crore/USD 99.35 million approx) and Lucknow (INR 757 crore/USD 92.85 million approx).Arun Dhumal, the chairman of the IPL, said that finalising the schedule and itinerary for the first season of the WPL was “a work in progress”. A player auction is also to be held, details of which are yet to be released. The BCCI recently earned a big sum from the sale of the women’s IPL media rights, which were bagged by Viacom 18 for INR 951 crore (USD 116.7 million approx.) for a five-year period between 2023 and 2027. Under the revenue-sharing model, the women’s IPL will distribute 80% of the media rights money to the five franchises in the first five years. This is significant – as was seen in the men’s IPL – in offsetting a major part of the franchises’ operational costs.A total of 16 entities took part in the bidding process on Wednesday after 17 entities were understood to have submitted their bids.

Jay Shah: ‘A red-letter day’

The BCCI was understandably elated at the way the auction went. While secretary Jay Shah called it “another red-letter day”, Dhumal called it “a landmark day” for both the BCCI and the IPL brand.In 2008, the BCCI had fetched USD 723.59 million for selling the first set of eight men’s IPL teams. Looking at the conversion rate at the time, the IPL deal was worth approximately INR 2894.36 crore. Accounting for the current inflation rate, Dhumal said the WPL valuation was “bigger” than that of the men’s IPL in terms of the money derived from the sale of the teams.Shah said that WPL was the “second-highest valued” league in cricket after the men’s IPL. While Shah did not explain the basis of his assertion, he was likely combining the franchise sale money with the media rights valuation.”The responsibility lies on our shoulders to see to it that the faith that has been deposed on BCCI, we work extra hard to make sure that this Women’s Premier League turns out to be at par with men’s league, if not better,” Dhumal said. “We take it as a challenge and we will leave no stone unturned to make sure that what we are successful in achieving for WPL what we have done for IPL.”ESPNcricinfo Ltd

WPL auction likely to be in first week of February

Dhumal said that the BCCI is hoping for the WPL to start soon after the women’s T20 World Cup, which will be played in South Africa between February 10 and 26. The BCCI also wants the WPL to end around a week before the start of the men’s IPL, likely on April 1, to keep the venues fresh.”With regard to [the venues for the] first season, we are still talking,” Dhumal said. “That is work in progress. We will have to see logistical challenges involved in case it [WPL] has to be multi-city value or single-city value.”Shah said that the players’ auction date was not final, but suggested the first week of February as the likely time for it. The WPL has finalised a purse of INR 12 crore (USD 1.47 million approx.) per team for the first season.

BCCI hopes for ‘most competitive and most loved’ event

The BCCI was confident of selling the five WPL teams for good money despite not setting a base price, unlike in 2008 when the eight men’s IPL teams were sold.”We already sold the [WPL] media rights and they [franchises] would do their calculations,” Shah said. “We were pretty confident that we don’t need any minimum price.”Dhumal explained that the market dictated the valuations. “It is not our job to value or create,” he said. “Out of five successful bidders, four are existing partners in the BCCI. They have seen and grown with us in the last 15 years. So they are the best guys to evaluate. Our job is to make sure the tournament comes out to be most competitive and most loved and engaging for the fans.”1:04

Sthalekar: ‘Once the WPL starts, India could dominate world cricket’

RCB ‘held back investments’ in overseas leagues to buy WPL team

“This is a historic moment for Indian cricket, and we are delighted to be a part of it,” Nita Ambani, owner of Mumbai Indians, said in a statement. “India’s women cricketers have always made the nation proud in the global sporting arena – be it the World Cup, Asian Cup or the recent Commonwealth Games. This new women’s league will once again shine a global spotlight on the talent, power, and potential of our girls.””I’m sure our Women’s MI team will take the Mumbai Indians brand of fearless and entertaining cricket to a new level altogether,” co-owner Akash Ambani said. “As we bring the MI experience and best practices into the women’s game, we look forward to seeing our women’s team excel and inspire future generations of female athletes.”Prathmesh Mishra, chairman of RCB, explained that the group had avoided bidding for teams at the men’s ILT20 and SA20 leagues to focus energies on the WPL. “We held back all our investments in overseas teams to own a team that aligns with this philosophy and core value, and it gives us immense pleasure to have marked this accomplishment positively.”Rajesh V Menon, RCB’s vice-president, said, “We have been following women’s leagues very closely and our scouting team has set their eyes on women cricketers for some time now, as part of RCB Hinterland scouting system, and it gives us immense joy to see it all coming together for a team that sets to play for the inaugural edition of women’s IPL in the country.”[L to R] Devajit Saikia, Ashish Shelar, Arun Dhumal, Roger Binny, Jay Shah and Rajeev Shukla after the WPL teams’ auction•ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Roger Binny ‘surprised’ at improvement of women’s cricket

Shah used the opportunity to stress that the BCCI’s decision to pay the women the same match fees as the men had played a role in the standard of the women’s game going up.”Right now women empowerment ,” he said. “So I think people are very keen to invest in women. Out of this, we will get good girls out of districts, cities and states [to increase the talent pool].”With corporates willing to spend on women’s cricket and crowds – as seen during the recent white-ball series between India and Australia in Mumbai – willing to come out in big numbers, the BCCI expects the WPL to grow fast.”Over the years, the Indian team has played some fantastic cricket – at the Commonwealth Games they did well,” BCCI president Roger Binny said. “They have done well throughout. I am very surprised to see the standard of the game improve in the last five years because you know we didn’t expect that from Indian women.”The game has taken off so much and now with the WPL coming in, that could take the players even further. Like what happened in the men’s section, the game really took off and the game improved so much. The same thing is going to happen in women’s cricket.”

Yorkshire plead guilty to data deletion in wake of racism allegations

Club to face CDC hearings next week charged with bringing game into disrepute

Matt Roller23-Feb-2023

Yorkshire will face disciplinary proceedings at next week’s CDC hearings•Getty Images

Yorkshire have pleaded guilty to a charge of destroying or losing data and documents relating to allegations of racism made against the club.The ECB confirmed this week that Yorkshire had admitted four charges “including a failure to address systemic use of racist and/or discriminatory language over a prolonged period and a failure to take adequate action in respect of allegations of racist and/or discriminatory behaviour”.The reported on Wednesday that the specific admissions included a guilty plea to a charge that evidence relating to allegations of racist abuse, made by Azeem Rafiq, had been destroyed.The club confirmed the report on Thursday morning ahead of next week’s Cricket Discipline Commission (CDC) hearings, where a panel will hear disciplinary proceedings brought by the ECB against Yorkshire and seven ex-players.”It has been reported in a number of news outlets that, in relation to the Cricket Discipline Commission inquiry, the club has admitted a charge of deletion of data and documents,” Yorkshire wrote to members on Thursday.Related

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“The CDC proceedings are ongoing and, as such, we are limited as to what we can say at this time. However, we are writing to reassure members reading these reports to let them know that no personal data relating to members of the club was compromised.”Yorkshire said that following Lord Kamlesh Patel’s appointment as chair, “it was discovered that emails and documents, both held electronically by the club and in paper copy, had been irretrievably deleted from both servers and laptops and otherwise destroyed.”After a thorough independent investigation it was established that the deletion and destruction of documents date from a time period prior to the appointment of Lord Patel and relate to the allegations of racism and the club’s response to those allegations. The club is not prepared to conjecture publicly as to why this occurred, who was responsible or the motivation for doing so.”The club said that the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) and the ECB were “informed of the position”. The ICO took no action, while the ECB brought a charge “on the basis that the conduct (deletion/destruction) may be prejudicial to the interests of cricket and/or which may bring the ECB and/or the game of cricket into disrepute”.Yorkshire added: “The club has admitted this charge, as there was no viable defence in these circumstances. We wished to let members know the position at the earliest opportunity we were able to and to allay concerns about the integrity of members’ data, which the club believes is secure.”The CDC hearings take place from March 1-9 in London. Gary Ballance has admitted liability in response to a charge of using “racially discriminatory language” while Tim Bresnan, John Blain, Matthew Hoggard, Andrew Gale and Richard Pyrah have all withdrawn from the proceedings.Michael Vaughan is the only remaining defendant.

Glenn Maxwell: 'Recovery hasn't happened as fast as I would have liked'

He’s hopeful recovery from broken leg will hold him in good stead ahead of IPL, the Blast, the Hundred and ODI World Cup

Alex Malcolm23-Feb-2023Glenn Maxwell admits he is not as far advanced in his recovery from a broken leg as he thought he would be, but believes his slower build-up will have long-term benefits ahead of a massive year that includes the IPL, the T20 Blast, the Hundred and the ODI World Cup.Maxwell was named in Australia’s 16-man squad for the three-match ODI series against India starting on March 17 in Mumbai. He has not played international cricket since breaking his leg in a freak accident just after the T20 World Cup last year.”It probably hasn’t happened as fast as I would have liked,” Maxwell said on Thursday. “I probably would have liked to be playing cricket a little bit earlier. But I think the fact that I knew the timeline for the one-day side – and that was probably the realistic goal – I was able to manipulate my rehab program to fit the timeline that I was racing against.Related

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“Having not played for three-and-a-half months, I made a conscious decision to make sure I filled up my calendar with cricket to lead into that World Cup at the back end of the year. Obviously there’s the one-day series which is going to be a big series, especially with the World Cup in India at the back end of the year.”It will be a good opportunity for us to try and work out some things and get our game plan ready for the back end of the year, as well as having the IPL straight after it. [It is about] getting used to the Indian conditions again and spending a lot of time working on my game over there, which will then lead into to the Blast and the Hundred.”As a result of the injury, Maxwell missed Australia’s last ODI series against England in November, and the entire BBL that followed. He returned to play club cricket in Melbourne, and also the Sheffield Shield cricket for Victoria this week, but will not be playing in Victoria’s 50-over Marsh Cup game against South Australia on Sunday. He will instead play club cricket for Fitzroy-Doncaster on Saturday, where he hopes to bowl for the first time in a match, having built up his bowling loads steadily.

“I always said I was building towards that one-day series in the back of my mind. Now I’m closer to that workload that I need to be at”Glenn Maxwell eyes a comeback in the ODIs against India

Maxwell is yet to bowl in the two games he has played, having pulled up sore after his first bowl in early February. And though he was available to bowl at the back end of the Shield game, he was not required. Maxwell has opted not to play in the Marsh Cup this week because 50-over cricket requires some higher-intensity running. But he is edging closer to being able to handle that, and expects to be right for the ODIs against India.”Even just looking at the data from the last day of the Shield game, I started to get back to what a full one-day game looks like,” Maxwell said. “So that time on my feet, that speed back up, it’s all heading in the right direction. I always said I was building towards that one-day series in the back of my mind. So now I’m sort of closer to that workload that I need to be at. It’s about trying to maintain that, get the pace back up, and then hopefully, in a couple of weeks’ time be 100%.”Maxwell revealed he is also not quite where he needs to be mentally from a batting perspective, having registered scores of 5 and 0 in his first first-class game since 2019. But he is confident that will come with more time in the middle.”Probably, mentally, batting in that position, I’ll probably wasn’t quite there,” Maxwell said. “In the nets, you can do all the hard work, but to try and get that mental application back in a game is obviously a different thing. So that’s probably something I’m working on over the next few games – club cricket on Saturday and the Shield game as well. A few more hits out there, and just try and build up that match intensity.”

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