Craque da galera: confira quem foi o melhor jogador da 1ª rodada do Brasileirão

MatériaMais Notícias

A 1ª rodada do Brasileirão chegou ao fim, e os torcedores elegeram o craque dos jogos de estreia da competição. A redação do Lance! separou quatro destaques das 10 partidas iniciais do Campeonato Brasileiro para que os fãs votassem.

continua após a publicidade

➡️A boa do Lance! Betting: vamos dobrar seu primeiro depósito, até R$200! Basta abrir sua conta e tá na mão!

Mateus Carvalho, do Vasco, Ganso, do Fluminense, Canobbio, do Athletico, e Fernando, do Internacional, foram os candidatos. Em votação realizada no Canal de Whatsapp do Lance!, os torcedores elegeram o atacante do Furacão como o melhor jogador da primeira rodada do Brasileirão, com 54% dos votos.

Cannobio foi o destaque da goleada de 4 a 0 do Athletico sobre o Cuiabá, na Arena da Baixada, no domingo (14). O uruguaio contribuiu com um gol e uma assistência na partida, além de ter sido extremamente participativo até ser substituído, já nos momentos finais do confronto. Por isso, foi eleito o craque da galera da 1ª rodada na votação do Lance!.

continua após a publicidade

➡️Siga o Lance! no WhatsApp e acompanhe em tempo real as principais notícias do esporte

Quem ficou em segundo lugar na enquete foi Mateus Carvalho, do Vasco, com 28% dos votos. O jovem volante marcou um os gols do Cruz-Maltino e controlou o meio-campo na vitória sobre Grêmio. Ganso, do Fluminense, ficou com 10% da votação, enquanto Fernando, do Internacional, teve 8%. Você pode deixar sua opinião na publicação abaixo, via Instagram do Lance!.

Tudo sobre

Brasileirão

Vladdy Guerrero Already Belongs on the Mount Rushmore of Great MLB Postseasons

TORONTO —  There is a laundry list of problems the Seattle Mariners will take into Game 7 of the American League Championship Series tonight. They have struck out almost twice as many times as the Blue Jays (62–34). They don’t win when they don’t hit a home run (13–30 in 173 games this year). And they must win in the toughest place to win this year in the AL.

None of those issues are their biggest problem. The Mariners have a Vlad problem.

To go to their first World Series, they must figure out how to pitch to a smoking hot Vladimir Guerrero Jr., who is having a postseason for the ages. So hot is Guerrero that the best course of action for Seattle pitchers is to swallow their pride and pitch around him in any spot with a smidgen of meaning.

No offense to Alejandro Kirk, who is swinging a hot bat behind him right now, but there is no way the Mariners can go home allowing Guerrero even a chance of beating them. You pitch to him every time in Game 7 as if there are two outs and first base open. He is that good and that hot.

In a too-easy 6–2 victory over a tight Seattle team Sunday (three errors, three double plays grounded into and 13 strikeouts), Guerrero’s night went like this:

  • Popped out for only the second time this postseason.
  • Grounded out on a slider on one of the seven hardest hard balls he has hit all year (116 mph).
  • Ripped a curveball for a home run.
  • Shot a classic “how-dare-you” look at the Mariners’ dugout upon scoring after they hit him with a pitch.
  • Hit a sinker twice for a single—once as it broke his bat on the handle and again, on the carom, with his barrel.

“He came in the dugout and said, ‘I hit that twice,’” said Toronto center fielder Dalton Varsho. “That’s how hot he is. He knew he hit it twice.

“It’s amazing to watch this.  He’s hitting everything right now. It doesn’t matter where they pitch him—in, out, up or down—and what they pitch him. I mean, he’s so hot right now they flipped him a curveball out of nowhere and he’s on time and hits it out.”

The Mariners have thrown him 77 pitches in this series. Only two have been curveballs. He smoked one for a double and whacked the other for a homer to end the night of a wholly ineffective Logan Gilbert, Seattle’s Game 6 starter.

Guerrero looked at the Mariners’ dugout after scoring in the seventh inning. / Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images

Seattle quashed Guerrero in Games 1 and 2, getting him on the ground six times in seven hitless at-bats. The Mariners pounded him with right-handed sinkers away. Before Game 3, Guerrero made an adjustment to catch the ball slightly deeper on its way to the plate and to elevate it.

Since then, he is 10-for-17 (.588) with three homers, three doubles and 13 times on base in four games. In the past two games Seattle has tried to pitch him in; that worked no better.

With a PlayStation postseason slash line of .462/.532/1.000, Guerrero is carving a place for himself among the Mount Rushmore of great postseasons in the expanded playoff era. Take your pick from among Reggie Jackson (1978), Barry Bonds (2002), David Ortiz (2004 and 2013), Carlos Beltran (2004) and Yordan Alvarez (2023), but you better have Guerrero in your top four.

Shohei Ohtani, of course, set the postseason afire with his one-man show in NLCS Game 4. But let that not diminish the history in the making by Guerrero, who is having an October of pure hitting excellence like we’ve never seen. He is the first player in the postseason to hit six home runs with only two strikeouts. The fewest strikeouts while hitting six homers in the postseason was six, by Albert Pujols in 2004.

Guerrero has seen 144 pitches in the postseason and swung and missed only nine times on 58 swings. How in the world do you slug 1.000 make contact on 84% of your swings against the best pitchers of the best teams in the most important and most heavily scouted time of year?

A better question was put to Seattle manager Dan Wilson. It was as brief as it was obvious: “What do you do about Vladdy?”

It seemed mostly a rhetorical question, like asking a farmer what you do about a drought or a Manhattan taxi driver about traffic. You bear the misery, is what you do.

Wilson’s answer was perfectly euphemistic: “He’s someone that you have to take note of and that’s for us to do going forward.”

Take note, yes. Paul Revere once took note of the British coming. Guerrero is that dangerous right now. It’s hard to imagine the Blue Jays imaginedwhen they signed him to a 14-year, $500-million extension this year to keep him away from free agency. Your most restful night of sleep could not dream a postseason like this. But the contract did remove the usual “where-is-he-going-and-how-much-will-he-get” parlor game nonsense that is for elite free agents. (Hello, Kyle Tucker and the Cubs.) And it did validate Vladdy, even in his own mind, that he is the rare kind of player who can not only carry a team but also welcome the responsibility to do so.

“I've seen him embrace being the face of the franchise,” Blue Jays manager John Schneider said.

Tonight the Mariners will play their first Game 7 in franchise history. (The Blue Jays have played one, losing in the 1985 ALCS.) There has never been a postseason game to decide the pennant among two teams with a combined wait for one that is this long: 81 years of waiting for the World Series.

This is a series that has whipsawed back and forth in terms of the upper hand, so Seattle can flip it back in its favor to finally retire its status as Only Franchise Never to Have Won a Pennant. But to do so, the Mariners likely must hit two homers (because as Game 6 reminded us with three rally-killing double plays, they are awful at situational hitting) and they must get starting pitcher George Kirby through 18 batters with the game still tight to make use of their bullpen advantage.

Above all their musts, the most pressing one is an answer to that postgame question to Wilson: “What do you do about Vladdy?”

كلوب يعترف: التعامل مع محمد صلاح ليس سهلًا.. وستواجه مشكلة إذا لم تشركه

اعترف يورجن كلوب، مدرب نادي ليفربول السابق، بأن أي مدير فني سيواجه مشكلة مع محمد صلاح، في حال لم يشركه بشكل أساسي أو قام باستبداله خلال أي مباراة.

محمد صلاح يواجه وضعية صعبة حقًا مع نادي ليفربول خلال هذا الموسم، وذلك في ظل هبوط مستواه تزامنًا مع هبوط مردود النادي الإنجليزي.

وبقى محمد صلاح على مقاعد بدلاء ليفربول في آخر ثلاث مباريات لعبها الريدز في الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز، إضافة إلى استبعاده من مواجهة إنتر ميلان في دوري أبطال أوروبا يوم أمس الثلاثاء.

واتهم محمد صلاح إدارة ليفربول بعدم تنفيذ الوعود التي قدموها له، كما صرح بأن علاقته مع مدرب الريدز، آرني سلوت قد أنهارت بالفعل.

أقرأ أيضًا .. ستوريدج ينقل “تصريح مفاجئ” من محمد صلاح بشأن مستقبله مع ليفربول

لكن كلوب اعترف بأن محمد صلاح عقليته استثنائية، وذلك خلال فيلم وثائقي نشرته “بي بي سي سبورت”.

وقال كلوب عن محمد صلاح: “لن أقول إن مو سهل التعامل معه لكنه ليس صعبًا أيضًا، ستواجه مشاكل مع محمد صلاح إذا لم يلعب، وستواجه مشاكل معه إذا استبدلته”.

وأضاف كلوب في حديثه عن محمد صلاح: “لقد أدرك مبكرًا أنه يجب عليه بذل المزيد، لهذا السبب ربما كان تشيلسي أهم ناد بالنسبة له، ليقول: حسنًا، ظننت أنني جيد بما فيه الكفاية، لكنهم أثبتوا لي الآن أنني لست كذلك، لذا سأتدرب بجدية أكبر وعندها سأكون جيدًا بما فيه الكفاية”.

وأوضح المدرب الألماني: “إنه لا يتوقف أبدًا، هذه هي عقليته وسيذكر كواحد من أعظم اللاعبين على مر العصور”.

واختتم: “عندما وصلت، كان لدينا اللاعبون المتاحون لكننا كنا نبحث عن أجنحة سريعة، وجود لاعب يتمتع بالسرعة والمهارة والقدرة على إنهاء الهجمات وحس تهديفي عالي يجعله لاعبًا استثنائيًا”.

 

Shohei Ohtani Might Be Peaking Just in Time for Postseason

The Dodgers’ plan to slow play Shohei Ohtani, the pitcher, back to top form is working to perfection. Ohtani looked so good throwing six shutout innings against the Diamondbacks Tuesday night that he is a full-bore Game 1 option for manager Dave Roberts when the National League wild-card series begins Tuesday.

And when Ohtani does make his first career postseason start on the mound while taking his usual spot as the Dodgers’ leadoff hitter, he will replace Babe Ruth as the starting pitcher to hit from the highest spot in the batting order in a postseason game. Ruth hit sixth for the Red Sox in Game 4 of the 1918 World Series.

Three other postseason starting pitchers have batted in a spot other than ninth, all in the eighth spot: Zack Greinke in the 2021 World Series for the Astros and Kyle Hendricks and Jason Hammel twice each in the ‘16 postseason for the Cubs.

In his 14th game on the mound since a second elbow procedure, Ohtani reached season highs against Arizona in innings (six), pitches (91) and batters faced (22). Most impressively, Ohtani pitched off his fastball, which was electric, and held his stuff deep into his start. Here are the key numbers:

Inside Ohtani’s Tuesday start vs. Diamondbacks

Stat

Amount

Rank

Whiffs

16

Most since June 27, 2023

Whiffs on four-seam fastball

9

2nd most of career

Sixth inning fastball velocity

99.1

4th highest of career; highest since 2022

Max Velocity

101.2

4th pitch this month above 101 mph (career-high)

Roberts likely won’t announce his Game 1 starter until playoff matchups are set, but Ohtani has made 11 straight starts on at least six days of rest and if (and when) he starts NLWC Game 1 he will have … six days of rest.

The start Tuesday was the 100th pitching appearance for Ohtani in MLB. His 670 strikeouts through 100 games are the 11th most in history.

That’s impressive enough. But know this: that same all-time pitching talent also this year became the first player in history with 50 homers, 100 walks and 19 stolen bases in a season. Amazing.

And one more note about the incredible two-way talent of Ohtani:

The Two-Way Power of Shohei Ohtani in 2025

Stat

Amount

Rank

Balls Hit 100+ MPH

196

Most in MLB (Tied with Yandy Díaz)

Pitchers Thrown 100+ MPH

39

3rd most by starter since his return on June 16

The Dodgers’ plan to slow-play not just Ohtani but also all their top starters appears to have worked well. Los Angeles pitchers have made only 19 starts this year on four days of rest or fewer, the fewest in MLB (Houston is next at 23) and the seventh fewest in any full season. Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Blake Snell and Tyler Glasnow are all throwing well, giving Roberts good choices about how he wants to line up his postseason rotation.

Now he must fix his bullpen, and Roki Sasaki may be the answer. Sasaki, who is expected to be activated Wednesday, hasn’t pitched in MLB since May 9 because of a right shoulder impingement. After making five rehab starts in the minors, Sasaki made his past two appearances out of the bullpen for Oklahoma City. Each time he threw one shutout inning. He hit 100 mph with his fastball.

Roberts is expected to give Sasaki two relief outings this week as further trials for a high-leverage postseason role, which could include anything up to closing games.

Joelinton upgrade: PIF pursuing £44m Newcastle move for "one-man army"

Eddie Howe hasn’t minced his words when quizzed on Newcastle United’s interest in their former schoolboy Elliot Anderson, who was sold to Premier League rivals Nottingham Forest for about £35m in 2024.

Now regarded as “one of the best midfielders in the Premier League” by Three Lions manager Thomas Tuchel, Anderson is indeed becoming a star, and Newcastle want him back, forced into cashing in to comply with PSR regulations.

But Manchester United are also known suitors, and Forest are set to demand in excess of £100m for their prized player.

Newcastle need a centre-midfielder, though, and technical director Ross Wilson is centring on a shrewd alternative.

Newcastle pursuing new midfielder

Though Bruno Guimaraes and Sandro Tonali are among the finest midfielders in the game, Joelinton is becoming a weak link, with Toon writer Thomas Hammond claiming this is “the start of the end” for the Brazilian.

The 29-year-old surely doesn’t have much more mileage left in the tank, having run many laps around the St. James’ Park grass across the years.

The interest in Anderson is suggestive of Howe’s stance on the mainstay’s future, but there is an alternative option in the pipeline for the PIF-backed side.

Indeed, Italian outlet Tuttomercato, Newcastle are pursuing a January move for Roma midfielder Manu Kone, who has been instrumental in the club’s blooming Serie A title charge this term.

Reports from the summer claim that the Italians have placed a €50m (£44m) price tag on the 24-year-old, but United and PIF would surely strike gold, should they bring him over.

What Manu Kone would bring to Newcastle

Kone has been at Roma since the start of the 2024/25 campaign, joining the club from Borussia Monchengladbach in Germany. He was a loanee last season but has since become a permanent member of Gian Piero Gasperini’s squad.

A powerhouse of a midfielder, the 6 foot 1 Frenchman is limber but endowed with natural strength that allows him to perform robustly in the engine room.

As well as being a crisp passer, Kone is also skilled as a carrier, looking to break lines.

As per FBref, he ranks among the top 2% of Serie A midfielders this season for pass completion and the top 9% for successful take-ons per 90. He regularly draws fouls from lunging opponents.

That aside, Kone has also been hailed as a “one-man army” in midfield by talent scout Jacek Kulig, owing to that strength and physicality in the middle of the park.

In this, he could be the perfect player to succeed Joelinton in Howe’s midfield, striking a balance between the different facets of a successful box-to-box role.

Matches (starts)

10 (10)

12 (12)

Goals

0

0

Assists

0

1

Touches*

39.5

62.2

Accurate passes*

22.2 (82%)

43.8 (92%)

Chances created*

0.5

1.0

Dribble (success)*

0.2 (50%)

1.2 (67%)

Recoveries*

3.4

4.7

Tackles + interceptions*

2.7

2.0

Clearances*

1.7

1.0

Duels won*

4.6

5.4

Errors made

2x

1x

Joelinton has had a good run in Howe’s midfield, but it’s time for ruthlessness to take precedence: the club have threatened to stagnate this term, and a breath of fresh air in the engine room could elevate the squad, reinforcing the backline and giving new support to the forwards.

His ball-carrying metrics have decreased significantly, and while he remains a combative and dangerous force in the middle, there’s no question that the Brazil international lacks the same full-throttle energy as once before.

Borussia Monchengladbach midfielder Manu Kone.

Kone was considered a top talent during his early-career days in the German Bundesliga, and while he has endured some ebb-tide moments in his career, no one can deny that he is now blooming into a complete midfielder tailor-made for the Premier League.

PIF have signed an "explosive" talent who can end Gordon's Newcastle career

Newcastle United already have an exciting attacker up their sleeve who can end Anthony Gordon’s stalling Magpies career.

ByKelan Sarson Nov 27, 2025

New Southampton manager update revealed and what it means for Tonda Eckert

Southampton chiefs have made a new manager decision which involves current interim boss Tonda Eckert.

Eckert looking to make it three wins in a row for Southampton

Following the sacking of Will Still at the beginning of the month, the Saints and Sport Republic are yet to appoint a new permanent manager.

A number of candidates have been linked with the St Mary’s vacancy, with Eckert impressing on a temporary basis, winning back-to-back Championship games to steer the club clear of the bottom three.

With the international break now finished, attention once again turns back to club action, with Southampton set to travel to Charlton Athletic on Saturday lunchtime.

As we know, the Saints are no closer to appointing Still’s long-term successor, meaning Eckert looks set to be given the chance to make it three victories in a row.

Tonda Eckert’s coaching career

Role

Years

1.FC Koln U17

Assistant manager

2013-2016

RB Salzburg YL

Assistant manager

2016-2017

RB Leipzig YL

Assistant manager

2017-2019

FC Bayern U17

Assistant manager

2019-2020

Barnsley

Assistant manager

2020-2022

Genoa

Assistant manager

2022-2025

Southampton U21

Manager

2025

Southampton

Interim manager

2025 – present

He has impressed Saints star Finn Azaz, who scored last time out against Sheffield Wednesday, with the summer signing calling Eckert “top level”.

“Since his first meeting, I was really impressed. It hasn’t been drastic changes. He’s been able to watch from outside and tweak a few things. He has been able to instil his message and new energy and his drive and a new voice. As I say, it hasn’t been drastic changes.

“We are playing in the same shape almost. We went out there with similar personnel, [there were] just a few tweaks. I would like to thank him. He’s been top level.”

Now, a fresh manager update has emerged from St Mary’s ahead of the trip to The Valley.

Southampton to give Eckert next three games

According to sources from Give Me Sport and reliable reporter Ben Jacobs, Sport Republic have decided that Eckert is set to take charge of Southampton’s next three Championship fixtures.

Southampton’s next 3 Championship fixtures

Date

Charlton Athletic vs Southampton

22nd November

Southampton vs Leicester City

25th November

Millwall vs Southampton

29th November

It is stated that the 32-year-old is not guaranteed to be given the job on a permanent basis just yet. However, if Southampton’s games against Charlton, Leicester and Millwall go to plan, Eckert could become a genuine contender.

Radio Solent’s Sports Editor Adam Blackmore even admitted recently that Eckert was always on the radar to be promoted and replace Still as Southampton manager, although it wasn’t supposed to come this early.

“Saints have spoken to candidates, but they can afford to be patient with Eckert’s good start, and it allows them time to see the market develop.

“Eckert was always Johannes Spors’ succession policy after Will. It just wasn’t supposed to be after months! So it’s highly unlikely anything imminent occurs either way …..like I said about Will, it would be a risky appointment giving it to Eckert …but if he wins 5 out of 5? Hard not to!”

The early signs are positive, and another three points on the weekend will only strengthen Eckert’s claim to be named Southampton’s next full-time manager.

Southampton told to appoint new manager over Eckert who "ticks every box"

Jazz Chisholm Jr. Had No Interest in Discussing Absence From Yankees' Starting Lineup

Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. wasn't included in New York's starting lineup for their playoff opener against the Red Sox Tuesday. He entered late in the game as a defensive substitute for Amed Rosario who started at second base.

The Yankees fell to the Red Sox 3–1 as they were unable to convert with bases loaded and no outs in the ninth. After the game, Chisholm was asked about manager Aaron Boone's decision to leave him out of the starting lineup, but he didn't seem too interested in discussing the matter.

"I mean I guess, yeah," Chisholm said with his back to the camera in the locker room on whether he was surprised with Boone's decision. "It's a little conversation. Not much, but yeah, just move forward after it."

Chisholm said that Boone relayed the decision to him in a text message Monday night. "I mean, got to do whatever we got to do to win, right? So, that's how I look at it," he said.

Before the game, Boone mentioned the decision was a matchup call to play the right-handed-hitting Rosario against the Red Sox' lefty ace Garrett Crochet, according to NJ.com. Righthander Brayan Bello is Boston's planned starter for Wednesday's Game 2, so Chisholm will presumably be back in the starting group.

He had one at-bat Tuesday night, hitting a flyout out in the ninth inning as the Yankees' comeback attempt fell short. Chisholm received his second All-Star appearance this year as he slashed .242/.332/.481 with 31 home runs, 80 RBIs and 31 stolen bases over the regular season. He slashed .248/.322/.411 with six homers and 19 RBIs against lefties this year.

Aroldis Chapman Rips Yankees, Says He’d Rather Retire Than Play for Them

Aroldis Chapman has seen both sides of the Yankee-Red Sox rivalry, having pitched for New York for seven seasons and now Boston this past season. And, as Chapman made crystal clear during a recent appearance on the podcast, he doesn't intend on ever going back to the other side of the rivalry.

"No way, not even dead," Chapman said in Spanish in response to being asked if he'd ever play for the Yankees again. "If I were told that I was being traded to New York, I'd pack my things and go home. I'll retire right on the spot if that happens. I'm not crazy. Never again."

Why does Chapman feel so adamantly about never playing for the Yankees again?

"I dealt with a lot of disrespect [with the Yankees]," Chapman said. "I put up with a lot of things. I knew that they just wanted to find a way to get rid of me, but they didn't know how. And I just dealt with it quietly, kept playing, and doing what I always do."

Chapman was dealt to the Yankees in December of 2015 in exchange for four minor league players amidst allegations into a domestic violence incident allegedly involving the talented relief pitcher. Citing conflicting accounts and insufficient evidence, prosecutors declined to convict Chapman, though he received a 30-game suspension from MLB.

Chapman, after recording a 2.01 ERA and 20 saves in his first 31 games with the Yankees, was dealt to the Chicago Cubs at the 2016 trade deadline, then later reunited with the Yankees on a five-year deal that ensuing winter.

Chapman, a hard-throwing lefthander who routinely hits triple digits with his fastball, was largely effective during his tenure with the Yankees. From 2017 to 2022, he recorded the fifth-most saves in MLB, a 3.05 ERA and posted a 37 percent strikeout rate.

Unfortunately, for Chapman, his Yankee tenure was remembered more for two key home runs he allowed in the postseason, a 2019 American League Championship Series-winning dinger served up to Astros star Jose Altuve and a ninth-inning go-ahead blast to then-Rays infielder Mike Brousseau in the 2020 American League Division Series.

Chapman and ths Yankees also didn't seem to end their relationship on the best of terms.

Chapman's disappointing end to Yankees' tenure

In August of 2022, his last season in the Bronx, Chapman was placed on the 15-day injured list due to a "pretty bad infection" arising from a new tattoo he had recently got at the time. While the Yankees publicly showed no signs of frustration with the flamethrowing closer amid the unfortunate situation, that would soon change later that year.

Days before the Yankees were set to take on the Guardians in the ALDS, Chapman, after disappointing for much of the season, skipped a mandatory team workout and was then fined and subsequently left off the ALDS roster. Yankees general manager Brian Cashman was openly critical of Chapman, calling his absence "disappointing" and questioning whether the eight-time All-Star was "all in."

Judging by Chapman's words, it seems pretty clear who he directs his ire towards with the Yankees.

"I got along well with all the players," Chapman said. "Never had a problem with anybody, even the manager. We're friends and we talk and everything. The bosses are the ones who make those decisions."

Chapman bounced from the Royals to the Rangers—with whom he won his second World Series title—and the Pirates before signing with Boston last winter. He pitched to a 1.17 ERA with 32 saves for the Red Sox in '25.

Should the women's game use a shorter pitch and a smaller ball?

Smriti Mandhana, Rachael Haynes, Lea Tahuhu, Kate Cross and Nida Dar discuss potential innovations in women’s cricket

Interviews by Annesha Ghosh23-Jun-2020In a recent webinar conducted by the ICC on how women’s cricket has led the way in innovations in the game, New Zealand captain Sophie Devine and India batter Jemimah Rodrigues suggested the use of a smaller ball and shorter pitch might further advance the women’s game. We spoke to some of the world’s top international female cricketers to find out what they think of the proposed tweaks.Could using a pitch shorter than 22 yards, as Rodrigues suggested, help attract more fans to the women’s game?
Smriti Mandhana, India batter: The pitch is the only element that’s the same size in both men’s and women’s cricket. Otherwise, we use a smaller ball [140-151g with a circumference of 21.0-22.5cm in women’s cricket, compared to 155.9-163g and 22.4-22.9cm in men’s]. Our inner circle is shorter [25.15 yards in radius; 30 in men’s cricket] as are the boundaries [stipulated range is 55-65 yards; 65-90 yards for men].ALSO READ: 2020 T20 World Cup takeaways: Australia’s lead at the top and poor fielding standardsAlthough I feel women’s cricket is exciting as it is, and I don’t have the technical knowledge to comment on to what extent the pitch should be shortened, reducing the length might make it interesting from the viewer’s perspective. At present, the maximum speed range for most women’s quicks at the international level is 120-125kph, so maybe a shorter pitch could amp it up to 130-135. And it’s always attractive to watch genuine fast bowling. I will enjoy batting as much regardless.Rachael Haynes, Australia batter: Shortening the pitch is actually something that Australian cricket has done in some of their junior and pathway programmes to make it easier for the younger players coming through. At the international level, if a shorter pitch helps make the bowler get the ball to the other end a bit quicker, you’ve got to be open to it. But there are a lot of other variables in the game, like the nature of the wickets – lots of grass, cracks, no grass, and so on – and the conditions that you need to take into consideration. You want to understand why you want to shorten the pitch, have some good research on how one tweak could have an impact on the other variables, and make sure the importance of the contest between the bat and ball is not lost.Lea Tahuhu, New Zealand fast bowler: I am not sure if reducing the size of the pitch will enhance the game enough to justify it. The purpose would be, I presume, to have balls getting to batters faster. And that would make us look quicker. That might change the perception of fast bowling a bit in the women’s game and bring the equation between bat and ball closer, especially when we’ve seen in recent times that the bat has clearly dominated more. So you don’t have to probably get as much effort into getting a bouncer up – it doesn’t have to go as far. But whether that’s going to be a great incentive to attract new fans, I am not sure. Also, if you’re having to prepare two-sized pitches, then you lose out the opportunity to host double-headers with men.Nida Dar, Pakistan offspinning allrounder: I think the length of the pitch as we have it now is fine. If you reduce it by a yard or two, you’ll be giving batters more options to have an upper hand because the boundaries in the women’s game are quite small anyway. If the pitch is shortened, batters will use the depth of the crease more than ever. That might be one way of adapting to the change.

“Spinners will certainly be able to impart more revolutions and will probably be able to get the ball to drift more if the ball becomes smaller”Nida Dar

Kate Cross, England fast bowler: I don’t think the women’s game needs any tweak at the moment that will make the game more exciting even though it will make us [pace] bowlers look quicker because the length we’d be bowling on is going to be shorter. And the batters, obviously, will have to react quicker to that. From a logistical point of view, we’re at a stage in the women’s game where we’re trying to play at the best stadiums, bigger grounds, and trying to fill the stadiums. I don’t know how ground staff would be able to make wickets that would be shorter for the girls. Imagine us playing before a men’s fixture or after – then the size of the pitch would be a concern, which would mean we’d have to play only at grounds where the pitches are designed for women’s games.What’s your take on Devine’s suggestion of bowling with a ball smaller and lighter than what is currently in use to encourage attacking cricket in the women’s game?
Tahuhu: I don’t know the science behind a smaller ball making it go further. Assuming it would, I don’t think it’s a bad suggestion. It will certainly let spinners get their hand around the ball a bit more, so you’re likely to get more turn, which isn’t something we see a lot in the women’s game. Spinners certainly play a massive role in women’s cricket, but I don’t know how [many] genuinely rip the ball in and beat the outside edge often. That could be an aspect that would be slightly enhanced by smaller balls.Could a smaller ball mean more revolutions and more drift?•William West/AFP/Getty ImagesHaynes: Lisa Sthalekar, a really good fingerspinner, could turn the ball well. As did Shelley Nitschke [the former Australia left-arm spinner]. Poonam [Yadav, the India legspinner], as a wristspinner, really gets lots of revolutions on the ball. So the key point is that technically you’ve got to have a good skill set even if you play with a smaller ball. You walk out to a ground where the pitch offers very little help – as a spinner, you’ve got to rely on your other variations. And you’ve also got to understand that if the ball becomes too light or small, it may not travel the right away.Mandhana: A lot of the girls, including myself, have small palms. Yadav’s is even smaller [than mine]. At times, it becomes quite difficult to catch. I am open to giving it a try.Dar: Spinners will certainly be able to impart more revolutions and will probably be able to get the ball to drift more if the ball becomes smaller. That could make spin bowling in women’s cricket even more effective. It might make six-hitting a bit difficult, because batters, excluding those who are naturally very good timers of the ball, will get less time to react. But a smaller ball will probably fly a bit further as well, meaning longer sixes. This change could favour both batters and bowlers, but bowlers, in my opinion, might gain more.ALSO READ: ‘I hope I see the day when people acknowledge men’s and women’s cricket equally’ – Mithali RajCross: This seems the more realistic of the two suggestions to me because it can be done quite easily. Women naturally have smaller hands than men, so it will indeed make turning the ball easy. Growing up, when I first held a men’s full-size cricket ball, I remember thinking, “God, this is massive! I am never going to be able to bowl with that.” But now, I don’t necessarily see a difference when I hold a men’s Kookaburra ball and a women’s Kookaburra ball. The physical size difference isn’t that’s huge. Obviously, it’s the weight that’s taken off a bit [because of the less heavy ball already used in women’s cricket].How could these innovations affect power-hitting?
Haynes: At the recent T20 World Cup in Australia, I felt the boundary size was a little small. People getting rewarded for playing good shots is vital to the essence of the game, as is good bowling, and one of the things I enjoy about women’s cricket is, at times, there has to be more craft in terms of how people go about scoring their runs. So to just really focus on the power side: why do you want to do that? If it’s about bringing it aesthetically closer to the men’s game, I don’t think that’s necessarily the right way to go about it. The women’s game is a good product that’s continuing to evolve and make its own mark. You don’t want to tip the scales one way. People still want to watch a good contest between the bat and ball and not just plenty of sixes.

“Having the WBBL, the KSL, the Hundred or a women’s IPL – that’s the kind of change the women’s game needs”Kate Cross

Tahuhu: Do you then let the boundary size remain the same or increase it from a 55-metre boundary?Mandhana: Players like [Ashleigh] Gardner, Devine, [Deandra] Dottin, Harman [Harmanpreet Kaur], Shafali [Verma] are all hitting long sixes anyway. While I would love to see these changes improve bowling, I am not sure power-hitting or the ability to hit sixes should be reliant on either of these suggested changes.Do you have an idea to improve the game?
Haynes: Maybe you’re able to nominate one of your bowlers to bowl an additional over. That would be pretty cool – being able to sub a bowler into a particular situation. The thing about these innovations across different countries is particularly to use the domestic tournaments to trial these and see whether these work.Tahuhu: I would love to see powerplays in one-dayers go similar to the men’s powerplay, in terms of being allowed more fielders outside the ring in the last powerplay. In men’s cricket, the last ten-over block of the 50-over game allows five players outside the ring, while in the women’s game [the five-over block of the final Powerplay, which is completed by the 40th over] allows only three. This tweak could stop huge scores and give a bit of power back to the bowler.Should boundary sizes be reconsidered if pitches get shorter?•Brett Hemmings/Getty ImagesMandhana: Shortening of the boundary should be restricted, because if you have 50- or 52-metre boundaries, which we do in some of the leagues, it takes away [running] doubles from the game, which is an especially important skill in T20s. It also discourages spinners from flighting the ball, which is a more pronounced feature in women’s cricket than in men’s. It dents the skills of spinners as batters no longer face the challenge of having to use their feet. Sixty metres is a decent size; anything below that is too short, I feel.ALSO READ: Jarrod Kimber: How to watch the women’s game (2017)Dar: How about publicising the matches rigorously on social media and mainstream media? How about offering cash prizes for the best catch of the match, or best fielding effort, or most sixes of the match and some such, and mandatory cash prizes for the Player of the Match and Series and not just trophies? Give players more incentive to raise the standard of the game and things will get more entertaining.Cross: Women’s cricket, in my opinion, is exciting as it is. The T20 World Cup two-three months ago, and even the 2017 ODI World Cup is proof of that. The pace of the women’s game is relative; what isn’t deemed quick in the men’s game is so in ours. Katherine Brunt bowling 75mph isn’t quick enough in men’s cricket but for us, it is. I don’t think girls bowling quicker is what’s missing. The general standard needs to improve globally, and not just in Australia, England and India. All the other boards [need to be] doing their bit to make the game more accessible to girls and make adequate investments to grow the profile – in the West Indies, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and so on. Having the WBBL, the KSL, the Hundred or a women’s IPL – that’s the kind of change the women’s game needs.

Five CSK games only hardcore fans will remember

From throwing a surprise in the batting order to smashing sixes after sixes, CSK have done it all

Deivarayan Muthu31-Mar-2020If you’re a Chennai Super Kings supporter, you’ll remember MS Dhoni’s sensational 29-ball 54 not out against Kings XI Punjab in Dharamsala in 2010 and that rare, pumped-up celebration where he jabbed himself in the jaw like a boxer. That was probably the moment when Dhoni became Chennai’s . Here are five less-known contests that only hardcore Super Kings fans will recall.Spin barrage at Kingsmead
v Kings XI Punjab, 2009
Kingsmead isn’t Chepauk, but Super Kings’ spinners rallied to make their team’s 116 for 9 in this game the lowest total successfully defended in the history of the IPL. Kings XI’s line-up was packed with left-handers, so Super Kings looked to counter them by yanking rookie R Ashwin off the bench and uniting him with the vastly experienced Muttiah Muralitharan and part-timer Suresh Raina.Muralitharan let rip biting offbreaks and , and at the other end Ashwin relentlessly attacked the stumps and took the prized wicket of Kumar Sangakkara. From a reasonably well-placed 32 for 1, Kings XI collapsed to 92 for 8 at the end of the 20th over, with the three offspinners returning combined figures of 12-0-38-6.Yellow Magic Orchestra: his team-mates get their hands on Suresh Raina, who took four wickets and effected a run-out against Victoria in the 2010 Champions League T20•AFPRaina the Ripper
v Victoria, 2010
The Super Over ended in defeat for Super Kings, but it was an achievement that they even got there, given Victoria were, at one point, cruising at 104 for 2 in pursuit of 163. Then Muttiah Muralitharan dismissed Matthew Wade and Andrew McDonald off successive balls in the 12th over. But David Hussey took charge of the tricky chase, and it came down to 24 needed off 18 balls when, from out of nowhere, Suresh Raina prised out two wickets in the 18th over and then another two in the first three balls of the 20th. Victoria eventually needed one run off the last ball. Bryce McGain wildly slogged and missed an offbreak, and a subsequent mix-up saw MS Dhoni chuck the ball to Raina, who completed the run-out. Hussey then sealed the deal in the Super Over, cracking Ashwin for three sixes. Super Kings’ batsmen – Vijay and Raina – ultimately came up well short amid a thin drizzle.When Ashwin was used as opener
v Kolkata Knight Riders, 2013
Super Kings don’t usually tinker with their line-up much, so when they were set a target of 120 by hosts Kolkata Knight Riders in 2013, everyone expected M Vijay to walk out to open alongside Mike Hussey though Vijay was out of form. Instead, Super Kings elevated R Ashwin to the top. While he only scored 11 off 13 balls, the match provided a rare instance of MS Dhoni’s men going against the grain. In the end, Hussey’s steady 40 and Ravindra Jadeja’s rapid 36 – he struck at 257.15 on a surface where nearly everybody else struggled – sealed victory.Close but cigar: Dwayne Bravo nearly went for 19 off the last over against Delhi Daredevils in 2015•BCCIWhen they stopped Morkel in time
v Delhi Daredevils, 2015
Chepauk was used to watching Albie Morkel launch mighty sixes and whistling for him. However, in 2015, he was in Delhi Daredevils colours and gave Super Kings a serious scare with a 55-ball 73 in a chase of 151. Even as wickets kept falling at the other end, Morkel dug deep and took it to 19 needed off the last over, bowled by Dwayne Bravo. Morkel edged the first ball past the keeper for four, and mis-hit the next to long-on for a single. Bravo had Imran Tahir holing out the next ball, but Morkel walloped the fourth over midwicket for six, and followed it with two runs off the fifth. Delhi needed six off the last ball, and Bravo missed his length. Morkel wound up and lofted the ball, but it bounced once before reaching the long-off rope. Delhi were denied by about six feet. MS Dhoni’s cardiac Kings had finished on the right side of yet another thriller.Dhoni fireworks in Ranchi
v Sunrisers Hyderabad, 2013
In his first two high-profile matches in his hometown, Ranchi, one for India and one for Super Kings, MS Dhoni had not done much with the bat. In the third, this Champions League T20 group match, he launched Thisara Perera for five sixes in an over, including one that was reminiscent of the six over long-on that won India the 2011 World Cup. In all, Dhoni shellacked eight sixes and a four during his unbeaten 63 off 19 balls. Suresh Raina dazzled with the bat too on, hitting 84 off 57 balls. Darren Sammy tried to match Super Kings’ big hitting in a chase of 203 with his 50 off 25 balls, but Dwayne Bravo and Mohit Sharma closed out a 12-run win with their variations.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus