فيديو | الهلال السعودي يهزم الدحيل القطري بثنائية في دوري أبطال آسيا

فاز نادي الهلال السعودي على الدحيل القطري، بنتيجة هدفين مقابل هدف، في المباراة التي أقيمت اليوم الثلاثاء، ضمن منافسات بطولة دوري أبطال آسيا للنخبة.

الهلال واجه الدحيل، على ملعب المملكة أرينا بالسعودية، في إطار الجولة الأولى من مرحلة الدوري لمواجهات بطولة دوري أبطال آسيا للموسم الحالي 2025-2026.

وتقدم نادي الدحيل، بواسطة لاعبه الجزائري عادل بولبينة في الدقيقة 37، وعاد فريق الهلال وسجل هدفين متتاليين، عن طريق ثيو هيرنانديز وداروين نونيز في الدقائق 57، 67. أهداف مباراة الهلال والدحيل اليوم في دوري أبطال آسيا للنخبة

وبتلك النتيجة، يحصد فريق الهلال، 3 نقاط أولى في دور المجموعات من بطولة دوري أبطال آسيا ويحتل المركز الثالث في ترتيب مجموعة الغرب، ويتساوى مع الثنائي المتصدر بنفس عدد النقاط الأهلي السعودي والشارقة الإماراتي.

بينما فريق الدحيل القطري، يحتل المركز العاشر في ترتيب نفس المجموعة لأنية “غرب” في دوري أبطال آسيا بدون نقاط.

طالع.. فيديو | الأهلي السعودي يحقق ريمونتادا مثيرة أمام ناساف الأوزبكي بمستهل مشواره في دوري أبطال آسيا

بطولة دوري أبطال آسيا للنخبة، تقام بنظام مرحلة الدوري (دور المجموعات) من 24 فريقًا مقسمين إلى 12 فريقا لأندية الشرق ومثلهم لأندية الغرب (التي تمثل المنطقة العربية).

ويخوض كل فريق 4 مباريات على أرضه و4 مباريات خارج ملعبه، في مواجهة ثمانية أندية مختلفة، وتتأهل 8 أندية من كل منطقة (شرق وغرب) إلى دور الـ16، والذي تقام مبارياته من ذهاب وإياب، لتتأهل الأندية الفائزة إلى ربع النهائي.

واعتبارًا من دور الثمانية (ربع النهائي) تلعب مباريات البطولة بنظام التجمع (التأهل من مباراة واحدة) في دولة واحدة تم اختيار دولة السعودية لاستضافة تلك المباريات.

Tottenham could replace key player with £50m star who Arsenal really want

Tottenham Hotspur are set for a very intriguing summer transfer window, which has been made all the more important after their qualification for the Champions League next season.

Tottenham preparing bid for £30m colossus wanted by Napoli, Milan and Inter

Spurs could scupper Antonio Conte in the race for his signature.

1 ByEmilio Galantini Jun 21, 2025

Spurs were handed a monumental boost both on and off the field after their triumphant Europa League final win in Bilbao last month, with Thomas Frank set to reap the rewards as he prepares for his first-ever job managing an elite-level club.

Son Heung-min

7.00

James Maddison

6.98

Pedro Porro

6.95

Dominic Solanke

6.84

Dejan Kulusevski

6.83

via WhoScored

The financial windfall gifted to Tottenham, not to mention the greater player-pull they now possess as a result of competing in Europe’s most prestigious competition, will play an absolutely pivotal role in attracting the club’s top transfer targets to N17.

However, that isn’t to say that they’re guaranteed to keep their best players.

Son Heung-min may well have already played his final game for Spurs, with sides in Saudi Arabia expressing a serious interest in the South Korean, while Atlético Madrid continue to sniff around star defender Cristian Romero.

The 27-year-old was crowned UEFA’s official Europa League Player of the Season and was vital for Ange Postecoglou throughout the tournament, helping Spurs to end their 17-year wait for a piece of major silverware.

Romero is also a leader in the dressing room, according to teammates like Micky van de Ven, who showered praise on the Argentine for helping his transition to Premier League football.

“For me, he is world-class. He is a leader. He is always one hundred per cent. He is a top-class player with the ball and without the ball when defending,” said van de Ven to Optus Sport.

“I can promise you he is not scared of anyone. He keeps going every game. From day one here he has helped me. He is just a world-class player.”

With Tottenham facing the prospect of losing their imperative defender, who’s reportedly told chairman Daniel Levy he’s keen to leave the club this summer (Marca), reliable football.london journalist Alasdair Gold has taken a look at who could replace him.

Tottenham could replace Cristian Romero with Marc Guehi

As per Gold, Tottenham have been fans of Crystal Palace star Marc Guehi for a “long time”, and he’s a potentially “obvious” candidate to step into Romero’s shoes.

Crystal Palace's MarcGuehireacts after the match

Spurs made a very public £70 million bid for the England international in January, which was rejected out of hand by Palace chairman Steve Parish, who had precious little time to source a replacement for the defender.

Gold warns that, while Tottenham could offer Guehi Champions League football, any move would depend on defensive sales as Frank is currently stocked with centre-backs, and by the time they agree to some sales, the 24-year-old may have already found a new club.

Arsenal are believed to be “very keen” on Guehi, as are Liverpool, so Spurs may even have their work cut out for them in this instance. He’s about to enter the final 12 months of his contract at Selhurst Park, but Palace will still demand around £50 million, according to GiveMeSport.

He'd be better than Bijol: £5m defender now wants to sign for Leeds

On their re-entry to the Premier League, Leeds United will know that their defence will have to be much firmer than when they last struggled in the top division.

Relegation at the close of the dismal 2022/23 season saw the Whites give up a league-worst tally of 78 strikes, with their respectable haul of 48 goals scored completely pushed to one side by their constant dire displays at the back.

Daniel Farke must be worried that his side will be equally as porous on their return to the top-flight, with Udinese centre-back brute Jaka Bijol now reportedly closing in on a deal to join the growing Elland Road ranks.

However, Leeds might not be done there with standout defensive additions, with a fresh report now linking the newly promoted side to a Premier League-ready left-back.

Leeds interested in move for £5m defender

Responding to the news that Junior Firpo won’t stick it out at Leeds, with the full-back heading in the direction of Real Betis, Farke and Co could now win a new left-back.

Well, according to Football Insider, they have revealed that Aston Villa figure Alex Moreno is now interested in the prospect of signing for Leeds.

While the player is seemingly keen, the Whites should be too, particularly because he’d tick plenty of boxes as they hunt down a cheap replacement for the departing Firpo.

Aston Villa defender Alex Moreno.

It has been widely reported that Moreno could be available for around the £5m ballpark this summer, with Real Betis, Real Sociedad, and Sunderland all also keen on the 32-year-old, according to Football Insider.

This is a signing Leeds must persist with because Moreno could be an even better buy than Bijol walking through the door in terms of bolstering their defensive numbers, alongside the ageing full-back also being a major threat in attack like Firpo.

Why Moreno could be a better signing than Bijol

Whilst it’s paramount that Leeds find a suitable Firpo replacement, it’s arguably not the most pressing concern that the Whites hunt down plenty of new centre-backs.

After all, Farke already has Pascal Struijk, Ethan Ampadu, and Joe Rodon at his disposal in this position, with the imposing trio just fresh off collecting a combined clean sheet total of 55 during last season’s whirlwind promotion success.

Joe Rodon

Of course, there’s no harm in adding Bijol to the building, considering the intimidating Slovenian just shone in a top-five European league, notably winning a high 4.8 duels per game, but Leeds only have a waning Sam Byram to call upon in the left-back spot as Firpo heads for the exit door.

Therefore, snapping up Moreno for only £5m feels like a no-brainer move to make and could perhaps be seen as a more urgent deal to get over the line than Bijol’s due to Leeds’ depleted options otherwise.

Games played

55

Goals scored

2

Assists

4

Big chances created

5

Wins

27

Goals conceded

46

Clean sheets

7

Tackle success %

67%

Whilst Moreno hasn’t always been the most stable defensive option in the top-flight with only seven clean sheets collected from 55 appearances to date, he has consistently shown off his class in attack to be a fitting stand-in for the loss of Firpo, with six goal contributions also picked up.

The ex-Barcelona defender did amass a far heftier 14 goal contributions last season, but the Dominican Republic international had struggled in the big time previously, with a lesser four goal contributions tallied up from 43 overall clashes.

Aston Villa's Alex Moreno

Therefore, it could be deemed vital that Leeds seal a deal for the “pure class” left-back soon, as he was once glowing labelled by journalist Lee Clarke.

On the contrary, whilst Bijol would definitely boost Farke’s men in the heart of defence, they are already strong here. Whereas, Moreno would really enhance the Whites’ options on the left channel in the wake of Firpo’s expected exit.

Ampadu 2.0: Leeds ready to pay up for “tremendous” £1.2m star

Leeds United could be about to sign their next Ethan Ampadu with this summer purchase.

ByKelan Sarson Jun 14, 2025

He'd be their new Gordon: Howe wants Newcastle to sign "deadly" £60m star

Newcastle United are in the box seat to qualify for the Champions League via a top-five finish in the Premier League. The Magpies, who lost their most recent outing 1-0 away to Arsenal, currently occupy third spot with one game to go.

With 66 points to their name, a win would guarantee Eddie Howe’s side a place in next season’s premier European club competition, although a draw might not be enough, given they are just one point clear of seventh-place Nottingham Forest. It is in their hands, so they must beat Everton at home.

If they do return to the competition next term, attacking reinforcements would certainly strengthen their case to help them go on a run in the competition.

Newcastle’s latest attacking target

Newcastle seem keen to add strength and depth to their forward line this summer, and one player who has been constantly linked with a move to St James’ Park is Bryan Mbeumo who has been excellent in 2024/25.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

Now, according to a new report from GIVEMESPORT, the Magpies ‘are firmly in the race’ to bring Mbeumo to the club this summer.

Manager Howe, who brought silverware to the club this term after 56 years, views the attacker ‘as a standout target for Newcastle’ this summer.

Brentford's BryanMbeumoreacts

However, this is not a deal that will come cheap. The report suggests that the Cameroon international will cost the North Eastern side £60m, with Manchester United, Nottingham Forest and Arsenal all interested in signing the attacker, too.

Why Mbeumo would be a good signing

It has been a really strong season for Brentford in 2024/25, who themselves are pushing for a European spot. It is perhaps no coincidence that the Bees’ excellent campaign has aligned with a personal year to remember for Mbeumo.

The 25-year-old, who came through French side Troyes’ academy, has been one of the Premier League’s standout players this term. He was nominated for the Player of the Season award, which he described as a “crazy” feeling.

Well, the stats don’t lie, and Mbeumo’s goal and assist numbers are exceptional. He’s managed 19 goals and eight assists in 37 games, playing 3,327 minutes. That leaves him with an average of one goal involvement every 123 minutes.

Should the Magpies bring the winger to the club, he could prove to be a wonderful addition to an attack that includes Anthony Gordon. It has also been a terrific campaign for the England international, who has managed nine goals and seven assists in 41 games across all competitions.

One of Gordon’s biggest contributions came in the Carabao Cup. Although he was suspended for the final, the Merseyside-born winger scored in both semi-final legs against Arsenal to help guide Newcastle to Wembley, where they ultimately lifted the trophy.

Well, perhaps Mbeumo can become the right-sided Gordon in this Newcastle side. They play on opposite flanks, and with Gordon being right-footed on the left and the Brentford man left-footed on the right, both like to cut inside on their stronger foot and look to get a shot off.

They are also statistically similar via FBref from this season. For example, the Brentford attacker averages 1.84 key passes and 0.54 goal-creating actions per 90 minutes. In comparison, Newcastle’s number 10 averages 1.92 key passes and 0.45 goal-creating actions each game.

Mbeumo and Gordon key stats compared

Stat (per 90)

Mbeumo

Gordon

Goals per shot on target

0.39

0.32

Key passes

1.84

1.92

Progressive passes

3.74

3.58

Goal-creating actions

0.54

0.45

Take-ons completed

1.38

1.40

Stats from FBref

Football statistician Statman Dave described Mbeumo as a “deadly” attacker, and with the numbers he has put up this season, it is easy to see why. There is no doubt, he would enhance the Newcastle attack, and could well become the second coming of Gordon.

Brentford's BryanMbeumolooks dejected after the match

Although £60m is a large fee, the winger is seemingly worth the money, so perhaps the Magpies should take the plunge and bring Mbeumo to St James’ Park next season.

100% duels lost: 4/10 Newcastle dud must never start for the club again

Newcastle United are now hanging onto third spot in the Premier League after a narrow 1-0 defeat away at Arsenal.

ByKelan Sarson May 18, 2025

Contact made: Man Utd make first move to sign "unbelievable" £62m forward

Manchester United have now made contact over a move for an “unbelievable” striker, whose agent is due to fly to England for talks, according to a report.

Man Utd stepping up striker pursuit

The lack of a reliable goalscorer has been a real problem for Man United this season, once again failing to find the back of the net in the 0-0 draw against Manchester City at the weekend, and they are now stepping up their pursuit of a new striker.

Ipswich Town’s Liam Delap has now emerged as one of United’s major targets, identifying the Englishman as their first-choice option, but given that there is widespread interest in his signature, the Red Devils may be forced to move on to alternative targets.

Another potential signing is Sporting CP’s Viktor Gyokeres, and United have now taken their first step towards signing the Sporting CP star by submitting a £64m bid, although there could be fierce competition for the 26-year-old from Chelsea and Arsenal.

Amorim's own Salah: Man Utd pushing to sign "Europe's best player" for £67m

Man United need to make a range of impactful signings in the transfer market this summer.

By
Angus Sinclair

Apr 7, 2025

The Gunners are also in the race for Wolverhampton Wanderers star Matheus Cunha, according to a report from talkSPORT, which states Man United have now made contact with the Brazilian’s agent ahead of a potential summer transfer swoop.

Cunha’s agent is set to fly to England for in-person discussions with potential suitors, which could include United, although the likes of Nottingham Forest and Arsenal retain an interest.

The 25-year-old is set to be available for a fee of £62m this summer, at which point his release clause kicks in, and he could fit the bill for Ruben Amorim, who is looking for a number 10 for his 3-4-2-1 system.

"Unbelievable" Cunha could upgrade Man Utd's frontline

There is little doubt Amorim will need to bring in a new striker this summer, given that Joshua Zirkzee and Rasmus Hojlund have just 14 goals between them in all competitions this season.

The Wolves forward has 15 goals to his name by himself, with 13 of those coming in the Premier League, playing a major role in preserving the Old Gold’s top-flight status, and he has been performing at a very high level for quite some time.

Cunha has proven himself as a reliable goalscorer in the Premier League, which could give him the edge on some other targets from across the continent, so it is promising news that Man United could make a move this summer.

However, it seems a wise decision to make Delap the top target, given that the 22-year-old has also been extremely impressive in front of goal this season, and he could be available for less than Cunha at £50m.

Stats – Kohli becomes first Indian to 13,000 T20 runs; Bhuvneshwar overtakes Bravo

Stats highlights from the Wankhede Stadium, where RCB ended a 10-year-long drought against MI

Sampath Bandarupalli07-Apr-20252015 – The last time Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) had defeated Mumbai Indians (MI) at Wankhede. RCB lost their last six outings at the venue against MI, failing to defend a total on five occasions.221 for 5 – RCB’s total on Monday is their second-highest against MI in the IPL, behind the 235 for 1 in 2015.3 – RCB have won all three matches they have played away from home this season – Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) at Eden Gardens, Chennai Super Kings (CSK) at Chepauk, and MI at Wankhede. Only one team before them beat all three at their respective home venues in an IPL season – Kings XI Punjab (now Punjab Kings) in 2012.Related

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13,050 – Runs scored by Virat Kohli in T20 cricket. He is only the fifth player and the first from India to complete 13,000 runs in the format. He is the second-fastest batter to that milestone, in 386 innings, only behind Chris Gayle (381 innings).184 – Wickets for Bhuvneshwar Kumar in the IPL, the most by a fast bowler, surpassing Dwayne Bravo’s tally of 183. Bhuvneshwar is also now the third-highest wicket-taker in the IPL.1.89% – Win probability for MI as per ESPNcricinfo’s forecaster when they needed 123 runs to win off just 47 balls. That went up to 48.42% before Tilak Varma fell in the 18th over after adding 89 runs in just 5.4 overs with Hardik Pandya.12 – Number of 200-plus totals while chasing for MI are the most by any team in T20s. PBKS are next on the list, with 11 200-plus totals. Only five of those 12 totals by MI have come in successful chases.208 – Runs scored by Indian players for RCB on Monday. It is the highest contribution from Indian batters for RCB in an IPL match, surpassing the 188 runs against Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) in the 2022 eliminator.The Indian players at MI also had a good hit with the bat on Monday. They aggregated 362 runs across both innings, the third-most for an IPL match.57 – Runs conceded by Trent Boult in his four overs on Monday, the most he has conceded in his 251-match T20 career. It was also the first time he conceded 50-plus runs in an IPL match.29 – Balls that Kohli needed to complete his fifty, his fastest in the IPL since 2018. It was his fifth-fastest fifty in the IPL and his fastest in all T20s since the 21-ball fifty against West Indies in 2019 at the same venue.

Rafiq, Vaughan, Yorkshire: a race reckoning

More than two years on into the Yorkshire racism saga, it has taken a toll on all sides, and landed all parties in a deeply unsatisfactory place

Osman Samiuddin24-Mar-2023Nobody other than a handful of people can ever know for sure whether Michael Vaughan said what he is alleged to have said to four Yorkshire players nearly 14 years ago. “There’s too many of you lot, we need to do something about that”, or in some recollections, with a slightly tweaked second clause: “we need to have a word about that”. Fourteen years is a long time, so a word lost here or there is to be expected, but nobody disputes – not the recipients or Vaughan – that, if uttered, it would have been a racist statement.Of the four – three British-Asians and one Pakistani – three say they heard it. Ajmal Shahzad says he didn’t hear it and says that Vaughan was not that way inclined, being the way of the racist. Rana Naved-ul-Hasan said he heard it but chose not to give evidence to that effect. Of the others in the vicinity that day, we don’t know.Not even the three-person panel of the Cricket Discipline Commission (CDC), who sat over a five-day hearing at the start of March for this and other allegations made by Azeem Rafiq can ever know for sure. They don’t need to. They aim to reach a verdict by the end of the month based on the lower of two yardsticks in adjudications: on the balance of probability, the yardstick for a civil hearing, and not proved beyond reasonable doubt. That is, on the balance of probabilities, did Vaughan say what he is alleged to have said, or not?Related

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Two and a half years after Rafiq began the most urgent conversation the UK has had about race in cricket, and here we are, obsessing about those words. It is not, perhaps, where anyone intended to be. But given how it began, that is not surprising. The interview Rafiq gave to wisden.com’s Taha Hashim in August 2020 did not intend to focus on the racism he says he suffered at Yorkshire. That was a detour in an otherwise evocative profile on the fading of a once promising young cricketer who was a symbol of the county’s inclusiveness credentials.Then it barrelled away, slap-bang, into a fervent and ongoing culture war. People lost jobs. Careers ended. Sponsors left. Allegations of racism at other counties tumbled out. The government took note. Parliamentarians held hearings. Newspapers took sides. Social media poured petrol on to the burning heap. Yorkshire were left on the verge of financial ruin.And then here we were, at the International Arbitration Centre in the heart of London, its slick and featureless interior with unremarkable conference and meeting rooms, the anaesthetising aesthetic designed, one might reasonably suspect, to draw the sting and heat from the disputes to be settled within.

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Hard evidence for the Vaughan allegation is scant, so to speak. Broadcast footage of the pre-game huddle at about the time Vaughan is alleged to have said it, exists. But it’s a tease. There is no footage of the exact moment the remark is alleged to have been made when the huddle broke away to enter the field.The investigation into whether Michael Vaughan, seen here arriving at the International Arbitration Centre for hearings earlier this month, made a racist utterance has been undermined by questions raised about how it has been conducted•Justin Tallis/AFP/Getty ImagesThe footage is not incriminating, which explains why it has been used by both the prosecution – the ECB in this case – and Vaughan’s defence for their own ends. Jane Mulcahy, the ECB’s lead counsel, highlights a 19-second gap in footage away from the camera where such a thing been said. Christopher Stoner, Vaughan’s lawyer, counters that the footage confirms Vaughan’s innocence. The team goes on to the field in good spirit; Adil Rashid, one of the quartet allegedly targeted by this remark and who says he heard it, is seen joshing with Tim Bresnan (who has also been charged with making racist comments on a separate occasion). There’s no way he would have said it, Vaughan reasons, because that’s not who he is, and especially not before a game because the impact would have hurt his side’s chances of winning.Even Vaughan shaking hands with the four players, as seen on the clip, has been weaponised. The prosecution say it is a sign he singled them out. The defence say it reflected a moment of genuine pride, referred to in Vaughan’s memoir from the same year: three British Asian players, homegrown, turning out for Yorkshire, a county with a long, exclusionary history, was worth celebrating.The prosecution sees Vaughan’s social-media persona as central. Referring to some of his tweets from that time – which Vaughan agreed were “unacceptable” – they say the tone is similar to the alleged remark. “If a person has a tendency to make racist comments,” Mulcahy argued, before garnishing it with some QED, “they have a tendency to make racist comments.”Mulcahy’s case builds on the atmosphere at Yorkshire CCC in that time as supporting evidence. The club has since admitted failing to address the systemic use of racist language. Two Yorkshire players, Matthew Hoggard and Gary Ballance, have admitted to making racist remarks in that period. Vaughan says he couldn’t recall Hoggard making such remarks in the dressing room. (Six other individuals as well as Yorkshire were charged by the ECB, though only Vaughan appeared to defend himself. Yorkshire and Hoggard have admitted, or part-admitted to some charges; the others have all denied them and refused to attend the hearing, claiming the process is flawed.)The crux of Vaughan’s defence, meanwhile, is that the ECB investigation was deeply flawed. Stoner called it “woefully and wholly inadequate”. The ECB, Stoner said, was hellbent on pinning Vaughan from the off, not only by not interviewing enough people but not even interviewing Vaughan himself, as well as ignoring evidence and testimony that was counter to their case. “Due process matters and it is the cornerstone of law,” Stoner said. “But in our submission, it was sent on holiday by the ECB.”There’s plenty else for the panel to consider; the amount of paperwork submitted constitutes a ferocious assault on the environment. A lot of it is one person’s word against another’s, though, so the case more or less boils down to this: Vaughan’s social media and various admissions on the one side, against potential flaws in the ECB investigation on the other.Protesters at Headingley in November 2021, following the publication of parts of the report of an investigation Yorkshire conducted into Rafiq’s allegations•Peter Byrne/PA Photos/Getty ImagesWords are important, as acknowledged in an exchange between the ECB’s legal head Meena Botros and Stoner, but the question for the panel is: whose?

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If that feels like a deeply inadequate place to be in after all this, then it is of a piece with the entire hearing. The CDC is more used to parochial housekeeping – sanctioning counties for fielding improperly registered players or issuing points deductions for poor pitches. Occasionally there might be the flutter of an anti-corruption breach or a doping case. Recently it has encountered racism-adjacent territory, retrospectively punishing players for inappropriate social-media behaviour in the past.This is bigger. This is one of the most successful modern England captains, a prominent media personality, against the man who has become the face of antiracism. This is a battle for unclaimed frontiers in that culture war. If Vaughan is found not guilty but the others charged are, it will likely allow many to see it as proof that there is no racism in English cricket, or that the problem is overblown; or that Rafiq is – and this is already a popular trope in such cases – a troublemaker. If Vaughan is found guilty, he has the right to appeal, and given that he has argued the very shape of his “life and livelihood” is at stake, he will exercise it. There is no end here, only more ammunition for the culture war.Yet on paper this hearing is about alleged breaches of ECB directive 3.3, which isn’t specifically about discrimination or racism. It is about bringing the game into disrepute. The ECB has an anti-discrimination code and a directive (3.4) that says each participant must be bound by it, but because that was only introduced in March 2021 and these cases pre-date it, charges cannot be laid under that code. That it took the ECB until 2021 to put in place a specific nationwide anti-discrimination code for all cricket under its jurisdiction, and then only as a response to Black Lives Matter, is itself an indictment. It isn’t as if these issues are new or that Yorkshire is the only county side with a past.It also speaks to the complicated historical nature of such allegations, and indeed more broadly, of the moment we find ourselves in. Laws and codes change as communities and values do, but they still can’t be applied retroactively to past behaviour, even though it might seem suitable to do so. Or, as the columnist Hadley Freeman wrote two years ago about the late novelist Philip Roth, whose work was being, let’s say, robustly reappraised in light of #MeToo: “Looked at from the point of view of today, every single thing from the past is on the wrong side of the modern moment, because that’s how time works.”In this case, of course, it isn’t that the words and behaviours in question were not offensive in 2009. They were; this isn’t the re-editing of Roald Dahl’s books which are much further away from the modern moment. But, as with the panic when old, inappropriate tweets from current England players were dug out, there’s no satisfactory consensus yet on how to deal with it.Consequently, having the CDC be the arbiter of what amounts to a Brief Modern History of Racism in English Cricket is much like the trial for the murder of Nicole Simpson being adjudicated upon by the Brentwood Residents’ Committee in LA.

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The greater burden and scrutiny in these matters must fall necessarily on institutions. They are the ones who make the rules, who maintain them, and who run investigations against those who break them. The case Stoner made against the ECB’s investigation of Vaughan’s allegations, lasering in on procedural flaws, was compelling. Arguably, though, the bigger questions about the roles of the ECB as a regulatory body and one of its constituents, Yorkshire, which Stoner crept up to without quite raising fully, are more troubling.The ECB under Tom Harrison launched an investigation into racism in Yorkshire cricket, but the board’s position has been riven by conflicts of interest•Getty ImagesYorkshire have behaved exactly as you would imagine a county at war with itself might. When they first conducted an independent investigation, using the legal firm Squire Patton Boggs (SPB), the club was not found to be institutionally racist, although seven of 43 allegations Rafiq made, including of racist behaviour, were upheld. Nevertheless, Yorkshire’s chairman when the investigation took place, Roger Hutton, told parliamentarians (after he had stepped down) that he thought the club institutionally racist.Hutton’s own underwhelming standing within the county didn’t help and, done in by a lack of support from the ECB and Yorkshire, he was replaced by Lord Kamlesh Patel. A renowned former social worker in Bradford who had worked his way up and through the English establishment to become a peer, Patel seemed right for the job. He had been an independent director on the ECB board, loved cricket, and had experience of racism first-hand.Under his chairmanship, Yorkshire turned 180 degrees, admitting that the club had failed to address the systemic use of racist language by multiple players and employees over a long period. That sounds a lot like admitting to institutional racism without admitting to institutional racism, and a not unreasonable inference to draw is that it allowed Yorkshire to escape deeper cross-examination at the CDC, while also displaying sufficient culpability.Initially Yorkshire had said they would take no further disciplinary action after the SPB investigation. The investigation, which began in September 2020, took nearly a year. The report was presented to Yorkshire in August 2021 but to this day has not been published in full (it emerged that Hutton had links to SPB, bringing the firm’s independence into question).But soon after Lord Patel became chair in November 2021, the club summarily sacked 16 backroom and support staff. It was dressed up as a necessary reset of the club’s culture. Many of the 16 had put their names to a letter to the county board, complaining about the reputational damage Rafiq’s unchallenged claims had wrought on the club and about, as they saw it, his “one-man mission” to bring down the club.And then a week before the CDC hearing began, the kind of stuff CIA suits go to jail for at the end of Bourne films: Yorkshire publicly admitted to a mass deletion of emails and documents relating to the Rafiq case, but by unspecified persons and at an unspecified time around that of Lord Patel’s appointment. Except, during the hearing it was reported that senior club officials were sure that the documents were still in Yorkshire’s possession well after Lord Patel took over. Yorkshire are not unfamiliar with internal strife historically, but rarely can the club have been as pulled apart, at both ends of this culture war.A banner with an antiracist message on a fence at Headingley Stadium in 2021•Oli Scarf/AFP/Getty ImagesThe sackings feel now like an inflection point. Two of the signatories to the letter – head coach Andrew Gale and bowling coach Richard Pyrah – were among those charged by the ECB at the CDC. There was also the batting coach, Paul Grayson, who joined the men’s side in 2019, Rafiq had left the club, and so it wasn’t clear what the case against him had been. Kunwar Bansil, the club’s British Asian physio, was a signatory; Bansil was interviewed by Michael Atherton after he was sacked and spoke of a very different experience at Yorkshire to Rafiq’s.By then, though, there was no space in the discourse for grey. Everything had built unceasingly to this moment. The delay and secrecy over the SPB investigation, the lack of ostensible action in its wake, the public furore after Rafiq’s emotional appearance at a parliamentary committee. Somebody needed to pay and these 16 did.Except, by Yorkshire’s own admission, it was done without due process and was “procedurally unfair”. The letter the sacked staff had sent, seen by ESPNcricinfo, was bruising and not without vindictiveness in tone. It also did not acknowledge Rafiq’s experiences of racism at all, instead calling him “problematic” and “a complete liability off the field”. Firing the letter-writers, as Yorkshire did, ultimately cost the county nearly £1.5 million in severance payouts. The real cost was in entrenching the polarisation. Rafiq had been treated appallingly. Now there were 16 staff who could claim the same. At best, it was a purge; at worst, it came across as a crass act of revenge by Yorkshire on Yorkshire.Perhaps this wasn’t two Yorkshires but the same old Yorkshire, after all, as David Hopps said, detecting cruel irony in what Lord Patel had done. “Uncompromising, implacable, adamant that only his way is the right one, and supremely confident in his own moral compass, he has revealed many of the Yorkshire attributes that over generations have caused the county so much pain.”In a rare recent interview Patel gave to , he said that he had been asked by the ECB to come in and “turn the disaster around”. The publication claimed to disclose (in their words) that “the ECB urged him to get rid of people”. Which people wasn’t clear but Lord Patel said: “I was asked by the ECB to ensure some people who were there from the previous regime did not take part in that governance process.” The interview reads like a valedictory middle finger to the ECB – Patel steps down this month – claiming that ECB support wasn’t forthcoming once he had done what he had been asked to do.The interview was brought up at the CDC by Vaughan’s team, during a tense and uneasy exchange with Botros. It got close to what is, in some ways, the knotted heart of this matter – though it did not go right into it. Did the ECB, under pressure to act post-BLM and Rafiq, bring Lord Patel in specifically to clean house at Yorkshire? The interview leaves little doubt this was the case.Lord Kamlesh Patel speaks to the press after taking over as chairman of the Yorkshire board in 2021. It has emerged since that he might have been under pressure to sack people seen as belonging to the previous regime•Danny Lawson/PA Photos/Getty ImagesIf so, that would place the ECB as the game’s promoter and regulator, a former employer of Vaughan, a prosecutor in this case, and from one interpretation of Patel’s interview, an active participant because of the sackings. In the intersection of those duties, there must lie some conflict, and even, perhaps, a curtailing of the ECB’s ability – as Vaughan’s team argued – to be fair and impartial in the hearings. At best, as ESPNcricinfo’s UK editor Andrew Miller noted, it spotlighted the somewhat circular absurdity of the whole affair, the ECB charging its own constituents for failures that it, as the overall regulator of the game, must bear some responsibility for.Botros came across as both imperturbable and somewhat hapless, not least when Lord Patel’s interview came up, in a three-hour grilling. No, he said, he didn’t say Patel was not being truthful. But he also denied “any knowledge of the ECB telling Lord Patel to sack anyone”. He just didn’t have knowledge of the things Patel had spoken about.

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A little tempering of this critique of institutional failings is advisable, given that racism inquiries or investigations are messy, difficult processes and rarely resolved tidily. Nobody . Somebody just ends up slightly less unhappy than somebody else. As Cricket South Africa well knows, having grappled with issues of race, discrimination, and representation near daily since its readmission post-apartheid in 1992.Partly as a response to BLM and the discussions it ignited, CSA set up the Social Justice and Nation-building (SJN) hearings in the South African summer of 2021. It did not constitute a disciplinary process. They began as a compensatory process for players who had been victims of racism, but that idea was dropped because, well, putting a cost to racism is another level of messy.Instead, they became a bit like the country’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission after apartheid, an open house for former players and administrators to unload traumas. Some of the testimonies were harrowing. Others were little more than the ordinary grievances carried around like an ID badge by professional athletes who never quite made it.It was an imperfect process and ended up with the least desirable but most predictable outcome: having to weigh one person’s word against another’s in a formal disciplinary proceeding. Which is not tenable because victims of racism, as ESPNcricinfo’s South Africa correspondent Firdose Moonda likes to say, don’t carry around receipts for the racism inflicted upon them.Graeme Smith and Mark Boucher faced investigations after the hearings. Smith was cleared and charges against Boucher were withdrawn after witnesses, including Paul Adams, declined to appear. Smith was CSA’s director of cricket then and is now commissioner of the SA20; Boucher was South Africa coach then and is an IPL coach now. Of the receipt-less alleged victims, Thami Tsolekile was, and still is, serving a ban for corruption; Adams’ promising coaching career, meanwhile, was throttled by the board itself – according to a former board CEO – because of the deep-set inequalities in the game in the country.Adil Rashid features on a mural for the Hundred in Bradford. Rashid, along with the likes of Moeen Ali, has been seen as a success story of British Asians from the north of England making it big in cricket•Oli Scarf/AFP/Getty ImagesStill, the hearings served a purpose. They painted an alternative but necessary history of that great South Africa side, and really, of modern South African cricket. It was sobering and, hopefully, cautionary. The collective unburdening felt necessary at that point because these were stories that had not been publicly aired, and given they finally had been, at the very least they would provide some residual deterrence.This is not the CDC’s remit. All it is tasked with doing is to work out the probability of whether 14 words of racist intent were spoken in Nottingham in June 2009. (To be fair, had all those charged turned up to defend themselves, this would have been a more substantial audit; that they didn’t is not on the CDC). Also, the CDC (or English cricket) does not operate in a country in which racism was state policy. The SJN hearings had the very tangible and real legacy of apartheid to rail against. It gave that discourse a shape.English cricket has no such target. All it has is the anxious and hurried acknowledgment, after BLM, after Rafiq, that there is racism within the game. Is it institutional or does it permeate the game? The shape, extent, and nature of it is not clear. Yorkshire has been pulled up. How many skeletons exist in how many other counties’ closets? In recent years, the chairmen of Middlesex and Essex have been condemned or officially sanctioned for inappropriate or outright racist comments. Playing staff at both counties are deeply unrepresentative of London, given their pool of talent comes from London or Greater London, areas with the country’s most diverse demographic.What of the culpability of the ECB in all this, with the broader responsibility to make the game more inclusive? What of its own failures, including but not limited to the abysmally low rates of conversion of recreational cricket to professional cricket for British South Asians, barriers in pathways the ECB is aware of but has struggled to overcome; the fact that only one British Asian has ever been head coach of a county; or that there are two umpires of colour in a 34-person panel (after none were appointed for nearly two decades ); or the 75% decline over time in the number of black British professional players that led to Surrey setting up the ACE programme in 2020; or, in recognising, as Rainford-Brent has, that the problems of the game’s inclusivity might be more acutely centred around socio-economic status, with race as subset.A more holistic reckoning will come in the shape of a report by the Independent Commission for Equity in Cricket (ICEC). The Commission was formed two years ago to examine race, gender and class in the English game. It has collected evidence from over 4000 people of their lived experiences within the game and the report – which will be made public – is due soon. could be a lot of words to take in.

PSL postponement: Operational fiasco casts doubt on organisers' positions

PCB’s over-reliance on testing and mistakes in key moments under scrutiny

Osman Samiuddin06-Mar-2021The PCB is scrambling to find a window to reschedule the curtailed sixth season of the PSL, with June in Karachi as one option. June is not usually part of Pakistan’s home season (though they did host the 2008 Asia Cup then) and windows in May and September have been talked about, but in a busy year for international cricket, space is at a premium.The board is keen to host it in Karachi, and though the UAE has been mentioned as a potential host, the fear is that if they do go that way, it would squander all the groundwork done in convincing international teams to play in Pakistan.Whenever and wherever the season is completed, the planning and implementation of a biosecure bubble will almost definitely be outsourced to a specialist firm. That will be a tacit acknowledgment by the board of the failures of this season – the board’s head doctor and the man in charge of those protocols Dr Sohail Saleem has on Saturday offered to resign – which was called off on Thursday after a spate of Covid-19 positive tests among players and staff.The outsourcing will be a key factor as they try to move ahead, even as the dust is far from settled on the events of the last week, the impact of which one senior Pakistan international has privately compared to the terror attacks on the Sri Lankan team in 2009.Related

  • Covid-19: Franchises ask PCB to move remainder of PSL 2021 from Karachi to UAE

  • ICC biosafety head: 'We don't want to cancel tournaments, we just want to have them safely'

  • PCB accepts Dr Sohail Saleem's resignation, looks to revamp medical department

  • PSL 2021 to resume in June

  • Non-playing PSL franchise member left bubble despite testing Covid-19 positive

Whether it becomes as seismic as that remains to be seen, but there is clear concern within the board that it could hit both the PSL and potential touring sides later in the year.Franchises and boards, meanwhile, are still sifting through the wreckage, the former beginning to detail their experiences inside the bubble and its loopholes.Though not alone, scrutiny will be on two-time winners Islamabad United, where in Fawad Ahmed, the first positive test after the tournament began was recorded. Three other players from the franchise have tested positive since. The franchise – and the PCB – has already had to defend itself over protocols followed during a social media shoot.In communication that is expected to be sent to the PCB, the franchise reveals that despite complaining of feeling unwell after the evening game on Saturday, February 27, Ahmed wasn’t given a Covid test until the following evening, at 9pm, despite repeated requests. The franchise claims when Ahmed initially consulted the PCB doctor, informing him of a stomach pains, he was told it didn’t fit Covid symptoms. The doctor was unable to see him the next morning because of another unrelated medical incident.Though Ahmed was put into immediate isolation, it isn’t clear whether the rest of the squad, as close contacts, went into isolation – and if they did, for how long. There are conflicting reports on this, but both the PCB and Islamabad tweeted only that Ahmed had been put in isolation when they eventually made his result public and that other members had all since tested negative.The question of isolation becomes especially significant in light of a birthday party held for Azhar Mahmood, fast-bowling coach with the Multan Sultans, on the same evening as Ahmed complained of feeling unwell. Hasan Ali, Ahmed’s team-mate, attended that party (in the same hotel) as well as a number of other players from other franchises.

Ostensibly, that party didn’t breach protocols because it was only attended by people already within the bubble – as Islamabad reiterated in the same thread. And it is also unknown whether Ali was aware at the time that Ahmed was unwell, or that he had been put in isolation. But as a close contact of a player who did test positive, he was now in a room with a number of other players and officials – some of whom, like Babar Azam, would go on to play a game the next day.It is the response to this first positive case – and during the build-up to it when Ahmed was unwell – that are likely to bear most focus. In particular, questions will be asked as to why it took so long for Ahmed to be tested after his initial complaint; and why, once it was confirmed he was positive and on the basis of Ali’s appearance at the party, the attendees of that party were not asked to isolate or take any kind of precautions.The responsibility of who was supposed to have conducted that kind of track and trace has slipped through the cracks between league management and franchise management: both have suggested to ESPNcricinfo the other should have been responsible but it is clear that there was no communication to those at the party.Fawad Ahmed’s positive test left the league at a critical juncture•Getty ImagesIn retrospect, the decision on Monday (the day Ahmed’s positive test was made public) to simply reschedule Islamabad’s match for the following day, rather than locking down the league for a few days there and then, seems a fatal moment.In fact, in one franchise’s breakdown of that day, communicated to the PCB, they describe a state of panic among players as the match was initially delayed and then postponed. Some international players, in that account, called for the league to be shut down for three days.The PCB’s rationale for going ahead was that all players involved in the game had cleared at least two tests since Ahmed’s positive test – one rapid test and then a PCR test for all franchises. Given what is widely known about the incubation period of the virus this seems misplaced – and to some extent borne out by the fact of Ali emerging as one of the positive tests the day the league was called off. He had been at the party only a few nights previous and had even played a game in that time.Testing, in fact, appears to have been the central – and at times, it has felt, only – plank in the PCB’s coping with the effects of the pandemic on cricket. That was evident in the Peshawar Zalmi incident at the start of this PSL when, on the basis of two negative tests in 48 hours, Wahab Riaz and Daren Sammy were allowed to reintegrate into the squad despite breaches of protocol.Towards the end of last year, the board highlighted that it had conducted nearly 3000 tests across the domestic season. But the fragility of measures alongside it – such as biosecure bubbles and protocols – was evident in, for example, the number of players turning up with positive results in New Zealand; more relevantly, it was evident in the number of cases that emerged from the playoffs of the PSL’s fifth season, played last November.Franchises are expected to highlight a number of complaints about what went on in the Karachi hotel bubble over the next few days: from quarantine periods being considered too short at three days, to daily glitches like elevators not being secured for those inside the bubble alone, to questions about the cutlery being used to serve those in the bubble, or whether the hotel’s kitchen and service staff were all part of the bubble and even to how the exit of players was handled. Once again, the PCB has relied on tests cleared to let people leave the hotel and travel back, overlooking the fact that the virus can incubate for several days before it shows up in a test, or through symptoms.What is emerging is a picture of an operational fiasco above all, where the SOPs (standard operating procedures) and protocols in place were not sufficiently secure and where the implementation of them was worse. Pressure will build for heads to roll – Dr Sohail Saleem looks set to be the first, but is unlikely to be the last.

Shohei Ohtani Had Hilarious Gesture for Heckling Padres Fan After Hitting Homer

Shohei Ohtani is plenty familiar with all of the animosity that comes with the rivalry between the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres. Every time the two teams meet, it makes for a tense game and plenty of jeering from fans.

One heckler during Sunday's game at Petco Park was silenced by Ohtani the old fashioned way: with one swing of the bat. In the ninth inning of the Dodgers' 8–2 win, Ohtani parked a ball in the bleachers, hitting a solo shot out to center field. When he got back to the visitors dugout, he paused to shake the hand of a Padres fan who had been relentlessly heckling him throughout the game.

The fan looked totally shocked to see Ohtani coming up for a handshake, and he shrunk in his seat as Ohtani packed his bat while celebrating his solo homer.

Dave Roberts and some others in the dugout were loving their front-row seats to Ohtani's bit of sassy retaliation. The team was all tuned in and laughing as the Dodgers' designated hitter addressed the heckler head-on.

Sunday's win sees L.A. get back on level-pegging with the Padres for the NL West lead, with both teams now tied up at 74-57 on the year.

Olho nas coincidências! Vasco aposta em escrita histórica para vencer o Flamengo no Brasileirão

MatériaMais Notícias

O próximo confronto do Vasco pelo Brasileirão será nada menos que o Clássico dos Milhões, contra o Flamengo, neste domingo (2), no Maracanã. Como trunfo para esta partida, o Gigante da Colina tem uma coincidência interessante. Na última vez que venceu o rival pelo Campeonato Brasileiro, o Cruz-maltino teve um treinador estreante. Relembre!

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➡️ Tudo sobre o Gigante agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso canal Lance! Vasco

Celso Roth começou sua caminhada pelo Vasco contra o Flamengo

Em 2015, o Clássico dos Milhões aconteceu na 9ª rodada. Na Arena Pantanal, Vasco e Flamengo entraram desesperados em campo e precisavam de uma vitória para deixar o Z-4. Àquela altura, o Gigante da Colina ainda não havia conquistado vitória alguma no Brasileirão.

Logo na primeira etapa, Madson deixou Riascos na boa para abrir o placar e definir o jogo. 1 x 0. No mesmo ano, mas pela Copa do Brasil, Jorginho também estreou com vitória diante do Rubro-negro.

continua após a publicidadeÁlvaro Pacheco deu injeção de ânimo à equipe

Os primeiros contatos do elenco vascaíno com Álvaro Pacheco foram animadores. Com uma característica forte e paixão pelo trabalho, o português já começou a conquistar os jogadores do Vasco.

-Os primeiros contatos do elenco vascaíno com Álvaro Pacheco foram animadores. Com uma característica forte e paixão pelo trabalho, o português já começou a conquistar os jogadores do Vasco-, disse Lucas Piton, em Media Day do Grupo Globo.

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