Hyderabad prodigy G Trisha hopes to live her father's dreams at the U-19 World Cup

The 17-year-old allrounder first picked up bat and ball at the age of two and has never looked back since

Annesha Ghosh13-Jan-2023Where would Indian women’s cricket be without farsighted fathers?Dorai Raj made a cricket icon out of a sleepy girl. Harmander Singh Bhullar raised his firstborn “like a son” and she went on to take India into the World Cup final with an epochal 171 not out. Shriniwas Mandhana was so smitten by left-hander batters that he ensured his naturally right-handed daughter morphed into one of the game’s most prolific left-hand openers. Ivan Rodrigues and Sanjeev Verma pushed against all sorts of obstacles to turn the first female child in their respective families into teen debutants for India.The latest in the list of enterprising Indian dads making precocious international cricketers out of their daughters is GV Rami Reddy. G Trisha, his only child, considers him “the single biggest reason” why she has made it to the squad of 15 to represent India at the inaugural Under-19 Women’s World Cup, which kicks off in South Africa tomorrow.Related

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“I came to know cricket through my dad at a time when I could barely tell what cricket was,” Trisha, 17, says of her early initiation into the sport as a two-year-old. “Maybe it’s only as I grow older that I’ll be able to fully appreciate my dad’s contribution in my life and cricket, all the sacrifices he’s made for me, the direction he’s given my life.”A batting allrounder who bowls legspin, Trisha has been considered a prodigy on the domestic circuit for as long as she has played the game at the competitive level. At seven she took part in the Telangana state’s district senior women’s meet and featured in the U-19 girls competition organised by the School Games Federation of India a year later.Trisha on her father’s role in her career: “I think he has everything sorted in his head since I started playing the sport, with a plastic bat and ball, or even before that”•Courtesy GV Rami ReddyWhen only a few months shy of nine, she played for Hyderabad’s U-16 side in the inter-state tournament in 2014-15. The following season she broke into the state U-23 side and not long after that, made her debuts for the Hyderabad and South Zone U-19s.The last time a young female cricketer turned heads in Hyderabad cricketing circles with this kind of precocity, she ended up being the leading run-scorer in the women’s international game. “Mithali Raj – what do I tell about her?” says Trisha. “Growing up in Hyderabad and training at the same coaching centre – St John’s Cricket Academy – as her are the obvious commonalities we share. But to get anywhere close to being a cricketer like her, I know I will have to keep working hard.”I have seen her practise at the academy since my father enrolled me there as a seven-year-old. Like for many others, she’s been a role model for me too, and I have been quite lucky to get advice from her whenever she visits the academy.”Better still, call it a coincidence or something else, Mithali was one of the batters I ended up bowling to on my senior debut for Hyderabad, against Railways.”In that tournament, the 2017-18 senior women’s inter-state T20 competition, Trisha featured primarily as a bowler. Her consistency apart, that she could open both the batting and bowling for her age-group sides played a part in fast-tracking her into top-flight domestic cricket.”It’s majorly down to my dad’s planning,” says Trisha, laughing, when asked about what making her senior debut a few weeks after her 13th birthday felt like. “Sure, me gradually taking a liking to the sport did help but had he not got me into the game early, I wouldn’t have been able to have this much domestic cricket under my belt already.”G Trisha’s career stats

India U-19: 6 matches, 130 runs, 3 wkts
List A: 20 matches, 370 runs, Highest score: 69, 17 wkts, Best 5 for 17
T20s: 21 matches, 335 runs, Highest score: 56*, 16 wkts, Best 3 for 10

“I think he has everything sorted in his head since I started playing the sport, with a plastic bat and ball, or even before that.”A former fitness trainer with the ITC conglomerate in Bhadrachalam, a small town in south-east Telangana, Reddy, who is now 52, quit his job of more than a decade and moved to East Marredpally, a residential suburb of Secunderabad in 2013.”The only motive was to give Trisha better opportunities to train and play proper cricket,” he says. “To make a world-class cricketer from a country of more than 1.30 crore population requires effort and early investment, and that’s what I have tried to do. Bhadrachalam didn’t have quality facilities or cricket grounds, so I had to risk what was a settled life for me and my family until then.”A former U-16 national-level hockey player from Andhra Pradesh in the early 1980s, Reddy felt being short-statured put him at a disadvantage to pursue a career in one of his other favourite sports, tennis.”I didn’t have the genes [of height], but had the passion, so when I got married, I made up my mind that girl or boy, I will provide everything my child needs to play cricket for India. It’s a sport where, like football, you can excel even if you are short.”Reddy, true to his words, was on the job soon after Trisha was born in 2005, the year India Women made their first appearance in a World Cup final. That tournament was played in South Africa, where she is now set to play in the U-19 World Cup.Former Hyderabad spinner and India fielding coach R Sridhar has been one of the guiding forces behind Trisha’s rise to international cricket•Courtesy GV Rami Reddy”In that era, women’s cricket was fairly unknown in our country – a pity if you think of the heights the likes of Mithali Raj, Jhulan Goswami were taking Indian cricket to at the time,” reflects Reddy. “My understanding was that most kids in India typically start playing cricket at age six or seven. I needed to do something extra to give my daughter an edge.”For starters, he would put on cricket on the television at home and in the gyms of the ITC facilities where he worked, while his wife, G Madhavi, breastfed infant Trisha. Reddy affectionately recalls how the 18-month-old would be drawn to the luminescence of the screen. “Those little eyes, the light brightening up her tiny face as she lay in her mother’s lap… there was something special about those moments. Her first brush with cricket, really.”By her second birthday Trisha had a plastic bat in hand and would knock plastic balls at public parks in Bhadrachalam. When she was three, Reddy introduced her to practising with the tennis ball, and at four, she would frequently do batting drills in the corridors of the gyms he worked in. The number of balls Reddy would throw at her daily also increased over time: from 100 to 200 and then 300.”For those many knockings, the only trade-off was that Dad had to buy me something I liked,” Trisha says. “Mostly, it would be crayons or drawing books or any related stationery, because I have always enjoyed drawing. It’s gone from being one of my favourite pastimes as a kid, besides swimming, to something that now helps me unwind, switch off from cricket.”Reddy then had a cement pitch laid at a local ground in Bhadrachalam. One of his gym instructors took up coaching duties with Trisha in the evenings, and Reddy looked after her practice in the morning. Each session lasted nearly two hours, with an hour thrown in to work on her fitness too. In all, since the time she was around four, Trisha devoted some six hours a day to jogging, swimming, learning to bat, field and bowl medium pace.Trisha with India U-19 coach Nooshin Al Khadeer, who was in various coaching roles in Hyderabad as the youngster rose up the ranks in domestic cricket•Annesha Ghosh”It was after we moved to Secunderabad,” Reddy says, “that coaches John Manoj and Sreenu sir at St John’s suggested she become a spinner. “Trisha was seven at the time, and she was making steady progress as an opening batter. The coaches felt switching to spin could keep her from picking up injuries common to pace bowlers.”Her action, somewhat roundarm, has evolved naturally, says Reddy; he thinks it’s a bit like the Afghanistan wristspinner Rashid Khan’s. Among the coaches who have worked with Trisha to date, he reserves special thanks for R Sridhar, the former India men’s fielding coach, who was part of the backroom staff at St John’s, and former India spinner Nooshin Al Khadeer, the India U-19 coach at the World Cup, who held coaching positions at Hyderabad during Trisha’s debuts across all domestic teams.”Their guidance has been indispensable to Trisha’s journey,” he says. “Among other important advice, they encouraged her to retain her style of bowling when most felt it ‘looked unnatural.'”In October 2018, Trisha she was selected along with many India internationals in the National Cricket Academy’s spin-bowling camp in Baroda under Raj Kumar Sharma, who coached Virat Kohli when he was young.In the lead-up to the U-19 T20 World Cup, though, it’s her primary skill, batting, that has remained the focus within her all-round proficiency. She made the starting XI in all the preparatory series the India U-19s have played since November: the quadrangular series in Visakhapatnam, the bilateral assignment against a New Zealand Development side in Mumbai, and the away series against South Africa.India won them all, and Trisha says she enjoyed the experience of batting at No. 3. “The New Zealand series was our first bilateral series, and being an opener, coming at one-down brought me new learnings about my batting and adaptability.”A young Trisha in the nets•Courtesy GV Rami ReddyIn the T20 World Cup warm-ups, she made a five-ball 2 and 36-ball 44 batting at No. 3, against Australia and Bangladesh respectively.Reddy says Trisha’s solidity of technique, as well as her along-the-ground strokes and fitness to play long innings, could see her do well at No. 3.”Her coaches and I appreciate she’s only starting to get strong, so we have focused on her lofted strokes only after she turned 16,” he says. “Going for big shots when she lacked the power could have led to low returns. Without the runs, making the World Cup squad would have been unlikely.”Reddy says he goes over every performance of Trisha’s and carefully oversees her diet. To give his undivided attention to her cricket, he has quit his job and supports his family with the proceeds from the sale and lease of some ancestral land in Bhadrachalam.”Every month I use 20-30 new balls for her, and send her to special fitness and group coaching, give good nutrition involving chicken and fish, quinoa, dragon fruit, kiwi, blueberries, apples…” he says. “Cricket is an expensive sport but I am doing all I can.”It takes a village to raise a child, they say. But if Reddy’s efforts come to fruition, and a shared dream of his and Trisha’s becomes a reality, by the end of this month he might be remembered as the father who created a World Cup winner for India from scratch. It will be a first in the history of women’s cricket in the country.

Australia's opening dilemma: what are their options?

David Warner is ruled out, Will Pucovski has concussion and Joe Burns is badly short of runs

Andrew McGlashan11-Dec-20202:11

Smith on Pucovski’s concussion: ‘Everyone deals with injuries differently’

Hold the line, don’t panicThis would still appear the likely route, where Burns retains his place – he has been backed from the start by selectors, coach, captain and team-mates – with fingers crossed that he gets runs at the SCG or lifts for the occasion in Adelaide. He would be partnered by Marcus Harris, who last played a Test during the 2019 Ashes and has since tweaked his technique working alongside Chris Rogers, with 355 Sheffield Shield runs in three innings under his belt including a 239. Harris has nine Tests to his name, including four against India two years where he made 258 runs at 36.85, and in the following series against Sri Lanka he opened with Burns so it would not be an entirely unknown pairing.Joe Burns is bowled•Getty ImagesThe senior prosThe ship appears to have sailed on this one, but if you glance at social media (which, of course, is where all the proper selection debate happens) then you may notice a few mentions of Shaun Marsh and Usman Khawaja. The former had a prolific start to the Shield season, just as everyone, including Marsh himself, was moving on from his Test career. Speaking to , Justin Langer did not slam the door shut for Marsh: “You never discriminate against age. He’s doing everything possible,” he said. Khawaja, meanwhile, holds an average of 96.80 when opening the batting including 145 in the 2016-17 day-night Test against South Africa in Adelaide.Mission for MarnusThis is perhaps gaining a little momentum, a promotion one spot up for Marnus Labuschagne to plug the gap – most likely alongside Burns, but potentially even Harris if the selectors really get spooked by Burns’ form. As Steven Smith said yesterday, the No. 3 can be in to face the second ball of the match anyway so is there a massive difference if he goes in straight away? And if you can be thrust into an Ashes Test as a concussion sub, and never look back, you can probably handle this. Labuschagne has opened nine times in his first-class career, although not since 2016, and also did it in the recent ODI series after Warner’s injury although was dismissed for 7. The other byproduct of this move would be the middle-order batsman moving up a slot each which creates room for Cameron Green at No. 6. Green has done enough to suggest he could command a spot on batting alone, regardless of the bowling workload he is capable of.Marnus Labuschagne looks on during practice•Getty ImagesFrom left fieldThis one involves another batting-order reshuffle and is a bit more out-of-the-box: shift Matthew Wade up from No. 6. If it was alongside Burns it would retain the left-right combination and, as a punchy left-hander, Wade is not too dissimilar to Warner even though not the same pedigree. It would be a leap of faith given that Wade has never opened in first-class cricket (he does have an average of 57.25 from five innings at No. 3) although he has done it a lot in white-ball cricket, including a handful of ODIs, and on the Australia A tour of England in 2019 before the Ashes made one-day scores of 117 and 155 at the top of the order. This move would actually lead to fewer batsmen moving from their current positions but, like the Labuschagne option, would also open up the spot for Green.

Spurs have unearthed a "future £100m" star who could become their own Saka

Tottenham Hotspur swooped to appoint Thomas Frank as their new head coach ahead of the summer transfer window after they opted to remove Ange Postecoglou from his post.

The Australian manager won the Europa League at the end of the 2024/25 campaign, beating Manchester United in the final, but that was not enough for him to save his job.

Daniel Levy, who has since moved on from his role as chairman, parted ways with Postecoglou and snapped Frank up from Brentford, where he had won promotion to the Premier League and established the Bees in the division.

Four wins, two draws, and one defeat in the first seven matches of the top-flight campaign suggest that Spurs made a good decision when they changed managers this summer.

In his unveiling, the club’s official website noted that one of the reasons why Frank landed the job was that he has a proven track record in developing players.

Tottenham will now be hoping that he can work wonders with the plethora of talented young players at his disposal in North London, as he did with the likes of Bryan Mbeumo, Kevin Schade, and Yoane Wissa at Brentford.

Ranking Tottenham's most valuable U21 players

Whilst Frank could develop players of any age, the powers that be at Spurs may hope that he can develop the U21 players at the club to help them grow in value.

Tottenham have a rich history of developing and selling players. Gareth Bale and Luka Modric, both sold to Real Madrid, are notable examples, whilst Harry Kane came through the youth ranks before moving on to Bayern Munich in 2023 as the club’s all-time record goalscorer.

The Lilywhites may not have their next Kane in the making at the club at the moment, but they do have several impressive young stars who could have bright futures under an outstanding coach like Frank.

Spurs have four players aged 21 or under in their squad who are currently valued at £17m or more by Transfermarkt, which shows that several impressive young talents are waiting to explode in North London.

Tottenham’s most valuable U21 players

Player

Age

Market value

Lucas Bergvall

19

£33m

Archie Gray

19

£33m

Mathys Tel

20

£30m

Wilson Odobert

20

£17m

Kota Takai

21

£2m

Dane Scarlett

21

£2m

Valuations via Transfermarkt

As you can see in the table above, Lucas Bergvall is the joint-most valuable U21 player in the squad, and he has emerged as an early favourite under Frank.

The Sweden international has started four of his six appearances in the Premier League this season, scoring one goal and providing one assist, which shows that the manager has taken a liking to him.

Spurs will be hoping that Bergvall benefits from this exposure to regular starts in the top-flight to emerge as a star for Frank in the middle of the park.

Archie Gray is currently valued at £33m, the same as the Swedish starlet, but he has only made two appearances and started once in the Premier League so far this season.

Chalkboard

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

Whilst Bergvall is seemingly Frank’s favourite U21 player at the club at the moment, the England U21 international has the potential to develop into a Bukayo Saka-esque talent for Tottenham if he gets more game time in his favoured position.

How Archie Gray can become Tottenham's Bukayo Saka

At the start of Saka’s Arsenal career, Mikel Arteta played the English star at left-back 21 times, in central midfield five times, and at left midfield 29 times, per Transfermarkt.

This shows that the left-footed youngster had to play in several roles before nailing down a regular spot in his favoured position on the right flank, where he has scored 47 goals and provided 40 assists in 137 starts.

Gray has suffered through his versatility throughout his senior career to date. 30 of his 49 starts for Leeds came at right-back. 34 of his appearances for Spurs have come at right-back, centre-back, or left-back. Meanwhile, he has started just 13 matches as a central midfielder, his favoured role, in that time, per Transfermarkt.

13 starts as a central midfielder, the position he grew up playing at academy level, in more than two years as a first-team player for Leeds and Spurs shows that he has not had many opportunities to develop in his long-term position.

Gray finally had the chance to play in central midfield for England’s U21s against Moldova last week and caught the eye with an impressive and well-rounded display in the middle of the park.

Vs Moldova U21s

Archie Gray

Minutes

90

Pass accuracy

94%

Long pass accuracy

100% (3/3)

Dribble success rate

100% (3/3)

Ball recoveries

5

Ground duels won

3/4

Aerial duels won

1/1

Stats via Sofascore

As you can see in the table above, the 19-year-old star put in a sublime performance in and out of possession, as he was effective as a passer and a dribbler, whilst also being almost perfect defensively.

This shows that he has the potential to deliver quality displays as a midfielder, despite playing so many other positions ahead of his best one at senior level to date.

Gray, who U23 scout Antonio Mango claimed was “born to play football”, could realise his potential at Tottenham if Frank plays him in his best role for an extended run of matches.

Analyst Ben Mattinson once claimed that the England U21 international is a “future £100m CM”, and it is not a crazy prediction when you consider that he is currently valued at £33m, having barely played in his natural position.

Gray has 30 matches of Premier League experience under his belt and has won the Europa League with Spurs, but the next step is for him to nail down a regular spot in the XI in the middle of the park.

Frank could, then, unearth his own Saka-type player as the former Leeds starlet could follow in the Arsenal superstar’s footsteps by transitioning from playing out of position at full-back to being a star in his natural position.

18-year-old Spurs gem is a "superstar" with more talent than Vuskovic

Tottenham Hotspur have a whole host of exciting youngsters to watch out for.

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Kelan Sarson

Oct 13, 2025

Rohl can solve Bajrami blow by unleashing Rangers “passenger” in new role

Glasgow Rangers were dealt a big blow in their 3-0 win over Kilmarnock in the Scottish Premiership on Saturday, as Nedim Bajrami was forced off with what appeared to be a hamstring injury after 21 minutes.

The Albania international had scored one goal and created seven chances in his last two starts in the league, per Sofascore, which shows that he was finally finding his feet in the 2025/26 campaign.

Unfortunately, the former Sassuolo man is now set for a spell on the sidelines after this latest injury blow, which means that Danny Rohl will need to find a new left winger for the game against Ferencvaros on Thursday night.

Why Findlay Curtis should not start against Ferencvaros

Academy graduate Findlay Curtis came off the bench to replace Bajrami in the 21st minute against Kilmarnock on Saturday, but the Scottish youngster failed to take his chance to impress.

Perhaps it was nerves, as it was only his third appearance since the start of November, but the 19-year-old winger produced a shaky display before being substituted in the 76th minute.

Per Sofascore, Curtis completed one of his three attempted crosses, created one chance, and failed to score with either of his shots on goal, whilst one of those failed crosses sailed high and wide in the first half and led to some frustrated reactions in the penalty area.

Chalkboard

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

The teenage forward also struggled with the physical side of the game. Per Sofascore, he lost three of his four ground duels and was dribbled past three times, which shows that the Kilmarnock players found him too easy to get the better of on the night.

With this in mind, Rohl could solve the Bajrami injury blow by leaving Curtis on the bench to be an impact sub and starting Thelo Aasgaard in a new role.

The new role that Thelo Aasgaard could play for Rangers

It is fair to say that the summer signing from Luton Town has not enjoyed an ideal debut season with the Ibrox giants so far, with a return of one goal and one assist in 22 appearances in all competitions, per Sofascore

He was described as a “passenger” by Heart & Hand content creator David Edgar last month, and his lack of goals and assists for the Light Blues backs up that comment.

Per Transfermarkt, all of his starts this season have come in central positions. This is why Rohl should flip the script and attempt to ignite Aasgaard’s Rangers career by playing him in a brand-new role on the left flank.

Thelo Aasgaard’s most-played positions

Position

Appearances

Goals + assists

AM

70

20 + 10

LW

21

5 + 0

CM

19

1 + 0

LM

6

1 + 1

CF

5

0 + 1

Stats via Transfermarkt

As you can see in the table above, the Norwegian talent is no stranger to playing on the left flank, as he has played 27 matches there in his career, which suggests that he is capable of playing out wide.

A return of seven goals in those 27 games also suggests that moving him out on the left could ignite his goalscoring potential at Ibrox, after a run of one goal in 22 matches in central positions so far for the Light Blues.

Unlike Curtis, Aasgaard has the physical and defensive attributes to his game that could make him a reliable operator out of possession in a left wing position. Per Sofascore, he has won 58% of his ground duels and only been dribbled past once in 12 appearances in the Premiership.

The Scottish youngster, meanwhile, has lost 53% of his ground duels and been dribbled past three times in 119 minutes of football, which suggests that the summer signing from Luton offers more physicality on the pitch.

Physicality is not everything, though, and Aasgaard will still need to prove that he can deliver goals and assists on a regular basis if Rohl opts to provide him with a chance to shine on the left wing after injuries to Bajrami and Oliver Antman in recent days.

With Mikey Moore, who can play centrally or out wide on either flank, also returning to fitness, it will be interesting to see what the German head coach ultimately decides to go with against Ferencvaros on Thursday night.

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He could be Rohl’s first signing.

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It could be a good move, though, to unleash Aasgaard over Curtis in that left wing spot on Thursday night, both because of the physical element and how it could ignite the ex-Wigan star’s career at the club.

Julian Nagelsmann makes Kai Havertz injury claim in worry for Arsenal

Arsenal and Mikel Arteta have been handed a fairly concerning injury update on the condition of Kai Havertz, who was rumoured to be in contention for this weekend’s looming North London derby against Tottenham at the Emirates Stadium.

After losing star defender Gabriel Magalhaes to a thigh injury earlier this week, which cut short his international tour of duty with Brazil, the last thing Arteta needs is another injury setback.

Arsenal, who top the Premier League table after a sensational run of form and haven’t lost a single game since their 1-0 defeat to Liverpool in August, have done extraordinarily well to cope without a plethora of key attackers lately — including Martin Odegaard, Noni Madueke, Gabriel Martinelli, Viktor Gyokeres, Gabriel Jesus and Havertz.

Arsenal 3-0 Nottingham Forest

Athletic Bilbao 0-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 1-1 Man City

Port Vale 0-2 Arsenal

Newcastle 1-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 2-0 Olympiacos

Arsenal 2-0 West Ham

Fulham 0-1 Arsenal

Arsenal 4-0 Atlético Madrid

Arsenal 1-0 Crystal Palace

Arsenal 2-0 Brighton

Burnley 0-2 Arsenal

Slavia Prague 0-3 Arsenal

Sunderland 2-2 Arsenal

Odegaard, Madueke, Havertz and Jesus have been on the treatment table for extended periods, with the latter last in line to return to action after he ruptured his ACL against Man United at the start of 2025.

Madueke is racing to be fit for this weekend’s clash with Tottenham after impressing Arsenal rehab staff in his recovery from a knee problem, with Odegaard in the same boat according to reliable media sources like Standard Sport.

Havertz was believed to be in contention as well, but an update from Nagelsmann threatens to cast some doubt over his involvement against Spurs on Sunday.

The 26-year-old was sidelined in the opening week of the Premier League campaign and required surgery on a knee issue, having only just returned from a hamstring injury which kept him out for months.

It’s been a frustrating time for Havertz, and while reports suggest he’s been excelling in his Arsenal rehab similar to Madueke, Nagelsmann has actually made a suggestion to the contrary.

Julian Nagelsmann makes Kai Havertz injury claim in worry for Arsenal

Speaking to reporters this week, the Germany boss made an interesting prediction, stating that he expects Havertz to return “towards the end of the year”.

This comes after the £280,000-per-week star also suffered a “minor relapse” of his knee injury, though Nagelsmann has moved to say that Havertz is “doing well” all things considered.

While this doesn’t mean that Havertz is definitively out for this weekend’s all-important derby clash, it doesn’t exactly paint a certain picture of his involvement either, so Arsenal could have another injury worry on their hands here after a few scares over the international break.

Luckily for Arteta, while Gabriel is a major doubt to face Tottenham, Riccardo Calafiori has been given the all-clear to play this weekend, according to Fabrizio Romano.

If Havertz does turn out to be ready for Sunday, with uncertainty surrounding him right now, it would come as an almighty boost.

Gyokeres is another Arsenal player who could miss the derby, so a return for Havertz would undoubtedly do wonders to alleviate the Swede’s absence, otherwise Mikel Merino is in line to start his third successive game as Arteta’s makeshift striker.

Rookie Spence stars as Surrey secure their semi-final berth

Davidson-Richards continues fine form as Durham are outplayed in DLS loss

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay13-Sep-2025

Alice Davidson-Richards continued her fine form with an unbeaten 65•Philip Brown/Getty Images

Surrey 290 for 7 (Spence 68, Davidson-Richards 65*, Jones 47, Monaghan 45) beat Durham 138 (Gregory 3-24) by 86 runs (DLS)A fine career-best 68 off 63 balls from teenager Jemima Spence in only her second senior innings of 2025 featured in a rainy Surrey win as they confirmed their Metro Bank One-Day Cup semi-final place at the expense of Durham at the Banks Homes Riverside.Surrey sealed a fourth-placed finish – a position they held at the start of the day with a three-point advantage – and prevented either Durham or fellow chasers Somerset from leapfrogging them, winning by 86 runs on DLS.Nineteen-year-old Spence, batting at No.6, shared a 112 partnership for the fifth wicket with England’s Alice Davidson-Richards, who also contributed an unbeaten 65 off 61 to Surrey’s commanding 290 for seven from 48 overs.The third rain delay came with Durham 14 for one in the third over chasing a revised 276 in 41. The target was further revised to an overall 225 in 29, and the hosts were bowled out for 138 inside 23 overs. Davidson-Richards added two wickets with her seam.Vitality Blast champions Surrey will travel to face table-toppers Hampshire in the semis on Wednesday.A Surrey win would guarantee qualification, while a defeat would have eliminated them. In the end, a No Result would have also been enough. But a sixth win did it.A Durham win would have given them a good chance, though a big Somerset success over the Bears left them needing a bonus point win at the start of their chase. They finished sixth in the table.Having been inserted, Surrey started impressively as Alice Monaghan shared in first and second-wicket partnerships of 55 and 69 with Bryony Smith and Emma Jones.Monaghan and Jones both played nicely for 45 and 47 – the latter particularly so as she latched onto anything short and hit a couple of eye-catching boundaries down the ground.At 121 for one in the 22nd over, Surrey looked set to dominate. But Durham took three cheap wickets, reducing the score to 149 for four in the 27th.Scotland off-spinner Katherine Fraser had Monaghan caught at long-on with a full toss and a pulling Jones bowled off her thigh.Rain briefly interrupted play at 180 for four in the 33rd over, with Spence and Davidson-Richards now set. And upon the resumption, they kicked on superbly, sharing their century stand in 18 overs.While Davidson-Richards was classy, Spence mixed power with invention and was first to her fifty off 56 balls. Her more experienced partner followed her there off 55.Durham were disrupted by having to change wicketkeepers because of a finger problem for Bess Heath. Mia Rogers took over. They also lost key seamer Phoebe Turner to a groin injury having only bowled three overs. She slipped in the outfield.Rain returned to cut short the Surrey innings at 1.55pm.When play resumed at 3.15pm, chasing that 276 in 41 overs, Durham would have been aware that Somerset had won with a bonus point. So they had to do the same given the counties started the day level on points.But that never looked realistic.Rogers pulled Phoebe Franklin’s seam to midwicket in the first over before rain intervened again at 14 for one in the third.Durham had approximately 20 overs in which to achieve their target for the bonus point, and they started in solid fashion when needing to be spectacular.Captain Emma Marlow and Hollie Armitage shared 53 for the second wicket.But when both fell inside three overs for 27 and 31 – bowled by Kalea Moore’s off-spin and caught behind off Alexa Stonehouse’s seam – Durham were 85 for three in the 14th over and out of contention.Stonehouse struck again as the end came quickly, with Davidson-Richards bowling Bess Heath and Trudy Johnson. Leg-spinner Dani Gregory struck three times. Injured Phoebe Turner didn’t bat.

Freddie Freeman Had Powerful Message About His Son After Dodgers' World Series Win

The Los Angeles Dodgers captured the 2024 World Series title in five games over the New York Yankees, finishing the series off in New York with a five-run comeback in a 7-6 Game 5 clinching victory.

Dodgers slugger Freddie Freeman earned World Series MVP after hitting home runs in each of the first four games of the Fall Classic. Freeman finished the five-game series batting .300 with four home runs and 12 RBI.

What makes Freeman's climb to the mountaintop in 2024 even more special was the troubling times it took to get here. Just a few short months ago, Freeman's 3-year-old son Maximus endured a very scary and serious health battle. After doctors probed for answers with Maximus's health rapidly declining, it was eventually determined that he was suffering from Guillain-Barré syndrome. He is doing much better now, and Freeman reflected on an up-and-down 2024 on-and-off the field.

"I would say [I've learned] a lot in so many different ways," Freeman said of his trying year. "I wish I'd never have to go through what we did as a family. But ultimately, Maximus is doing really, really well right now. He's a special boy. But it has been a grind for three months, it really has. It's been a lot, and then obviously with the injuries at the end, it makes it all worth it kind of in the end. I mean, I'll never compare Maximus to baseball, I won't. It's just two separate things. But with him doing really well now, it does mean a little bit extra."

Freeman's ending to the season was well deserved given everything he went through this season, which culminated with his second World Series title as a professional and first World Series MVP.

Lamb puts Payne to the slaughter as Sussex keep top-four hopes alive

Sussex 189 for 6 (Coles 62, Alsop 55, Shaw 2-25) beat Gloucestershire 185 for 5 (Short 66, Bancroft 45, Charlesworth 44*, Crocombe 3-32) by four wicketsDanny Lamb held his nerve to hit 16 runs off five balls and carry Sussex Sharks to a dramatic last-ball four-wicket win over Gloucestershire in a thrilling Vitality Blast encounter on the opening day of the Towergate Cheltenham Festival.Chasing a victory target of 186, Sharks required 15 runs off the final over, bowled by David Payne. Lamb clubbed three boundaries, including one off the final ball, to stun a large festival audience into silence and end Gloucestershire’s defence of the title they lifted last year.James Coles hit 62 from 40 balls and Tom Alsop 55 from 33, these two staging a superb fourth-wicket alliance of 106 in 9.2 overs to set-up a remarkable win and keep alive Sharks’ chances of making the quarter-finals.D’Arcy Short top-scored with a 45-ball 66, struck seven fours and three sixes and dominated a stand of 81 in 8.5 overs with fellow Australian Cameron Bancroft, who contributed 45, while Ben Charlesworth blazed 44 not out at the death as Gloucestershire posted 185 for 5. Henry Crocombe claimed 3 for 32 and Nathan McAndrew 1 for 21 from four tight overs to keep Sharks in the hunt.Gloucestershire skipper Jack Taylor’s decision to bat first was vindicated by Miles Hammond and Short, who staged an enterprising opening stand of 26 in three overs. Cheltenham-born Hammond twice clipped Ollie Robinson off his legs for four and then put Tymal Mills over the rope at deep midwicket to energize a sell-out crowd of 5000.There were mixed fortunes for Robinson, who had Hammond held at backward point for 18, only to then blot his copybook by dropping Short at mid-off on 8 off the bowling of McAndrew. Short rubbed salt in the wound, twice driving the former England bowler down the ground and then cutting him for another four as the powerplay yielded 51 runs. Bancroft proved adept at rotating the strike as the second wicket pair posted 50 in 33 balls. Feeding off the pace of Mills, Short pulled him backward of square for an imposing six before going to his fourth half century in five innings via 37 deliveries.Handily-placed on 86 for 1 at halfway, Gloucestershire kicked on, Short twice lifting Coles over midwicket for six as the score entered three figures in the 11th. Introduced at the College Lawn End, Crocombe broke the partnership, persuading Short to hole out on the square-leg boundary with the score 107 for 2.Relief proved only temporary for the Sussex seamers, Charlesworth putting a short ball from Crocombe over square and out of the ground before lifting Lamb into the crowd at long-on to propel Gloucestershire to 134 for 2 after 15 overs. Crocombe stuck to his task and produced a quicker delivery to bowl Bancroft for 45 and terminate an innings that had occupied 33 balls and included five fours. That was the cue for Charlesworth to launch a late offensive, the left-hander producing a fusillade of boundaries to finish unbeaten on 44 from 24 balls with three fours and three sixes as Gloucestershire attained a competitive total.Sharks required a decent start and openers George Thomas and Daniel Hughes obliged, adding 29 in 4.2 overs. But Gloucestershire hit back, Josh Shaw comprehensively bowling Thomas for a 17-ball 22 and Ajeet Singh Dale having Tom Clark brilliantly held by Hammond at long-off as the visitors reached the end of the powerplay on 44 for 2.When Marchant de Lange produced a startling yorker and clean bowled key man Hughes for 17 in the ninth, Sussex were 57 for 3 and under pressure. Much depended on Coles and Alsop, who advanced the score to 67 for 3 after 10 overs, at which point the visitors required a further 93 at 12 an over.Alsop served notice of his intentions by straight hitting Singh Dale for six and then guiding a wide delivery to the third man boundary as the 11th over yielded 17 runs, while Coles opened his shoulders to equally good effect as the boundary count began to climb and the fourth-wicket partnership realised 50 from 26 balls.Coles received a let-off on 35, Short putting down a sharp chance at long-off, much to the chagrin of the returning Payne. The right-hander took advantage to go to 50 from 34 balls, while Alsop hit Singh Dale over the long-on boundary as the 16th over haemorrhaged 16 runs to keep Sharks in the hunt.Coles then hoisted de Lange over cow corner for six and then plundered an off-driven four to bring up the 150, leaving Sharks to score 34 off the final three overs. Gloucestershire needed a breakthrough and Charlesworth provided it, having Coles held by Ollie Price at long-off, leaving the visitors to score 23 off 12 balls.Alsop raised 50 from 31 balls and was then brilliantly caught by Short at deep square as Shaw struck a crucial blow in the penultimate over. Needing to score 15 off the final over, bowled by the experienced Payne, Sussex suffered another setback when John Simpson was run out by Hammond. But Lamb clipped Payne for four to fine leg and then hit him through the covers for another boundary to leave Sharks needing one off the last ball. Lamb drove it for four to break Gloucestershire hearts.

بيلينجهام يكشف سبب صافرات استهجان جماهير ليفربول ضد أرنولد

تحدث الدولي الإنجليزي جود بيلينجهام، لاعب خط وسط الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بنادي ريال مدريد حول خسارة الفريق أمام ليفربول ضمن منافسات دوري أبطال أوروبا.

وواجه ريال مدريد نظيره ليفربول مساء أمس، الثلاثاء، ضمن منافسات الجولة الرابعة من مرحلة الدوري لبطولة دوري أبطال أوروبا، على ملعب “آنفيلد”.

واستطاع ليفربول أن يحقق فوزًا غاليًا على نظيره ريال مدريد بهدف نظيف سجله أليكسيس ماك أليستر بضربة رأس رائعة سكنت شباك الحارس كورتوا الذي ظهرر بمستوى مميز ورائع للغاية في المباراة.

وقال بيلينجهام، في تصريحات عقب المباراة ونقلتها “بي بي سي سبورت”: “أعتقد أن النتيجة تعكس أداء المباراة، لقد تفوقوا قليلًا في الشوط الثاني وقدموا أداءً أفضل”.

وأكمل: “في الشوط الثاني، استمر ضغطهم علينا وكان لديهم زخم وصخب كبير في المباراة، لقد تفوقوا علينا”.

اقرأ أيضًا | كورتوا يكشف خطة تصديه لكرة سوبوسلاي.. ويشكك في هدف ليفربول

وأردف: “بعد أن سجلوا شعرنا أننا أردنا الضغط أكثر من اللازم، هناك أمور يجب تعلمها لا تزال في بداية الموسم، ولا تزال في بداية مباريات دوري أبطال أوروبا، كنا أسوأ بكثير في الموسم الماضي ومع ذلك تمكنا من التأهل”.

عن ترينت ألكسندر أرنولد، قال: “من الواضح أن حدث معه الأمر الشائع في كرة القدم، صيحات الاستهجان من الجماهير لا تعكس مشاعرهم تجاهه أبدًا”.

وتابع: “أعتقد صافرات الاستهجان الهدف منها هو منح فريقهم الأفضلية وإبعاده قليلًا عن مستواه، أنا متأكد من أنهم يُقدرون ما قدمه للنادي، أتذكر أنهم ودعوه وداعًا حارًا في نهاية الدوري الموسم الماضي”.

وبسؤاله عن احتمالية استدعائه لمنتخب إنجلترا، أتم: “أتمنى ذلك لكن القرار ليس قراري”.

Hazlewood moves to No. 3 on Purple Cap table

Purple Cap table

Josh Hazlewood marked a spectacular return after injury, taking three wickets to dismantle PBKS’s top order with precision and swing. His spell at the start of the innings not only left PBKS reeling but also pushed him back into the top three of the Purple Cap standings. With 21 wickets form 11 innings, he has jumped to No. 3 spot.Noor Ahmad of Chennai Super Kings (CSK), with 24 wickets, continues to lead the table while Gujarat Titans’ Prasidh Krishna, with 23, is behind him. Apart from Prasidh, Mumbai Indians’ Trent Boult, who has 19 wickets and occupies the fourth position, will also be in action in the Eliminator on Friday.Virat Kohli joins in the celebration as Josh Hazlewood bagged his third on Thursday•BCCI

Orange Cap table

Chasing a low score of 102 in New Chandigarh, RCB’s Virat Kohli could only add 12 more runs to take his tally to 614 runs from 14 matches. Kohli maintained his fifth position on the Orange Cap table.There was no change at the top with Gujarat Titans’ B Sai Sudharsan (679) leading the table, followed by Shubman Gill (649) and Suryakumar Yadav (640) of MI. All three of them will be in action on Friday.Mitchell Marsh of Lucknow Super Giants has signed off the season with 627 runs and sits at No. 4.Here’s what ESPNcricinfo’s MVP table looks like.And here are some other IPL 2025 tables that show the season’s best performers in different aspects of the T20 game.

  • Highest batting strike rates
  • Best bowling economy rates
  • Most sixes
  • Best bowling figures in a match
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