How the Blue Jays Saved Their Season by Betting on Themselves

When the Blue Jays signed All-Star slugger Vladimir Guerrero Jr. to a 14-year, $500 million contract extension in April, the news was met with some mixed responses from the general baseball public.

Here was a homegrown star, a born Canadian who, with just one year left until free agency and after a lengthy and at times testy negotiation process, was pledging to spend the rest of his career in Toronto. For an MVP-caliber player entering his age-26 season, it was the kind of day that organizations dream about.

Except there was a way to view the decision as a desperation move, one made by a gambler who’s barely hanging onto their seat at the table deciding to push a dwindling chip stack all in. The Jays were coming off of a last-place finish that followed three playoff runs in four years, each ending with a wild-card round sweep. To some (including a certain writer), the organization’s contention window was closing, if not already shut. In gambling parlance, this was throwing good money after bad.

Four-plus months into the 2025 season, and it appears that Toronto’s big bet is paying off.

Entering play on Wednesday, the Blue Jays have the best record in the American League. Playoff odds that began at 40% on Opening Day, per FanGraphs, have soared to 98.7%. Barring a horrible collapse, Toronto will be alive and well in October, and has a good chance of earning a spot directly into the division series.

Beyond simply pledging half a billion dollars to Guerrero, the path to where the Blue Jays currently find themselves is paved with even more gambles on in-house talent returning to form and fueling Toronto’s surge.

For years, the Blue Jays have far too often (for their fans’ liking, at least) played the role of bridesmaid rather than bride. Highly publicized free agent chases of Shohei Ohtani (a private plane ride from California to Toronto carrying Canadian businessman Robert Herjavec of fame caused international confusion) and Juan Soto (agent Scott Boras said Toronto impressed the now-Met with a “great offer”) came up empty, as did bids at landing Corbin Burnes and Teoscar Hernández.

Toronto was looking high and low for reinforcements, but the big fish the organization chased weren’t biting.

And the ones that did end up joining the Blue Jays haven’t panned out as hoped. Anthony Santander, who inked a five-year, $92.5 million deal in January, managed a .179 average in 50 games before landing on the injured list. Closer Jeff Hoffman signed for $33 million, and has so far posted a 4.41 ERA with five blown saves. All-Star second baseman Andrés Giménez, acquired in a December trade from the Guardians, has battled injuries amid his worst offensive season (74 OPS+ in 62 games).

Instead of the cavalry coming to save the day, it’s been improvements from players already on the roster that have spurred the Blue Jays’ climb.

Bo Bichette, left, is leading the American League in hits in his free-agent platform season. / Daniel Kucin Jr.-Imagn Images

That list starts with shortstop Bo Bichette, a two-time All-Star who seemed to pair perfectly with Guerrero as the young faces of the franchise. From 2021 to ‘23, Bichette twice led the AL in hits and posted a 124 OPS+. An injury-marred ‘24 campaign saw his production fall off a cliff as he managed to play in just 81 games, and there was serious doubt as to whether he could rediscover his form.

Bichette has bounced back by cutting down his swing-and-miss, posting the lowest strikeout rate (14.9%) of his career without sacrificing hard contact. His barrel rate (8.6%) has nearly doubled from last year, and is back to near his career average. A free agent after this season, Bichette has greatly improved his financial prospects to the point that it’s possible Toronto could be priced out, but that’s a problem for another time. For now, the 27-year-old is playing a critical role in jumpstarting the Blue Jays’ title hopes.

Another standout has been George Springer, who once upon a time was the big-ticket free agent Toronto was actually able to sign. Springer joined the Blue Jays in 2021 on a six-year, $150 million contract that at the time was the largest in team history. After two productive years, Springer began to show his warts in ‘23, and the decline steepened to the tune of a .220/.303/.371 slash line in ‘24.

Against all odds, the 35-year-old has turned back the clock this season, putting up his best OPS+ (144) since 2019. He’s revitalized his production from the batter’s box by using his experience to his advantage, posting the lowest chase rate (20.6%) of his career. By laying off pitches outside the zone, he’s making pitchers come to him, and doing damage when he decides to let it rip. Springer ranks eighth among 300 qualified hitters in run value against pitches swung at in the heart of the strike zone, per StatCast.

The cast of resurgent Jays goes on. Alejandro Kirk is hitting .297 with a 110 OPS+ after posting .251 and 93 marks, respectively, over the previous two years. Daulton Varsho, who’s missed most of the year with shoulder and hamstring injuries, has played just 32 games but is healthy now and mashing, with 12 home runs and a 141 OPS+. Addison Barger, who batted .197 in his 69-game rookie season last year, has emerged to provide middle-of-the-order thump, slugging 18 home runs in 96 games with a 122 OPS+.

Toronto’s trade deadline moves reflected a team that’s moved on from the old boom-or-bust approach, with savvy acquisitions to bolster both the starting rotation and bullpen. The biggest of them was the trade for 2020 Cy Young Award winner Shane Bieber, who’s nearly ready to return after undergoing Tommy John surgery. Seranthony Dominguez and Louis Varland are two flame-throwers brought on to help fortify the back end of the bullpen and provide manager John Schneider with more options come October, when fire-extinguishing relief pitchers become even more valuable.

In chasing the big names in recent years, Toronto has often left itself frustrated and empty handed. But by banking on a core that many had lost hope for, the Blue Jays might have just hit the jackpot after many had already counted them out.

Maxwell named for 50-over return for Victoria despite ODI retirement

Matt Short also makes his return from injury ahead of Australia’s T20I tour of New Zealand

Alex Malcolm16-Sep-2025Despite retiring from ODIs earlier this year Glenn Maxwell will play 50-over cricket for his state side Victoria in the first two Dean Jones Trophy matches of the new summer to help prepare for the upcoming T20I series against New Zealand.Maxwell, 36, has been named in Victoria’s 14-player squad for their first two matches against Queensland and Tasmania at Allan Border Field on Wednesday and Friday respectively. Maxwell has played just one List A match for Victoria since March 2022, and that was against New South Wales in October last year.Fellow Australian T20I squad member Matt Short has also been named for his first game of cricket in any form since the MLC in July, after he was ruled out of the five-match T20I tour of the Caribbean then both the T20I and ODI series against South Africa at home in August due to a side injury. Like Maxwell, he has not played a 50-over fixture since the Champions Trophy.Related

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  • Webster hopes his all-round skills can help push for ODI honours

Captain Will Sutherland will only play in game one before departing to India to join the Australia A tour ahead of the second four-day game in Lucknow. Peter Handscomb will captain in game two.Young batter Oliver Peake, who is yet to make his Victoria 50-over debut despite making his List A debut for Australia A in July against Sri Lanka A, is unavailable as he is already in Lucknow playing in the first four-day match against India A. Todd Murphy is also playing for Australia A in India.Harry Dixon and Sam Elliott will play both games for Victoria before departing for India to play for Australia A in the 50-over matches in Kanpur that start on September 30.Meanwhile, Marnus Labuschagne will captain Queensland against Victoria on Wednesday and Western Australia on Sunday, also at Allan Border Field. Xavier Bartlett is unavailable due to Australia A duty while Mark Steketee (minor hamstring) and Callum Vidler (stress fracture) are also absent. Test opener Usman Khawaja won’t play either of Queensland’s 50-over matches this week as he continues his preparation for the start of the Sheffield Shield summer ahead of the Ashes.Former New South Wales allrounder Hayden Kerr is in line for a Queensland debut as is former Australian Under-19 World Cup winning captain Hugh Weibgen.Tom Straker and Lachlan Hearne will play both matches against Victoria and WA before departing to India to join the Australia A 50-over squad.Hearne has been called up to his first Australia A squad as an injury replacement for Aaron Hardie. Hearne has only played eight List A matches but the left-hander made an impressive 107 off 91 balls against his former state New South Wales in February.Victoria squad: Will Sutherland, Peter Handscomb, Blake Macdonald, Callum Stow, Cam McClure, David Moody, Glenn Maxwell, Harry Dixon, Marcus Harris, Matt Short, Mitch Perry, Sam Elliott, Sam Harper, Tom RogersQueensland squad: Marnus Labuschagne (capt), Jack Clayton, Benji Floros, Lachlan Hearne, Hayden Kerr, Michael Neser, Jimmy Peirson, Matthew Renshaw, Gurinder Sandhu, Tom Straker, Mitchell Swepson, Hugh Weibgen, Jack Wildermuth

Atlante reportedly push for Liga MX return as they enter talks over Mazatlán FC’s First Division franchise

Atlante’s long-awaited return to Liga MX is gaining momentum as the club steps up negotiations to purchase Mazatlán FC from Grupo Salinas. While no deal has been finalized, the move is widely viewed as their clearest path back to the top flight after a decade in Liga de Expansión. The Potros – currently the only certified team eligible for promotion – appear closer than ever to reclaiming their place among Mexican football’s elite.

  • @Atlante

    On the radar

    Atlante’s ambition to return to Liga MX is no longer just an idea – it’s an active project with concrete steps underway, including the potential acquisition of Mazatlán FC.

    According to reporting from TUDN’s Javier Rojas, Atlante has yet finalized the purchase of Mazatlán, though the franchise remains firmly on the club’s radar. For the azulgrana board, buying Mazatlán is considered a “Plan B,” as the club is still attempting to reach promotion through sporting merit first.

    While Grupo Salinas initially explored selling Puebla before considering Mazatlán, negotiations stalled months ago. The sale remains possible, and Mazatlán is widely viewed as the most realistic path for Atlante to re-enter the top division. The talks have since resumed, and optimism has grown within the club that a deal can be struck.

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    Deal not official – but momentum is building

    Recent reports suggested that Atlante’s return was already agreed upon, even circulating a purchase figure. However, Récord clarified that no official announcement is imminent; discussions are ongoing and will require more time before being finalized.

    The same media outlet also revealed that Atlante’s leadership, led by Emilio Escalante, has spent more than a year exploring options with Grupo Salinas – including negotiations for Puebla or Mazatlán – though concerns during earlier talks prevented an agreement.

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    Why Atlante holds a unique advantage

    A key factor favoring Atlante is its certification by the Mexican Football Federation, making it the club in Liga de Expansión currently eligible for promotion. With no other certified team in the division, Atlante stands as the lone viable candidate to move up – strengthening their position in negotiations.

    If the sale goes through, Mazatlán would not disappear. Instead, the Sinaloa club would shift into Atlante’s current place in Liga de Expansión, avoiding past scenarios like Jaguares or Lobos BUAP, whose franchises vanished after being sold.

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  • Possible timeline for the announcement

    TUDN indicates that the operation could be finalized shortly before the 2026 World Cup. The goal would be to present the agreement officially at the Liga MX assembly once the tournament ends.

    Under this scenario, Atlante would return to Liga MX for the Apertura 2026 as the new holder of the Mazatlán franchise. With their potential comeback, the Potros de Hierro would once again play in the stadium that historically served as their home. Reports suggest Atlante would join América and Cruz Azul as tenants of Estadio Banorte (formerly Estadio Azteca), where they previously played in three different eras: 1966–1983, 1996–2000, and 2004–2007.

Bavuma, Rickelton prove, in their own special ways, that they can and they will

Both of them got ‘stuck in’ to rise to the occasion at Newlands for the New Year’s Test

Firdose Moonda03-Jan-2025The first hundreds Temba Bavuma and Ryan Rickelton scored this summer – in Durban and Gqeberha respectively – were knocks of relief. Before Kingsmead, Bavuma had returned from an elbow injury, with no red-ball match practice ahead of the Test, and only two Test hundreds after a decade in the game. Before St George’s Park, Rickelton had played eight Tests with a top score of 42 and had shown little sign he could transfer his domestic dominance to international success. As both of them raised the bats they proved a point: we can and we will. By the time they got to Cape Town, everybody knew that.So these hundreds, Bavuma’s fourth and Rickelton’s second were laced with what Rickelton called “enjoyment,” because, “I played the game the way I want to play the game.”South Africa were in a touch of trouble at 72 for 3 at lunch but after the tension of their two-wicket win at SuperSport Park, which confirmed their participation in June’s World Test Championship (WTC) final, Newlands was always going to be something of a riot. They were helped by one of the flattest pitches seen at this ground in recent memory – likely an overcompensation for last year’s aberration where the Test ended in 107 overs – and an uninspired Pakistan attack that lacked genuine pace. But they still had to get the job done, each under their own microscope.Related

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  • Test centurion Rickelton proves to himself that he belongs on international stage

  • Make plan, find a way and believe – South Africa's not-quite-perfect WTC campaign

  • Ryan Rickelton, Temba Bavuma centuries drive South Africa's day

Rickelton was opening for the first time in a Test after spending most of his short career at No. 5. Promoted to No.3 in Gqeberha, he said he preferred playing against the new ball because it tightened his game, and he has some experience of opening at domestic level. So, he was a natural replacement for Tony de Zorzi, who was out injured, but came with the knowledge that this was the only place for him to play. “I just want to bat,” Rickelton said. “It doesn’t matter where, I just want a bat I get stuck in. I just want to play in this team and bat and score Test runs.”That desire was evident in the way he played: aggressively. Pakistan offered boundary balls and he cashed in. His century came off 135 balls, and his strike rate of 75.86 is his highest in any innings where he has scored more than 8. It was an indication of his proactivity.

Bavuma came to the crease with the same kind of conviction. Though he was the leading run-scorer in the series against Sri Lanka, his dismissal at SuperSport Park was so distressing – he walked when he had not nicked Mohammad Abbas and sparked a South African collapse that nearly cost them the game – that he hid in the bathroom until they were 15 runs away from winning. After that, Bavuma spoke passionately about being “berated and ridiculed” for playing with a hamstring injury in the 2023 ODI World Cup semi-final and the sounds of silence he has battled though this summer with two heavily strapped elbows. Those didn’t bother him in this innings, but he had cramp in the calf as he entered the 90s and asked Rickelton to “pull the old man through.”When his hundred came, Bavuma broke into a celebration that was completely out of character. He pumped his elbows several times, ran almost all the way to the boundary and cut his bat through the air as though he was slicing through criticism. What was that about? “The celebration just happened spontaneously,” Bavuma said afterwards.Temba Bavuma celebrates his fourth Test ton•Gallo Images/Getty Images”Obviously there was a lot of emotion behind it, more around the fact of having crossed the three-figure mark. I was quite frustrated at my last innings at Centurion – the manner that I went out, albeit I was obviously trying to make a play for the team. I wanted to make a bigger contribution towards the team and get away from the 40s and 50s that I have been getting. The celebration was around that. And also to prove to myself that I can play when there’s not much on the game.”There’s a poetic synchrony to Bavuma scoring the hundreds at Newlands. It’s the ground where he made his first Test hundred nine years ago, against England. Then, he was the face of hope in an experienced batting line-up; now he is the experience in a hopeful one. “The situations were a bit different. The first time I came in there was a bigger partnership that had been laid by Hash(im Amla), Faf (du Plessis) and the boys. Obviously I was under pressure as well from my place on the team,” he said. “Today, I was hitting the ball out the middle from relatively early on within my innings. It probably seemed a lot more fluent. I don’t think I made a lot of mistakes so there was a lot more class here if I could say.”And a lot more seniority and a lot of people looking up to him, including Rickelton. The two are domestic team-mates and to share a record-partnership in the New Year’s Test – South Africa’s marquee match of the season – in front of a sellout crowd with festive vibes fizzing in the air is something they will both remember for a long time to come. “We don’t talk a lot (when we’re batting), but we just emphasise doing the basics for long periods of time,” Rickleton said. “To share the partnership out there with the captain of South Africa, also captain of the Lions, is special for me and I like to think for him also. It was just really, really cool.”

Kelly, Boyce provide Blaze base for solid victory

Kathryn Bryce spearheads bowling as Freeborn-Wraith stand falls short of rescuing Warwickshire

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay24-Jul-2025A rain-hit 50-overs match on a club ground might bear little resemblance to a T20 at the Kia Oval but The Blaze will draw some confidence from a 47-run victory over Warwickshire Women in the Metro Bank One-Day Cup as a dress rehearsal of sorts for Sunday’s Vitality Blast semi-final.After Marie Kelly’s List A career-best 66 and opening partner Georgia Boyce’s 46 had laid the foundations for a total of 218 for 6 after opting to bat first in a match reduced to 39 overs-a-side, The Blaze dismissed Warwickshire for 171, despite a determined effort by Abbey Freeborn (56 off 73 balls) and Nat Wraith (75 off 71) to give the visitors a chance after being reduced to 13 for 4.Kathryn Bryce (3-18), Georgia Elwiss (3-26) and Grace Ballinger (3-26) shared the bowling honours for The Blaze, for whom Sarah Bryce had made an unbeaten 32, with two wickets each for Warwickshire’s Georgia Davis and Amu Surenkumar.Winning the toss and electing to bat in a match reduced to 39 overs per side after morning rain at the Lindum Sports Club Ground in Lincoln, The Blaze established a strong foundation as Kelly and Boyce shared an opening stand of 106, Kelly hitting eight fours and a six.Kelly, making her first List A appearance of the season, pulled Surenkumar for her maximum early in the innings, generally driving and pulling strongly. She found the boundary three times in the same over off Davis, completing a 47-ball half-century against her former county when she swept Millie Taylor for her seventh four.Taylor, making her List A debut for Warwickshire and unique in the English county women’s game as a left-arm wrist spinner, broke the stand when she turned one past Kelly’s bat for a stumping. Boyce, back with The Blaze after playing for Yorkshire in the Women’s Vitality Blast, was in sight of a fifty of her own when she miscued to mid-off.Kathryn Bryce – reprieved when given out leg before on 13 on the grounds of being distracted by bowler Hannah Baker’s cap dropping out of her pocket – added another 10 before she was stumped.Elwiss, Heather Graham and Ella Claridge all fell cheaply, but Sarah Bryce (32 off 19) and Sarah Glenn added 37 off the last 18 balls of the innings – 26 at the expense of England seamer Issy Wong.Needing to chase at 5.6 an over, Warwickshire suffered a disastrous start, slumping to 13 for four inside five overs.After Bethan Ellis had been caught at square leg off the next, Ballinger took wickets with the last ball of her second over and the first of her third as Lucy Higham took a fine catch at backward point to remove Davina Perrin and Sarah Bryce an easy one as Sterre Kalis skied a top edge, Kathryn Bryce holding a return catch as Surenkumar departed.An inswinging delivery from Bryce accounted for Katie George, leaving Warwickshire 28 for 5 after 10 overs.Freeborn and Wraith rebuilt well, the former clocking up her third half-century off 60 balls, Wraith her second of the campaign off 50, with three boundaries each and some enterprising running between the stumps, their partnership passing 100 in the 28th over.Yet once the breakthrough came, breaking the stand at 112, the home side made it count. Freeborn, who had survived a sharp caught-and-bowled chance to Kirstie Gordon on 52, fell shortly afterwards, leg before attempting to ramp Elwiss. Wong then came and went quickly, top edging Elwiss into the off side, before catcher Glenn combined with Elwiss again to run out Taylor off the next ball.Ballinger returned to have Davis caught on the legside boundary before Wraith departed as the last wicket to fall, caught at wide mid-off off Elwiss.

Florian Wirtz compared to Luka Modric as Liverpool's underwhelming £116m signing backed to silence doubters just as Ballon d'Or-winning midfielder did

Florian Wirtz has been compared to Luka Modric, with Liverpool's struggling £116m signing being backed to silence his doubters just as the former Real Madrid midfielder did. Wirtz was considered one of the brightest midfield talents in the world at Bayer Leverkusen, but the Germany international has experienced a major dip in form since moving to the Premier League.

  • Wirtz's underwhelming start to Anfield journey

    Liverpool spent a whopping £116 million ($154m) to sign Wirtz from Bayer Leverkusen during the summer transfer window. The talented German midfielder had also attracted interest from Bundesliga champions Bayern Munich and Manchester City, but he opted to join the Premier League champions.

    Anfield fans were very excited at the time of Wirtz's arrival as they expected fireworks on the pitch from a world-class talent, but the 22-year-old has failed to live up to his potential and has been a disappointment at the start of the 2025-26 campaign. The Germany international has faced fierce criticism in England, but it has not affected the midfielder or his family, as his father Hanz recently told : "My thought from the very beginning was to wait and see how the first ten league games went," he said. "We and Florian are perfectly happy with that. The incredible speed, the back and forth, that was very impressive for the first few games. The distances covered and the speed were significantly greater. The style of play is sometimes enormously different because it doesn't seem as organised, but rather more focused on pace."

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    Wirtz compared to Modric

    Amid all the negative chatter around Wirtz's performances, former Premier League star David Bentley has come to the midfielder's defence while drawing a comparison to Real Madrid and Croatia legend Luka Modric. When Modric initially arrived at Tottenham Hotspur, he was initially panned by critics, however, the Croatian eventually went on to establish himself as one of the greatest footballers of all time, winning the Ballon d'Or in 2018.

    Speaking to , ex-Spurs winger Bentley said: "He is an unbelievable player, so talented, fans and pundits have to stick by him. Yes he’s exactly the same [as Modric]. When Modric came through the door, he was exactly the same in the way he receives the ball, scans, he knows what he is doing. He was an unbelievably technically gifted player, and both can set the tone and tempo of a football match, so you have to stick with him."

  • Nagelsmann defends Reds star

    Germany head coach Julian Nagelsmann has also backed Wirtz during this difficult period of his career. He even aimed a dig at the Liverpool attackers for failing to convert the chances Wirtz has been creating. Speaking to reporters, the Germany boss said: "Liverpool could also help him out by scoring some of the chances he creates. They somehow don't like to shoot the ball in. To be honest, the overall situation doesn't make it easy for Flo either. The whole club isn't as stable this year as it was last year. It's much harder to slip into the team now. If you look at the game against [Manchester] City, they were actually the worse team over the 90 minutes. So it's also difficult for Flo to make a big impact. Ultimately, the overall situation is such that he just needs a little more time, which is normal; you see that with other players who move to the Premier League too. 

    "We all know what he's capable of, and it's perfectly normal for a player of his age to go through a bit of a dip in form. We can't expect him to perform at the same level for three years straight. Instead, we all need to support him a little bit so that he can clear his head here, and then maybe Liverpool could also help him out by scoring some of the chances he creates. That would be one idea, because he does not create few chances, it's just that… they somehow don't like to shoot the ball in, that's also part of the truth."

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    Wirtz eyes comeback with Germany

    Wirtz has made it into the Germany squad for their upcoming World Cup qualifying matches despite his poor club form. The former Leverkusen star will hope to make the most of the chances he gets during the international break to help Germany secure a World Cup berth and regain his form before returning to Anfield later this month. Germany are scheduled to take on Luxembourg on November 14, before facing Slovakia three days later.

ESPNcricinfo's top 25 women's cricketers of the 21st century: Nos. 15-6

We count down the best female players of the last 25 years

26-Sep-20241:56

Hayley Matthews glad she’s on other side of Shabnim Ismail’s ‘death stare’ now

Everyone loves a ranking list, right? Following on from our colleagues in ESPN, who have been running lists of the top athletes of the century on their platforms, we thought the 2024 Women’s T20 World Cup was a good time to look back over the 21st century so far and select the top 25 female cricketers.Will the player you expect to finish No. 1 finish here? Will a player be ranked too high? Will your favourite player be ranked too low or not make the list (sorry if that’s the case). You’ll find out over the next two days.The game has evolved dramatically over the time frame under consideration for this list, particularly in the last decade with the advent of the WBBL, followed by the Hundred and WPL. More international teams are now beating each other and this upcoming World Cup has the potential to be one of the most competitive.A group of ESPNcricinfo writers came up with a longlist of 50 names, which were then put into a voting system that played off pairs against each other. Once that was completed, a smaller group then assessed the list for anomalies or glaring omissions.In this piece, we count down from Nos. 15 to 6. Here are Nos. 25-16 and 5-1.Note: only achievements posted after January 1, 2000 are taken into consideration, even if the athlete’s career ran either side of the millenniumStats for 2000 and beyond
Test batting | Test bowling | ODI batting | ODI bowling | T20I batting | T20I bowling | All T20 batting | All T20 bowling

15: Shabnim Ismail (South Africa)

Shabnim Ismail: among the top five wicket-takers in international cricket•Gallo ImagesThe quickest bowler in women’s cricket, Ismail clocked 132.1kph in the WPL in March 2024, a year after she sent down a fiery spell that included multiple deliveries upwards of 128kph to bowl South Africa to their first senior World Cup final. Ismail played in all eight T20 World Cups from 2009 to 2023 and exited on the highest of highs in a home final. It ended a 15-year international career that included four 50-over World Cups, in which she forged a reputation for her passionate on-field presence and commitment to getting quicker. Ismail is the second-highest wicket-taker in women’s ODIs, behind Jhulan Goswami, and in 2022 equalled the record for most ODI wickets in a calendar year: 37. Overall, Ismail is the fourth-highest wicket-taker in all women’s internationals. She is South Africa’s fourth most-capped ODI player and third-most capped T20 international, and at 35 years old, is still going in the leagues. –

14: Harmanpreet Kaur (India)

Harmanpreet Kaur goes big during her 171 not out in the World Cup 2017 semi-final•Getty ImagesA ferocious bat-swing, great power-hitting ability, and a powerful slog sweep are keystones of Harmanpreet’s batting. All of those were on display in her epochal 171 not out in the 2017 Women’s ODI World Cup, a knock that sent the popularity of the women’s game skyrocketing in India. Harmanpreet has been the face of the new-age, aggressive Indian women’s cricket team, and was part of India’s maiden T20I series win in Australia in 2016. She became the first Indian woman to hit a T20I century, in the T20 World Cup 2018 against New Zealand. She was the first Indian – man or woman – to play in an overseas T20 league, when Sydney Thunder signed her up for the 2016 Women’s Big Bash League. Harmanpreet took over India’s T20I captaincy full time in 2018 and brought the same aggression to that role that she did to her batting. The high point of her international captaincy so far has been India’s runners-up finish at the 2020 T20 World Cup in Australia, and she also captained Mumbai Indians to the title in the inaugural Women’s Premier League in 2023.

13: Ashleigh Gardner (Australia)

At 21, Ashleigh Gardner was the joint highest wicket-taker at the 2018 T20 World Cup•ICC/Getty ImagesAn important member of the most dominant team ever seen, Gardner is among the most versatile allrounders in the game, delivering value across formats with her explosive batting and crafty offspin. She showed a glimpse of her all-round prowess in the first ODI of the 2017-18 Ashes series, taking three wickets and then scoring a crucial 27 off 18 from No. 8. She has particularly excelled in global tournaments, making contributions with bat and ball in Australia’s title win in the 2018 T20 World Cup and playing an important hand in several games in their next two titles as well, in the 2020 T20 World Cup and 2022 ODI World Cup. Gardner also helped Australia claim the gold medal at the 2022 Commonwealth Games, taking three wickets in the final against India. She finished as the Player of the Tournament in the 2023 T20 World Cup, having scored 110 runs and taken ten wickets. Later that year she impressed in red-ball cricket as well, taking 12 for 165 in the Women’s Ashes Test at Trent Bridge.A regular in franchise cricket, she is among the most sought-after players on the circuit.

12: Deandra Dottin (West Indies)

Deandra Dottin: match-winner with bat and ball•Getty ImagesFew can hit the ball as hard as Dottin. She was just 19 when she scored the first century in women’s T20Is, which also happened to be the fastest, coming off just 38 balls – a record unbroken 14 years later. Dottin is also the fastest woman to hit 100 sixes in T20Is, has the second-fastest fifty in women’s T20 World Cups, has hit the most sixes in women’s ODIs, and is the only woman to have made a century and taken a five-wicket haul in T20Is. Dottin is also an effective death bowler and an electric fielder. Her exploits in the shortest format make her one of the most in-demand players on the T20 circuit, where she has won titles with Adelaide Strikers in the WBBL and Trinbago Knight Riders in the CPL. She ended her decorated West Indies career in 2022 but walked back her retirement in July this year.

11: Mithali Raj (India)

More than the weight of Mithali Raj’s phenomenal numbers, it was the impact she had on the next generation of female cricketers coming up in India•IDI/Getty ImagesRaj was the link between a generation that played for the love for the game and the one that plays for contracts – both domestic and international – and now has pay parity. As a teenager, she said she trained like a racehorse, because cricket was her only career path – at a time when there was no money in the game and the BCCI was nearly a decade away from taking over women’s cricket. She batted on all sorts of pitches, on torn mats and grounds that barely had any grass, travelling to and from games in trains, sometimes without a seat reservation, on measly allowances that barely covered one meal, and lived in barely acceptable accommodations. All that changed in 2017 when she led India to a runners-up finish in the 50-over World Cup, captivating the attention of a nation that had been largely indifferent to the women’s game until then. Raj was finally on the front pages after two decades of toil that had produced a number of records, including most runs in women’s ODIs.

10: Chamari Athapaththu (Sri Lanka)

Chamari Athapaththu has been prolific during the biggest moments in Sri Lanka’s history•Getty ImagesOne of the greatest players to come out of Sri Lanka, Athapaththu is a trailblazer for women’s cricket. A prolific top-order batter with a trademark aggressive style of play, she has been Sri Lanka’s backbone for about 15 years. She is the leading run-scorer for Sri Lanka in ODIs and T20Is, and is one among three women to have scored three T20I hundreds apiece. Under her captaincy, Sri Lanka registered their first T20I series win over South Africa and England, and a maiden ODI series win against New Zealand. Her crowning glory came in July this year, when she led Sri Lanka to their first women’s Asia Cup title. Athapaththu’s career has also been marked by several firsts for Sri Lanka, be it topping the women’s ODI batting rankings, making over 1000 runs in women’s T20Is, and playing franchise cricket. –

9: Smriti Mandhana (India)

Smriti Mandhana: dismantling attacks the world over•BCCIA child prodigy who made her senior state team debut at 13 and captained them at 16, Mandhana has blazed a trail for over a decade at the international level. Armed with a silken batting touch and the ability to destroy accomplished attacks, Mandhana has also been consistent over long periods, which has placed her among the world’s top batters and among the most marketable female athletes in India. Instilling belief in the next generation of women cricketers in India has been a vital contribution Mandhana has made to the game. At a time when India’s representation in franchise T20 tournaments was next to nil, Mandhana broke the ceiling by featuring regularly in global leagues. And when India finally unveiled the WPL, she brought glory to one of cricket’s most popular sporting franchises, Royal Challengers Bengaluru, by delivering their first-ever title as captain. Most believe she is India’s next captain.

8: Hayley Matthews (West Indies)

Hayley Matthews is now one of the leading allrounders in the game•Getty ImagesOne of ther most audacious feats in Matthews’ international career came in the 2016 T20 World Cup final. In a Player-of-the-Match performance, she hit 66 of 45 balls against then three-time champions Australia to help West Indies to their maiden title days after her 18th birthday. That was a sign of things to come from a precocious allrounder who would go on to captain West Indies. Matthews truly came into her own when West Indies toured Australia in 2023, hitting a blazing 132 in a world-record chase of 213. West Indies’ fortunes largely hinge on how she performs with bat or ball, and that explains why she has been in demand on the T20 leagues circuit. –

7: Sophie Ecclestone (England)

Sophie Ecclestone has 260 wickets at an average of 16.3 and an economy of 6.1 in T20s•BCCIEngland’s devastating left-arm spinner has topped the ICC’s T20I bowling rankings since February 2020 and been No. 1 in ODIs since March 2022. That she isn’t higher on our list might be a reflection of the fact that she is still only 25, having made her international debut in 2016. This year she became England’s leading wicket-taker in women’s T20Is, and now sits fourth on the all-time world list with 126 at an average of 14.65 and economy rate of 5.85. In ODIs she has 108 at 19.94 and 3.66. The staggering thing about Ecclestone isn’t so much how far she’s come, but how far she can go.

6: Marizanne Kapp (South Africa)

Across four ODI World Cups, Marizanne Kapp has taken 32 wickets at an average of 22.8•ICC/Getty ImagesA genuine allrounder, Kapp is an all-format player extraordinaire: the maker of a Test hundred, taker of a T20I hat-trick, and one of only three players to have scored 3000 ODI runs and taken 150 ODI wickets. She also has three ODI centuries. Her magic lies in how she plays the big roles in major tournaments, which include bowling with the new ball (often finding appreciable swing), and batting as high as No. 3 in the later stages of her career. Though never South Africa’s captain in name, she has led them through some of their most significant ICC performances, including reaching the semi-finals of the 2017 and 2022 ODI World Cups, and the final of the 2023 T20 World Cup, and was Player of the Match in the final of the 2022 Hundred and that year’s Fairbreak Invitational tournament. ESPNcricinfo’s top 25 women cricketer’s of the 21st century: Nos. 1-5 | 6-15 | 16-25

Liverpool willing to sell first-team star to fund £150m Adam Wharton move

Liverpool believe both Crystal Palace captain Marc Guehi and midfield superstar Adam Wharton want to move to Anfield in 2026, and FSG are willing to sell one of their stars to Real Madrid to fund the deals.

The Reds missed out on the signing of Guehi on deadline day in September, despite the 25-year-old agreeing a £35m move to Anfield. Since then, Liverpool have leaked goals at an alarming rate, with Ibrahima Konate producing too many sloppy performances and new signing Giovanni Leoni ruled out for the rest of the season through injury.

It would be a surprise if the Premier League champions didn’t return for Guehi in 2026, though they may now face competition from the likes of Bayern Munich and Real Madrid, while Inter are the latest team to be linked with the England international.

Crystal Palace meanwhile may be facing a massive rebuild with manager Oliver Glasner yet to commit himself beyond next summer, and now the Reds are looking to poach another Eagles star.

Liverpool willing to sell Mac Allister to seal Wharton deal

Sources tell Football FanCast Wharton is keen to join Liverpool in 2026, and FSG are considering caving to Real Madrid’s interest in Alexis Mac Allister in order to fund the move.

A calm figure who oozes class on the ball, Wharton is reportedly valued at a whopping £150m, and the Reds believe his youthful exuberance could replace what Mac Allister is lacking since suffering an ongoing injury last year.

Crystal Palace's Jean-Philippe Mateta, Adam Wharton, EberechiEzeand Marc Guehi

If Liverpool were able to sign both Wharton and Guehi next summer, it would be fantastic business, immediately giving them so much added quality and depth in two key areas. The former is one of the most exciting young players in the country right now, with Eberechi Eze describing what a great teammate he was at Palace last year.

The former Blackburn youngster would be a long-term acquisition with the potential to grow into an elite midfielder, and with Mac Allister struggling for form and fitness, he could fill the void left by the Argentine.

Liverpool's £280k-per-week talent is looking like Slot's own Keita signing

Liverpool looks to have dropped the ball already, splashing the cash on this £280k-per-week star.

By
Kelan Sarson

Oct 31, 2025

Signing Guehi is arguably even more important for Liverpool, though, especially if Konate also moves to Madrid, with the England international one of the best centre-backs in the Premier League.

Latest on Liverpool's move for Guehi

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