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

Kohli, after all this time, just for this moment

Every year, Virat Kohli dusted himself off and brought the same energy to the IPL for RCB. After 18 years, he is finally an IPL champion

Sidharth Monga04-Jun-20252:28

Aaron: Kohli has been king of the castle for 18 years

Virat Kohli just didn’t know what to do with himself. It had finally happened. Josh Hazlewood had bowled a dot ball on the second ball of the last over. Punjab Kings now needed 29 to win off the last four balls. He later suggested to AB de Villiers, friend and former Royal Challengers Bengaluru team-mate, with whom he put together many magical stands, that he was struggling to hold back tears. Now, though, it was mathematically impossible to lose if Hazlewood didn’t concede extras. Kohli has faced enough of Hazlewood to know that wasn’t going to happen.It’s funny. If you look back at any of RCB’s interviews in the last week or so, you see signs of a team that believed this was their time. Their players signed off from New Chandigarh promising bigger celebrations on June 3. Kohli said that before the final he had told de Villiers that he wanted him to celebrate with them “when” they lifted the trophy at the end of the night.And yet, when it does actually come around, you don’t know what to do. As Kohli later said, he gave this team his youth, his prime, his everything, just for this moment. The team gave back. He came across players here who shaped his international career. Every year he dusted himself off and brought the same energy to the team. After the 2009 heartbreak, when he was just a kid. After 2016, when it seemed even more preordained than this year.Related

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You can trick your mind into believing there is no power that can stop you from winning, but when you have had that kind of history, you can’t visualise what you will do after winning. On top of that, there are four balls to go before you can let yourself go completely.At the end of the second ball, Kohli covered his face, and then covered even his eyes. The fingers came back wet. He had to wipe them on the back of his trousers. He was fielding at deep midwicket, one of the hot zones in the death overs that needs your best fielders. The next ball flew away for a six into the leg side. You have never seen Kohli react slower. He just jogged towards the ball and let someone from the infield retrieve it.RCB coach Andy Flower later acknowledged that those who believe in fate would have a story to tell because geopolitical tensions between India and Pakistan led to the suspension of IPL 2025 just when Royal Challengers’ campaign was flagging with injuries to Rajat Patidar and Hazlewood, which gave both players time to recover. Their opponents in the final, PBKS, lost a key player because the delay disrupted his team’s WTC final preparations.Try talking about fate to Kohli. He kept moving in circles as boundaries came off the last three balls. He looked deep into the stands. When you are struggling to hold back tears, looking into the distance helps. The same stands that mourned with him on November 19 two years ago were celebrating with him. A lot of them had come from Bengaluru. Not just English- and Kannada- and Dakhni-speaking fans, but also Tamil- and Hindi speakers who have settled in Bengaluru. The metro rides from Ahmedabad to Motera were jampacked and suffocating, but they endured it with discipline and joy. Perhaps they believe in fate.

The crowd for Qualifier 2 – on a Sunday – was only about half of this. Most of them were in the No. 18 knockoffs. Flight tickets from Bengaluru to Ahmedabad had risen to close to Rs 40,000 one way (over US$460). They still came. As they have been coming for 18 years. Never dunking on their team even when they were ridiculed for the team’s performance.One ball later, Kohli used the blue towel and threw it over the rope. It didn’t matter if the ball was wet now. Krunal Pandya began to celebrate after the fourth ball. He wouldn’t know what Kohli was going through. This was Krunal’s fourth title. His second Player of the Match in a final. He can’t know the pain of waiting with the same side for 18 long years.Kohli said there might have been moments of doubt in between, but he never seriously considered moving to any other franchise. He wanted to win his first IPL with RCB. Not many do, but he had found home at the first go. He gave his heart, soul, and now his experience to “Bangalore”. This is where he went from wild child to lean, mean fighting machine to responsible statesman. At some point along the way, it became his forever home. No matter how much you trick yourself into believing you will win, when you are slowly winding down and retiring from one format after the other, surely there are times you wonder: what if you never win?Before the last ball, Kohli threw away his cap as well. As the ball flew away for the final six, he sank to his knees with the grace of a Roger Federer icing one of his many Grand Slam wins when the opponent made an error. If there aren’t any already, there will soon be split-screen edits showing both falling to their knees upon winning.Virat Kohli and silverware make a striking pair•BCCIThat it means enough to Kohli to bring him to tears is vindication of how important the IPL is and how utterly difficult winning it is. Kohli is someone who has won almost all there is to win in cricket. The IPL is still a young product. Not long ago, it started as a glorified holiday for overseas players. This tournament needed a buy-in from its big stars.For 18 years, Kohli has given it his all, celebrating, anguishing, sledging, putting his reputation on the line beefing with kids, reinventing his game to triple the percentage of good-length balls he slogs. His tears of anguish, and now tears of joy, are perhaps the most glowing endorsement for the tournament.Second only to the crowd. About three-fourths of the 92,000 people who turned up stayed back till the end of the bloated presentations that went on for nearly an hour and a half after the match ended. They all sounded like they had the night of their lives despite all the struggles of attending a match in India. People were on the phone telling their loved ones they were “right there” when “we” won. A lot of them were going to go straight to the airport or the train station because Ahmedabad just doesn’t have enough hotels to accommodate everyone who comes to attend a match at the humongous stadium.There were many chasing the team bus to the hotel. That RCB will get a much bigger celebration, most likely an open-top bus ride with the trophy, in Bengaluru is a matter of when more than if. By then, Kohli and the others will not be fumbling with their reactions. They will have slept like babies and woken up to confirm this is not just a dream. That they are the IPL champions.

Spurs have their own Saka & he’s “one of the biggest talents in Europe”

This weekend is arguably the biggest in Thomas Frank’s tenure as Tottenham Hotspur manager, when he leads his side out against Arsenal on Sunday afternoon.

The Dane has yet to get his first taste of the North London Derby, but he will be looking to get one over Mikel Arteta and secure bragging rights for the Lilywhites faithful.

Such a fixture is huge for supporters, with the meeting between the two clubs one of the first dates they look for upon fixture release day, before a ball is kicked.

However, it’s been a game that the white side of North London have often come out on the losing side away from home – subsequently winning just one of their last 32 encounters.

If Frank’s side are to write themselves into the history books, they will desperately need to keep one player quiet throughout the clash at the Emirates.

The threat Bukayo Saka poses to Spurs this weekend

Bukayo Saka may ply his trade for Arsenal, but he’s cemented himself as one of the Premier League’s most threatening attackers over the last couple of years.

The Englishman has managed to register over 20 combined goals and assists in all competitions in each of the last three years – often providing the difference in such a fixture.

He’s often popped up with the goods in attacking areas, as seen by his record against the Lilywhites since his senior debut back in the 2020/21 campaign.

Saka has featured on ten occasions against Spurs throughout his professional career, racking up a total of five goals – subsequently finding the net in 50% of his outings in such a clash.

He’s also popped up with various assists in the North London Derby, with his corner to Gabriel securing the Gunners all three points at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium last campaign.

It’s evident that the winger possesses serious quality, often coming alive on Derby Day, with Frank and his squad desperately needing to silence him on Sunday afternoon.

However, he too could unleash his own version of the Englishman at the Emirates, with the Lilywhites star potentially able to inflict serious trouble on Arteta’s men.

The Spurs star who’s becoming their answer to Saka

Players such as Saka don’t come around very often, and when they do, they cost a pretty penny – many of which undoubtedly cost a small fortune in the modern-day.

Whilst Spurs are unlikely to pay over the odds for top-level talents, they have invested heavily into the frontline over recent years – as seen by their deal to land Brennan Johnson.

The hierarchy forked out a reported £47.5m for the Welshman’s signature back in the summer of 2023, with the attacker showcasing his talents in North London last campaign.

He registered a total of 18 goals across all competitions last season, the highest of any player in the squad, often starring off the right-hand side of the club’s attack.

However, he’s fallen down the pecking order in recent months, which has resulted in various options being considered within the forward line in the capital.

Mathys Tel joined the Lilywhites on a permanent basis during the summer window, with the Frenchman costing a total of £27m from German side Bayern Munich.

The 20-year-old is capable of operating off the left-hand side or even as a centre-forward, with Frank able to rely upon the youngster in a variety of different positions.

When operating on the left, he’s able to cut inside and onto his favoured foot – something which Saka has made a name for himself for in England’s top-flight.

His similarities to the Englishman are also reflected in his shot on target accuracy, with Tel matching the winger with his tally of placing 33% of his efforts between the posts.

The Frenchman has previously impressed in his professional career, but has transferred his skills over to the Premier League, as seen by his tally of two goals in the league this season.

Games played

8

Goals scored

2

Shot on target accuracy

33%

Pass accuracy

73%

Dribble success

50%

Long ball success

83%

Aerials won

1.2

Mins per goal

124.5

Tel’s efforts in attacking areas have led to huge praise from numerous outlets, with Bayern Chairman Herbert Hainer labelling him “one of the biggest talents in Europe”.

However, he will need consistent first-team minutes to reach the heights many have touted him to, with Frank needing to trust him in the near future to reap the rewards.

He’s shown that he’s capable of producing the goods in attacking areas, potentially able to provide the difference in the clash against the Gunners on Sunday.

Tel has proven he’s able to be the club’s answer to Saka, but it remains to be seen if the manager will show faith in him to allow the youngster to continue on his upward trajectory.

Spurs must sell "one of the worst signings in PL history" to fund Semenyo

Tottenham Hotspur must sell one player if they are to land Antoine Semenyo in January.

1 ByEthan Lamb Nov 20, 2025

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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  • Getty Images Sport

    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.

  • Getty Images Sport

    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.

Reunião com Carpini surte efeito, e James completa feito quase inédito pelo São Paulo

MatériaMais Notícias

Pressionado no São Paulo, o técnico Thiago Carpini encontrou respaldo nas principais lideranças do elenco, incluindo James Rodríguez. A utilização do colombiano, que pediu para deixar o clube e posteriormente foi reintegrado, é um dos pontos de maior crítica pela torcida.

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➡️ Siga o Lance! São Paulo no WhatsApp e acompanhe todas as notícias do Tricolor

Antes da partida decisiva contra o Cobresal, James Rodríguez teve um papo com Carpini sobre seu posicionamento em campo. O treinador foi pego de surpresa com a lesão de Ferreirinha e mudou o esquema tático do Tricolor. Com três zagueiros, o colombiano teve bastante liberdade no meio-campo e deu quatro passes decisivos no duelo pela Libertadores.

– Nós tivemos uma conversa muito boa. Ontem ele me procurou e se dispôs para fazer o que ele fez. Acho isso fantástico, sinto pela primeira vez o controle do grupo, como eu tenho esses caras do meu lado – revelou Carpini.

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

Como a condição física de James Rodríguez é delicada, Carpini evita cravar o colombiano como titular para a sequência da temporada. No sábado (13), o Tricolor enfrenta o Fortaleza, na estreia do Brasileirão, e Carpini ainda balança no cargo.

– Quando você está em um clube grande, sempre tem muita pressão. A gente está com o Carpini, estamos fechados com ele. Acredito que ele trabalha bem, é jovem, mas estamos fechados com ele – comentou James.

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➡️ Veja tabela com datas, horários dos jogos da Libertadores

Mesmo assim, o meia atuou nos últimos seis jogos da equipe e pela segunda vez desde sua chegada ao São Paulo completou 90 minutos em campo. A última vez havia sido em 20 de setembro, quando ele marcou o gol da vitória contra o Fortaleza.

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"Made it clear" – Arsenal star admits telling club's players he'll eventually join them

Questions surround some of the long-term futures of Arsenal’s stars, with Mikel Arteta and sporting director Andrea Berta poised for tough decisions.

The Gunners are preparing for a relatively quiet January transfer window, as is usually the case for them, following their hefty £267 million summer spending spree, but a few notable first-team players could still depart the Emirates Stadium as Arteta continues refining his squad.

Gabriel Martinelli, who’s currently racing to be fit for Arsenal’s looming North London derby on Sunday, has emerged as the most high-profile potential departure.

The Brazilian winger has slipped down Arteta’s pecking order following the summer arrivals of Noni Madueke and Eberechi Eze, according to The Mail, with Arsenal apparently prepared to entertain significant offers for Martinelli.

Arsenal haven’t actively pushed for Martinelli’s departure, but there’s been little in the way of contract extension talks, suggesting the club are open to different options.

Arsenal’s unbeaten run in all competitions since defeat to Liverpool

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

His current deal runs until 2027 with an option for a further year, meaning Arsenal hold a strong negotiating position. Interest from Saudi Arabian clubs and Bayern Munich has been mooted, though Martinelli himself has shown little desire to leave the Emirates, and even stated back in 2022 that he’d stay his “whole life”.

Meanwhile, it is believed that Arsenal would be open to offers for Ben White, despite Arteta’s admiration of the right-back. The competition for places at full-back, combined with his fitness woes, has limited White to just one Premier League game all season.

Leandro Trossard penned new and improved terms at Arsenal recently, but this didn’t include an actual extension, so with his deal expiring in 2027, the BBC suggest that Arsenal could decide to sell the 30-year-old, despite him being one of their best attackers this season with four goals and four assists in all competitions.

Another player who could leave Arsenal in January is Ethan Nwaneri, though the club has zero intention of letting him go permanently.

The 18-year-old wonderkid has managed just 163 Premier League minutes this season despite his obvious talent, with Eze’s arrival limiting opportunities further. A temporary loan move could be sanctioned to accelerate his development, though Arsenal remain extremely high on his long-term potential following the five-year contract he signed last summer.

Then, there is the matter of Gabriel Jesus, who is out of contract in under two years.

Gabriel Jesus makes Palmeiras admission amid doubts over Arsenal future

Jesus is back in training and working his way back from an ACL injury he picked up against Man United at the start of 2025, and Arteta has expressed how he cannot wait to welcome their ‘unpredictable’ weapon back on the field.

However, the 28-year-old has also confirmed his interest in joining Palmeiras after his spell at Arsenal, with Jesus making another admission to Globo Esporte.

The Brazil international told the South American media outlet, via Standard Sport, that he’s informed Palmeiras players of his intentions to eventually join them.

Interestingly, The Mail reported recently that Arsenal could be open to bids for Jesus in the new year, so his return to Palmeiras may even come sooner than he’d expected if they can foot the bill.

The former Man City star is currently on £265,000-per-week in N5, so the Brazilian Serie A side would need him to take a dramatic pay decrease for this move to be possible.

If not, it is certainly one to watch for the future.

'We just need to get that start and kick on' – Chase waits for change to come for WI

Away in the Caribbean, Cricket West Indies has got the best minds in the game in the region to chalk out a way out of the abyss – call it 27 all out if you will – the national team has fallen in, at a time when there is talk of the World Test Championship being split into two tiers. Roston Chase, the Test captain, is aware of all this and is hoping for ” that start and to then kick on from there” when they face India for the second and last time in the ongoing series in Delhi.”Obviously we are down right now but it has to change at some point, and the change can start from now,” Chase said a day away from the start of the second Test, where West Indies would be hoping to bounce back after an innings defeat in the first Test. “But it starts with the belief and the mindset of each and every player, and just keep motivating the guys that we can still play some positive cricket.”In Ahmedabad, in the first Test of the series, West Indies put up 162 and 146. They had two individual scores in the 30s – Justin Greaves in the first innings and Alick Athanaze in the second. Their best partnership was worth 46, in 87 balls, in the second innings between Greaves and Athanaze. Not good enough, especially when the opposition has three century-makers in their only innings and have declared on 448 for 5.Related

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“I don’t think the guys are lacking confidence. But it’s just to get that one score, to get that start and to then kick on from there,” Chase said. “It just takes one… get that good innings or that hundred or that big fifty, that then gives you the confidence to actually think ‘I can do it’.”I think everyone is confident, but when we get out there, we didn’t start well as a batting unit and the pressure is on, and it’s for us to soak up that pressure as batters, and still find a way to score, put pressure back on to the Indian bowlers. That is the biggest challenge for us. We just need to get that start and kick on. And we’ll be fine.”Chase’s own Test career has been an intriguing one. He has now played 53 Tests, but has an average of 25.57. To go with a bowling average of 46.25. He scored a century in just his second Test, against India in Kingston in July 2016, and then had two more centuries by his tenth Test. In the 43 since, he has scored just two more, and none at all in his last 24, where he has crossed 50 only four times.”I can’t really speak for anyone [else], but for myself, I just think it’s a matter of confidence and continuously playing quality first-class cricket and so on. Just that knowhow and facing good attacks for longer periods, and obviously, trying to improve on faults you may have picked up early on in your career,” Chase said. “Obviously, when you first start, no one really knows you, and then, obviously, [you] play a couple of games and people see your weaknesses and try to exploit them. So it’s for the players to just improve on those weaknesses from as early as possible. That’s it.Roston Chase hasn’t scored a century in his last 24 Tests•Associated Press

“It’s just digging deep for those four sessions and trying to stay in the now and not what has happened before in terms of the ball before or the over before. Just staying in the present is the biggest challenge for me right now. That’s something I have to go with.”Chase has played franchise T20 leagues in the past, in the ILT20, the Bangladesh Premier League, the Global T20 Canada, apart from the CPL, of course. While he is still a CPL player for St Lucia Kings, he wants to commit his future to West Indies, and to Test cricket.”It was always my dream to play for West Indies. I had a chance to play franchise cricket and I still have opportunities to play franchise cricket. But I have given that up,” he said. “So I cannot say that I am not hungry or not hungry, because this is what I wanted to do. I gave up my chance to play franchise cricket and I have taken up the captaincy role [in Tests], which is a big step.”So that just goes to show that I want to be here. I want to play for the Maroon. And I have always given my all for the Maroon.”

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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  • 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.”

AL, NL Reveal Starting Lineups, Batting Order for 2025 All-Star Game

The batting orders for the 2025 MLB All-Star Game have officially been revealed ahead of the annual mid-summer classic.

While we learned last week—via fan vote—which players would make up the starting lineups, it's up to the All-Star Game managers to determine the batting orders for the contest.

Said managers—Yankees' Aaron Boone for the American League and Dodgers' Dave Roberts for the National League—revealed their lineups on Monday afternoon. Here's a look at each:

American League Batting Order

Order

Player

Team

Position

1

Gleyber Torres

Detroit Tigers

2B

2

Riley Greene

Detroit Tigers

LF

3

Aaron Judge

New York Yankees

RF

4

Cal Raleigh

Seattle Mariners

C

5

Vladamir Guerrero

Toronto Blue Jays

1B

6

Ryan O’Hearn

Baltimore Orioles

DH

7

Junior Caminero

Tampa Bay Rays

3B

8

Javier Báez

Detroit Tigers

CF

9

Jacob Wilson

Athletics

SS

N/A

Tarik Skubal

Detroit TigersP

P

National League Batting Order

Order

Player

Team

Position

1

Shohei Ohtani

Los Angeles Dodgers

DH

2

Ronald Acuña Jr.

Atlanta Braves

LF

3

Ketel Marte

Arizona Diamondbacks

2B

4

Freddie Freeman

Los Angeles Dodgers

1B

5

Manny Machado

San Diego Padres

3B

6

Will Smith

Los Angeles Dodgers

C

7

Kyle Tucker

Chicago Cubs

RF

8

Francisco Lindor

New York Mets

SS

9

Pete Crow-Armstrong

Chicago Cubs

CF

N/A

Paul Skenes

Pittsburgh Pirates

P

First pitch of the 2025 MLB All-Star Game from Atlanta's Truist Park is at 8 p.m. on Tuesday, July 15.

England and New Zealand look for little gains

Rain seems to be following NZ at this World Cup and there is more expected in Visakhapatnam

Andrew Fidel Fernando25-Oct-20254:21

Preview: Will England’s middle order step up?

Big picture: Can New Zealand salvage some pride?There is very nearly nothing on the line. If England win, they finish No. 2, which does not change their semi-final tie – they will play South Africa regardless. But that little bump up the table will certainly help them progress if the Guwahati knockout is subsequently rained out.New Zealand leave themselves at risk of slipping down to No. 7 or 8 if they lose, but even that is unlikely – Bangladesh having to beat India by a significant margin. The White Ferns will nevertheless be intent on salvaging a victory from an otherwise disappointing campaign. They had had to endure two washouts in Colombo, but have only beaten Bangladesh in their completed matches, going down comfortably to South Africa, India, and Australia.It is also Sophie Devine’s last match in the ODI format, with New Zealand’s captain having announced her retirement at the end of this World Cup. Devine is 36. Team-mate Suzie Bates, who is 38, could also be playing her last World Cup match, though she has not herself announced a retirement.England, meanwhile, may use this as an opportunity to tune up ahead of the final. They have consistently put up the same XI most of the way through the campaign. Perhaps they will give some tired bodies a rest.New Zealand have lost eight of their last nine ODIs against England•ICC/Getty ImagesForm guideEngland: LWWWW (last five completed matches, most recent first)
New Zealand: LWLLWIn the spotlight: Sophie Devine and England’s spin trioOne-hundred-and-fifty-eight matches, 4,256 runs, 110 wickets – whichever way you slice it, Sophie Devine’s numbers are immense. She had been the form batter of the tournament weeks ago, when she hit 112 against Australia, 85 against South Africa, and 63 against Bangladesh. The back-to-back washouts might have broken a litttle of her rhythm however. Can she regain it for her final ODI innings?Between Sophie Ecclestone (11), Linsey Smith (9), and Charlie Dean (7), England’s frontline spinners have 27 wickets in the tournament. None of these bowlers have gone at more than five an over (Dean has been by a distance the most expensive, with an economy rate of 4.73). They’d mostly had a quiet game in the loss to Australia. They will attempt to reimpose themselves.Team news: Will England rest key players?England may ring in the changes. With Sophia Dunkley not having made a major impact this tournament, could Danni Wyatt-Hodge come in? Could legspinner Sarah Glenn give one of the frontline spinners a rest?England (possible): 1 Amy Jones (wk), 2 Tammy Beaumont, 3 Heather Knight, 4 Nat Sciver-Brunt (capt), 5 Sophia Dunkley/Danni Wyatt-Hodge, 6 Emma Lamb, 7 Alice Capsey, 8 Charlie Dean, 9 Sophie Ecclestone/Sarah Glenn, 10 Linsey Smith, 11 Lauren BellFor New Zealand, there’s a little scrutiny on the place of Eden Carson, who has taken two wickets in the tournament.New Zealand (possible): 1 Suzie Bates, 2 Georgia Plimmer, 3 Amelia Kerr, 4 Sophie Devine, 5 Brooke Halliday, 6 Maddy Green, 7 Isabella Gaze (wk), 8 Jess Kerr, 9 Rosemary Mair, 10, Lea Tahuhu, 11 Eden Carson4:19

Healy, Knight, Mandhana, Devine, Dottin – analysing the best six-hitters

Pitch and conditions: Can the rain please stop?You won’t believe this, but there are rains forecast for Visakhapatnam on Sunday, with a cyclone supposedly brewing in the Bay of Bengal. So far this venue has seen medium-to-high scores during this World Cup, with India and Australia both having made more than 330 here in one match.Stats and trivia: NZ’s poor record vs England Sophie Ecclestone has taken at least one wicket in every match she has played so far this World Cup. Although she’s played only four innings, Devine is still among the tournament’s top five run-scorers, with 266 runs at an average of 66.50. New Zealand have lost eight of their last nine ODIs against England – a stretch that goes back to September 2021.

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