Mike Brearley: 'Stokes and McCullum are about playing cricket for enjoyment. I hope we never lose that'

The former England captain and well-known psychoanalyst talks about Bazball, the current England side, and his new book

Paul Edwards18-Apr-2024Last September, Mike Brearley travelled to Old Trafford to watch Middlesex play Lancashire and to promote his memoir . As part of the visit he was interviewed for Lancs TV by Paul Allott, who made his Test debut under Brearley’s captaincy against Australia in 1981. Naturally, their conversation turned to Bazball and the ways in which Brendon McCullum and Ben Stokes have transformed the attitudes of England’s players and the results of the team. Midway through their chat, Allott asked his old captain whether he’d have enjoyed captaining the current England side with McCullum as its coach. The answer came back in a trice. “Yes, I think I’d have loved it”.Now it is six months later and Brearley is sitting at his kitchen table, sipping coffee and eating an almond croissant. His answers to a different set of questions are more measured and invitingly nuanced but the enthusiasm for this England team’s approach is no less keen than it was before they lost 4-1 to India. He likes the idea that Stokes’ players have been liberated by possibilities rather than constrained by expectations, and he admits that some England teams during his career suffered from the latter limitation.”I couldn’t imagine anyone changing the team’s morale and performance overnight in the way McCullum and Stokes have done, and you don’t do that by accretions of technique or little nudges this way or that,” he says. “You do it by changes of heart and attitude, and these seem to have released people from their inhibitions and tensions and the view that you must never get out playing an attacking shot if you could have defended the ball. The changes have been very much for the good.”Related

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Typically, Brearley traces Bazball to one of its sources: McCullum’s resolve to change the culture of the New Zealand team he captained in 2013, a few days after they had been bowled out for 45 by South Africa in Cape Town: “Just because there is more at stake now doesn’t mean you should lose the innocence of why you played the game in the first place,” said McCullum in an interview. “For a long time we had lost that, and I think our team had lost it… We expected the game to owe us something. We almost felt entitled… There was no soul about our cricket… It sounds a bit corny, but we talk about the playful little boy who fell in love with the game. When you have that mindset you can be positive and aggressive because you’re thinking about what can go right rather than what might go wrong.”Brearley identifies examples of the changed approach in many areas, not least selection, and talks with fascinated delight about the success enjoyed by Tom Hartley, Shoaib Bashir and Rehan Ahmed in the Test series against India.”The old spinners like Fred Titmus and Ray Illingworth would have completely pooh-poohed the idea of anyone playing Test cricket after playing half a dozen [first-class] games, and I think I would have done too, but I thought the three young spinners kept at it and they did remarkably well,” he says. “Rehan Ahmed reminds me of Warne with his strong shoulders and his busy, energetic, strong action. He certainly has chutzpah.”

“Winning is essential to a game. I’m very suspicious of the attitude expressed by some people that they don’t mind losing”Mike Brearley

As so often with Brearley, there are links with his working life as a psychoanalyst. One of the abundant joys of is to see how its author’s profession informs his understanding of the game he has been passionate about since the age of four. For example, the chapter “Prophet to a Profession” pays tribute to the psychoanalyst Wilfred Bion, a figure who is probably well known only to specialists. For Bion, the essence of psychoanalytic treatment is “to introduce the patient to that person with whom he has most dealings in his life, namely himself”. Brearley takes to the suggestion that Bazball has introduced cricketers to the players they could be if they weren’t so burdened down with precedent and expectation. “I think it’s true of sides who could have a distinctive way of playing the game, just as orchestras could have a distinctive way of playing music,” he says. “Stokes and McCullum introduced their England team to the team it could be.”Yes, but acquainting oneself with new ways of thinking can produce strange decisions. I challenge Brearley about Stokes’ declaration near the end of the first day of last year’s opening Ashes Test, when Joe Root was 118 not out and Australia’s attack seemed to be flagging. It was a decision Brearley has described as bizarre. Or what about Root’s own comment to his overnight batting partner, Ollie Pope, that he would reverse-scoop the first ball of the fourth morning’s play? How can that be squared with Greg Chappell’s statement, quoted in , that “premeditation is the graveyard of batting”?”Well, I wouldn’t have declared when Stokes did and I don’t advocate it, but I don’t necessarily blame him because it was part of his overall approach, in which I still believe,” says Brearley. “And Bazball has changed. For example, when Stokes first came to Bazball, he got out wildly in Pakistan, running down the pitch and slogging. That was a result of his determination to lead by example, but he did modify his approach.”As to Root’s reverse scoop, it’s got to be almost regardless, hasn’t it, and he did it for a while and had some considerable success. I have seen people readjust from a reverse scoop but I haven’t seen many do it. And what Greg Chappell would allow is that you could look for something; you have in your mind where you’re going to score runs off a certain bowler. Where might I get a four off Joel Garner, say?” Brearley smiles wryly at the memory. “There’s a difference between looking to do it and absolutely determining to do it.”So in addition to welcoming the change in England’s approach to Test match cricket, Brearley is fascinated by the way in which that approach might evolve after a series in which England’s 4-1 defeat hardly reflected the balance of the five games, which were played on very fair pitches.Brearley suggests that Stokes and McCullum have opened the England players’ eyes to who they could potentially be•Getty Images”I was sad that we didn’t get to two-all but I thought India were the better side and they deserved to win,” he begins. “I was disappointed that we didn’t take advantage of the positions we were in during one or two of the earlier matches, and particularly so in Pope and [Ben] Duckett, who both made huge hundreds and then got worse rather than better.”Pope looked just as jumpy even after making that wonderful 196 in the first Test, and Duckett played that extraordinary innings of 153 and yet lost it against Ashwin and Kuldeep [Yadav]. By the end he didn’t want to block, yet he didn’t want to lap. I thought [Zak] Crawley played extremely well and moderated his style but was unlucky to get good balls, and I was glad to see Root come back and play in his old way.”Brearley’s knowledge is as deep and his observations as informed as one might expect, yet is also notable for its author’s continuing enthusiasm for the game and his youthful, wide-ranging desire to find out new things and learn more. Brearley’s wife, Mana, says that he is more relaxed in the company of cricketers, and his editor, Andreas Campomar, believes he writes with more spontaneity on the game than on psychoanalysis, albeit that he has written a “memoir of the mind”.”Cricket is something that I feel I know more thoroughly but it’s also more limited than psychoanalysis, which is about the whole of life and you’re less likely to think you know it,” Brearley says. “There are people still doing psychoanalysis who are more renowned and better at it than me. And after having played for all those years, it is easier to write than to play. I was more anxious because of my limitations as a batsman at the highest level, so I was more liable to get tense about batting than I am about writing or psychoanalysis. Now I’m not answerable to anyone and I still sometimes have strong views about cricket, whereas I’m still a practising psychoanalyst and I’m in the thick of it.”But what does Brearley make of the times when sport and psychoanalysis overlap? I’m not thinking about captaincy here, an area in which his expertise has frequently been explored, but more about the purpose of playing games at all and the satisfactions to be derived from them. In , Brearley references the Dutch historian Johan Huizinga’s famous book and also quotes Bion, for whom play was easily contaminated by the will to win, or paradoxically in Brearley’s case, by his ability, which led to his being considered for a leadership role. For example: “Excellence meant that the prospect of captainship began to appear over the horizon. That would mean that the prospect of games for the sake of games would no longer be a feasible aim.”Little, BrownPrompted by such thoughts and connecting them to current debates, I ask Brearley whether the health of a country’s sport should be judged by the health of its national team.”That does seem to happen,” he acknowledges. “If you have a view of cricket like Bion or Huizinga’s, you would think that if the game is played in its purest spirit, it doesn’t matter who wins. The purity of the game is in the spontaneous, playful enjoyment of it – just as young lions play without hurting each other. You do it for its own sake. I hope we never lose that, and it’s actually what Stokes and McCullum are trying to achieve. But I do think winning is important – the rules of a game determine what a win is and winning is essential to a game. I’m also very suspicious of the attitude expressed by some people that they don’t mind losing.”It is nice if the national cricket team does well, especially if they play in the right spirit, as they have been doing. And there’s no other way of learning how to get there, except through county cricket. So it is a function of the county game that it should produce players of international standard, just as it’s a function of club cricket that it should produce players who are ready to go into county second teams and the first-class game. If you don’t have those stepping stones and strengthen them, then you don’t get the top level either.”Turning Over the Pebbles

In Sri Lanka's hour of economic and political crisis, their cricketers have spoken up

The country is on the brink of economic collapse brought on by poor governance, and its sportspeople have added their voices to those of common citizens

Andrew Fidel Fernando07-Jun-2022″Cowardly… I am disappointed to see we even have such leadership”
– Wanindu Hasaranga”Disgusting… Intentional and planned.”
– Kumar Sangakkara”Entire world can see how pathetic your actions are.”
-Mahela Jayawardene”They did not take any action to prevent this…”
– Roshan Mahanama”Disgusting behaviour.”
– Sanath JayasuriyaThese are all quotes from tweets by Sri Lanka’s biggest cricketing stars, and several of the most beloved sporting figures in the country. Each of them was clearly incensed. But they were not tweeting about a dismissal where a non-striker was run-out when backing up. This wasn’t about a dressing-room spat, a fight with a coach, or even corruption on the field.

All this was in response to the violence that each of them felt Sri Lanka’s government had unleashed on peaceful protesters on May 9. Those initial attacks sparked nationwide reprisals. By the end of the day, nine people had been killed, and dozens of politicians’ homes had been torched.Related

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Doth protest too little

What do India's cricketers have to say about the protests in the country?

Sri Lanka, if you hadn’t read, is going through an unprecedented economic crisis, which has prompted a popular uprising taking aim – in particular – at the Rajapaksa family, who have governed the country for 12 of the last 17 years and are seen as having led Sri Lanka to this precipice.”We send politicians to parliament for them to have full parliamentary benefits, and for them to lead a very luxurious life,” Mahanama says, capturing just a fraction of the public sentiment. “The only thing people expect from them is to give them what they promise, and to live peacefully. Now everything has been taken away. We’re talking about the bare essentials. There is no electricity, there are long blackouts. There are shortages of medicines. No fuel. No kerosene. No milk powder.”I’ve been seeing four or five kids share a loaf of bread. People have been going down from three meals a day to two. From two down to one. I’m hurt. I’m sorry to see fellow Sri Lankans going through this. It was the politicians who basically pushed everyone onto the streets.”Mahela Jayawardene: “One good thing with these incidents is that we as a country have come together”•Getty ImagesWhat has happened on the streets since March are mass protests, many led by young Sri Lankans. They have found an epicentre near Colombo’s Galle Face Green, where many of the earliest cricket matches in the country were played. There, a vast array of tents, banners, stalls, a makeshift library, a “teargas cinema” that screens films on themes relating to the protest, and various other platforms for public education, discussion and dissent have been erected by a loose collection of protesting groups. Around the country, more Occupy-style movements have begun in Kandy and Galle, most notably. But there have been large and spirited demonstrations all over the island, many of which have been met by water cannons, tear gas, and occasionally fatal gunfire, by Sri Lanka’s police and armed forces.It is impossible to separate the protests from their main demand, “Go home, Gota” (referring to Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, Sri Lanka’s president), and “Go home, Rajapaksas.” To support the protests is essentially to align yourself with these political aims.What is unusual about these demonstrations from a cricket perspective, however, is that they have had substantial support from past and current cricketers. Long before Hasaranga tweeted his disgust at the “cowardly and barbaric… attack on innocent and peaceful protesters” on May 9, he had expressed his unequivocal support of the “” (the struggle), even as he took his first steps in what would eventually become a phenomenally successful IPL season. “To the brothers and sisters involved in the , you have my utmost respect,” he tweeted on April 9, along with a photo of the mass demonstrations at Galle Face. “You’re the real heroes of the present day,” he wrote, tweeting a bicep-flex emoji and a Sri Lankan flag.By this stage, several high-profile cricketers had already been seen at the protests. Dimuth Karunaratne, Sri Lanka’s current Test captain, had made an appearance. As had former Test captain Marvan Atapattu. Upul Tharanga, and Jayasuriya had tweeted their support as well. Others put up social media posts that were at least “support adjacent” – meaning, they weren’t decrying the Rajapaksas outright but were in some vague sense showing solidarity with a growing people’s movement.Mahanama, though, was one of the first on the ground, one of the most vocal online. “When I saw people struggling like this, I thought to myself, ‘I can’t just stay at home,” he says. “I need to be there for people because they’ve been there for me throughout. We need people with a strong voice to come out and show their displeasure. By the day, things were getting worse. We need these politicians to be accountable. Some of these people have been there for years.”People line up for kerosene at a filling station. The Sri Lankan rupee has declined sharply and inflation in May was around 40%•Ishara S Kodikara/Getty ImagesFormer fast bowler Dhammika Prasad had had similar thoughts. “People were really facing a lot of difficulty just to live, because of the economic crisis,” he says. “They were facing an for their lives. They still are. As a responsible citizen, I had to do something. When I was playing, these are the same people who would support me. I have a responsibility towards them.”Young people have got down on to the streets to protest. When they are there demonstrating peacefully to ask for something completely reasonable, you can’t just stay at home. Perhaps there’s a tendency among us to save your own skin. But there are times when you have to have a backbone and stand up for what’s right.”Although far from the biggest name in Sri Lankan cricket, Prasad’s was the most committed, and profound of the anti-government demonstrations by Sri Lanka’s cricketers. In addition to the Rajapaksas’ perceived economic mismanagement and corruption, support for a variety of long-standing social-justice causes has found loud expression at the protests. In April, chief among these was the call for justice for the victims of the 2019 Easter bombings, which primarily targeted Christian places of worship. Although a presidential inquiry into the bombings was carried out, largely during Gotabhaya Rajapaksa’s tenure, there has been widespread criticism that it was insufficient, and that those who masterminded the attacks – or at least set them in motion – have not yet been identified.Prasad, a Catholic, said he could not help but take up this cause as the three-year anniversary of the attacks approached. He first took part in a 40-kilometre protest march between the Katuwapitiya Church in Negombo and St Anthony’s Shrine in Kochchikade – the latter was the site that had the most casualties in the attacks. Later that month, he staged a 24-hour hunger strike at Galle Face, during which he called relentlessly for justice.A policeman fires tear gas during clashes between government supporters and protesters in Colombo on May 9•Ishara S Kodikara/Getty Images”I remember in 2019 I went to the church at Katuwapitiya with Dasun Shanaka and Dushmantha Chameera,” Prasad says. “The church was totally destroyed, and there were parts of human bodies everywhere. Of the 269 people who had died, I wondered how many would have clapped for me, and how many would have loved cricket. I wanted to do right by them.”People are really struggling, and on top of that, there has been no justice for the victims of the Easter attacks. It was for those reasons I was at the .”There has been criticism of the , including that the protests became a trendy place to be seen. However, defenders of the protests have argued that the conversations, slogans and discourse seen at the protests have helped bring vital political issues that were previously the domain of wonks and academics into the mainstream. Jayawardene is among those defenders.”The has triggered a lot of awareness around the country – how we need this change and how we can make those changes, which the country desperately needs,” he says. “I’m very, very proud of the people who have got together in the protests around the country – not just in Colombo but in the outstations as well. And they’ve been strengthened by a lot of others.”Among the issues the protests have put a microscope on, for example, is Sri Lanka’s constitution, which many critics think concentrates too much unchecked power in the office of the president. Prasad, Mahanama, and Jayawardene all support amending the constitution to dilute the powers of the president, or a completely abolition of the office. As a first step, though, the current head honchos need to leave, Jayawardene says.Dhammika Prasad: “Young people have got down on to the streets to protest. When they are there demonstrating peacefully to ask for something completely reasonable, you can’t just stay at home”•Deshakalyan Chowdhury/AFP/Getty Images”In a company, if the CEO and the CFO have made bad decisions and that company is in a crisis situation, the first thing that should happen is that those people resign. It should happen the same way with a country.”We need all parties to come together, but that’s going to be tough because first of all people have to put their hands up and say, ‘We’ve done something wrong’ and step down.”Just as the protests have reflected diverse political interests that have – at least momentarily – come together, many cricketers have expressed varying visions for Sri Lanka. In the course of the interviews for this story, Jayawardene called for better-educated politicians, but Mahanama suggests that well educated people are not necessarily always good decision-makers. “Sometimes the guy at the [local eatery] knows more about what’s going on than the so-called political experts.”Not all cricketers have endorsed the anti-establishment sentiment. Muthiah Muralidaran, the most high-profile Tamil cricketer ever, has refused to criticise the Rajapaksas. In fact, he more or less defended them on an Indian news channel, asking protesters to calm down until the government provided solutions. Murali’s story, however, is profusely conflicted and complex.But as the protests have brought complex political discussions into the mainstream, Sri Lanka’s cricketers have become more vocally engaged in more political conversations as well.Protestors camp out at the “Gota Go” village on Galle Face Green in April•Ishara S Kodikara/Getty ImagesJayawardene, who is Sinhala-Buddhist, the majority ethno-religious identity group in the country, puts it this way: “One good thing with these incidents over the last three or four months is that we as a country have come together. There are no ethnic, or religious, or caste, or social divisions. For a long time a lot of people benefited from keeping everything divided. That’s something that the younger generation has realised.”His friend Sangakkara has also spoken out against majoritarian politics over the course of the last few months. Other cricketers from Sinhala-Buddhist backgrounds have also been critical of the island’s political culture. Prasad called outright for a “system change”.What has been clear through much of the economic crisis, and the political crisis that economic nosedive precipitated, is that many of Sri Lanka’s cricketers have either been unwilling to remain idle as their nation suffers, or at the very least have been forced to take a stance because of the intensity of the anti-government demonstrations.Jayawardene, who was one of Sri Lanka’s most respected captains and players as well as a globally recognised coach, but also the head of a national sports council under a Rajapaksa regime, explained it this way: “Sri Lankan cricket is about people in the country. Without the Sri Lankans supporting us, we wouldn’t have achieved anything over the last 30 years. All the sportsmen and women in the country owe a huge gratitude to the people in this country. We’re a small country, and we’re part of society.”Yes you still have to work within that framework, but that doesn’t mean you are part of that establishment. We grew up here, and most of us will be here till we die. You are part of Sri Lanka. You’re part of that society.”

How James Pattinson is turning the heat on from 'back-seat role'

After being “surprised to get a game”, Pattinson is at present joint-fourth on IPL 2020’s wicket charts

Vishal Dikshit10-Oct-20203:57

What’s behind the success of Anrich Nortje and James Pattinson?

When the Mumbai Indians squad, covered in their PPEs, landed in the sultry August heat of Abu Dhabi for IPL 2020, James Pattinson was still in lockdown in Victoria, Australia, in 7 degrees Celsius. Pattinson, like most other players around the world, had not played any cricket for many months, and after being named as a replacement for Lasith Malinga, he had to suddenly fly to the UAE to face an additional 30-plus degrees and play two months of challenging T20 cricket.Pattinson was preparing for the Australian summer before that, and “luckily” he had been training with the white ball when he got a call for the IPL. But was he going to even get a game early on, joining a pace-heavy bowling attack, which included Jasprit Bumrah, Trent Boult, Mitchell McClenaghan and Nathan Coulter-Nile? As many experts had predicted, and Pattinson himself expected, he wasn’t in the Mumbai Indians’ initial plans. But Coulter-Nile arrived with a side strain and Pattinson “was surprised to get a game”, as he revealed before the game against the Sunrisers Hyderabad.Since then, the Mumbai Indians have carved out a specific role for Pattinson, with the seamer moulding himself so well for it that they haven’t had to change their bowling attack even once in six games. The result: Pattinson is the joint-fourth among the top wicket-takers this season with nine scalps, only behind Kagiso Rabada (15), Bumrah (11), Boult (10) and Mohammed Shami (10).The role Pattinson has been given is to bowl two overs with the new ball, one in the 10-14-over period and the last at the death, which allows Bumrah to start bowling towards the end of the powerplay and keep two for the slog overs. One of the things that has worked well for Pattinson is that he is a hit-the-deck bowler, and that skill comes handy on pitches in the UAE where fast bowlers barely get any assistance. Pattinson aims for that short-of-a-length area, which he can use for extra bounce, or for cutters.ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball data on length from this IPL shows that in powerplays so far, Pattinson has bowled about 55% of his 60 deliveries either short or short-of-a-good-length and conceded only 39 runs off those 33 deliveries while picking up one wicket.James Pattinson has bowled 10 overs in the powerplay in six games•ESPNcricinfo LtdHitting such lengths is a feature of the overall plan the Mumbai Indians have been following for a while now in the IPL.Another weapon Pattinson has used with great success this season – his maiden IPL – has been his change-ups, which he had been working on before the tournament. What else does a fast bowler do when pitches don’t offer swing or seam movement? Bowl some cutters, take the pace off the ball and wait for the batsmen to miscue the ball with your fielders at the boundary.Case in point: Pattinson was bowling a crucial 16th over with David Warner on 58 and the Sunrisers needing 70 off 30 balls, which is quite achievable in Sharjah. After slanting two slower deliveries across Warner from over the wicket, Pattinson came around the wicket and sent down a slow, short and wide legcutter that Warner chased desperately and ended up edging to short-third man for a spectacular catch by Ishan Kishan.Pattinson says planning for particular batsmen has been key to his and the Mumbai Indians’ bowling success.”It’s just the planning that goes into it,” Pattinson said on Saturday. “Before the game, we plan and work out our fields, different plans for different batters. It’s just about executing that. I think the confidence they have really rubs off on me, especially Trent and Boom [Bumrah] have great confidence in their ability. It’s great to have that rub off and you going to games with that confidence and knowing you’re surrounded by world-class bowlers.”It’s good to go out and play my part. I’ve got two really, really good white-ball bowlers in Jasprit and Trent, it’s nice to play a back-seat role for them and try and help out the team as much as I can.”Pattinson is also a lesser-known entity in the IPL because apart from his start-stop Australia career marred by injuries, the only T20 league he has played in is the Big Bash. He picked up 5 for 33 for the Brisbane Heat with the new ball at the beginning of the year but in the IPL his role is not restricted to opening the bowling. In the second half of the tournament, too, Pattinson could prove handy with his reverse swing, which captain Rohit Sharma, before the IPL, had said could come into play as pitches go through more wear and tear.For now, Pattinson is enjoying what he is doing: bowling alongside Boult and Bumrah and playing the back-seat role.

العربي القطري يوضح موقفه من رحيل يزن النعيمات وحقيقة مفاوضات الأهلي

أصبح اسم الأردني يزن النعيمات لاعب العربي القطري، يتردد بقوة خلال الوسط الرياضي المصري، في الفترة الحالية، وذلك بعد أنباء عن وجود اهتمام قوي من النادي الأهلي لضمه.

ووفقًا لصحيفة الراية الأردنية، قالت إن محمود الخطيب رئيس النادي الأهلي كلف سيد عبد الحفيظ عضو مجلس الإدارة بإنهاء المفاوضات مع يزن النعيمات لضمه في انتقالات يناير القادمة.

وتواصل برنامج “استاد المحور” مع المتحدث الرسمي لنادي العربي القطري الذي يضم يزن النعيمات، لمعرفة حقيقة المفاوضات وموقف النادي من رحيل لاعبه إلى الأهلي.

وقال جمال الغندور مقدم برنامج “استاد المحور” المذاع على قناة “المحور”، :”محمد الكواري المتحدث الرسمي لنادي العربي القطري قال غير صحيح تفاوض الأهلي معنا لضم يزن نعيمات في الفترة الحالية”.

طالع | حقيقة مفاوضات الأهلي مع بابلو الصباغ لاعب منتخب سوريا

وأضاف: “الأهلي لم يتواصل معنا رسميًا أو شفهيًا، واللاعب مستمر بشكل طبيعي في صفوف العربي القطري”.

ويعد يزن النعيمات، أحد اللاعبين المميزين في الوقت الحالي بالوطن العربي، حيث يقدم مستويات رائعة تجعل جميع الأندية تهتم بضمه والظفر بخدماته، وساهم في تأهل منتخب الأردن إلى نهائيات كأس العالم 2026 القادم، كما كان قد وصل إلى نهائي بطولة كأس أمم آسيا الأخيرة وخسر مع النشامي اللقب أمام قطر.

Orioles Already Cut Ties With Offseason Signing Amid Sluggish Start to Season

The Baltimore Orioles have designated veteran starter Kyle Gibson for assignment after a brutal start to the 2025 campaign, according to a report from Bob Nightengale of

Gibson signed a one-year deal worth $5.25 million this spring, but after four starts amassed an 0-3 record with 23 earned runs across 12.1 innings (16.78 ERA).

The 37-year-old Gibson is one of several Orioles starters who have struggled to get going this season, and his release is the latest in a series of moves for Baltimore this weekend, with the headliner being the firing of manager Brandon Hyde on Saturday after six-plus seasons leading the franchise.

Entering Sunday, the Orioles are 15-29 on the season, and sit in last place in the American League East, 10 and 1/2 games behind the first-place New York Yankees.

Wrexham's Premier League promotion dream is ON: Eight-match unbeaten run has Red Dragons dreaming of the big time after slow start

When Wrexham lost 3-1 at home to Queens Park Rangers on September 13, they were 21st in the 24-team Championship, with just four points from their opening five games. It felt like a brutal reality check for fans dreaming of promotion to the Premier League just two years after getting out of the National League. Manager Phil Parkinson refused to panic, though.

"If the set-up's not right in our defensive shape, those five yards away from where you need to be as a team, then we're going to get punished with that bit of extra quality. That is the difference at this level and we know that," Parkinson told reporters.  "But we've changed the squad around completely and there was always going to be a period at the start where it doesn't go completely as you'd want it." 

Luckily for Parkinson, his plea for patience did not fall on deaf ears and now, less than three months on from that chastening loss at the Racehorse Ground, Wrexham's remarkable bid for a fourth consecutive promotion is very much back on track.

Getty Images Sport'Invest to be competitive'

The Championship is a notoriously competitive and unforgiving league. More than half of the 30 teams promoted to England's second tier over the past 10 years have gone back down inside two seasons.

So, while Hollywood duo Rob McElhenney and Ryan Reynolds had pumped millions into the club since taking over in 2021, they were acutely aware that even greater investment would be required just to survive in the Championship, resulting in a record-breaking outlay of £40 million ($53m) on 13 players.

Wrexham's net spend raised eyebrows – and expectations – but chief executive Michael Williamson was at pains to point out that there were mitigating circumstances on account of their unique situation.

"[The net spend was high] because it wasn't offset by any player sales – unlike a club who's in the Championship already or a club that's been in the Premier League that gets relegated to the Championship," he told . "They're able to do that kind of squad change as a result of being able to sell players along the way. Or they rely on their academy players and they sell their academy players to fund some of the transfer market.

"We don't have the foundations for that within the academy, that pipeline of players, and we had three consecutive promotions, so we had to invest in the squad to be competitive."

AdvertisementGetty Images SportLearning from Liverpool

Nonetheless, it initially looked like a case of too much, too soon for Wrexham, who struggled to keep clean sheets and, consequently, win games during the first two months of the season.

However, after a disappointing 1-0 defeat at Stoke City on October 18 that left the Red Dragons 18th in the Championship standings, they've now risen to 10th on the back of an eight-game undefeated run featuring five shut-outs. Indeed, Andri Gudjohnsen's early strike in Saturday's 1-1 draw with Blackburn Rovers at the Racehorse Ground was the first goal Wrexham had conceded in 375 minutes of league football.

For Parkinson, the improved defensive record was all down to his players understanding the importance of the fundamentals in football, revealing that he'd used struggling Liverpool as a case in point while addressing his team before last week's win over Bristol City.

"I was listening to Virgil van Dijk's interview after the Nottingham Forest defeat," the 58-year-old Englishman explained, "and he was speaking about how Liverpool have got to win the first and second balls, be competitive, work as a team and how they've got to get their way back by doing the basics in football. And that's the champions of England talking like that!

"But we had spoken about the same things early in the season: football is about making sure you're threatening at one end but also secure when you're attacking, and I think we've got a lot better at that as the season has gone on."

'Keep going right until the end'

Parkinson also feels that Max Cleworth's 95th-minute equaliser in Saturday's draw with Blackburn proves that Wrexham have recovered the relentlessness and never-say-die attitude that characterised their astounding ascent to the Championship.

"It's good for the lads who have come and joined us to see that we keep going right until the end here," Parkinson enthused after his 200th game in charge of the Welsh outfit. "Time and time again, we've scored late equalisers or winners, and we've done it again today. The crowd could sense a goal was coming, too."

The belief is certainly back among the fans, who, Parkinson feels, are feeding off the increase in energy they're seeing on the pitch.

"I think the atmosphere now and the feeling in the stadium is what we were used to in previous years," he said. "In those early games this season, we didn't quite create that intensity in our play. We had some really good periods in all those games but we got punished in key moments.

"But we've always spoken about making this place difficult for the opposition to play and I think we've got it back where we need it to be. We've got to keep it there now and that comes with the supporters obviously playing their part, but also the manner of the performance, the physicality."

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'Fiery' atmosphere

The home form has certainly been integral to Wrexham's revival. They've not lost a league game at the Racecourse Ground since that defeat to QPR, while they're still the only team to have beaten runaway Championship leaders Coventry City so far this season. 

"As a team, it probably took a little bit of time to gel and that happens with the amount of changes that were made in the summer and you lose players and new lads come in," Cleworth said. "It's hard to gel straight away, but I think we're certainly doing that now. We've tightened things up and we're really dangerous going forward.

"And it's massive for us, that home form and having the fans behind us week-in week-out when we play. I think if we can keep that fiery atmosphere going, it's hard for teams to come here and get anything.

"No matter who plays, lads who come off the bench, we've got quality all over the pitch so we're always a threat to teams and it's important that we've managed to get on a decent run. Hopefully we can continue it and with a few more runs like this, we could be potentially fighting for promotion."

It's certainly possible at this point of the season.

It's showtime as winless Hong Kong take on wounded Afghanistan to kick off Asia Cup

Afghanistan will be particularly concerned by the form of Rahmanullah Gurbaz, who endured a rough week in the recently-concluded tri-series

Danyal Rasool08-Sep-20254:10

What was the biggest turning point in Rashid Khan’s career?

Big picture: First of three big tasks for Hong KongMeasured by eyeballs, this is the largest non-ICC international tournament cricket has to offer, even if an opener between Afghanistan and Hong Kong doesn’t help make the case for that argument. But in a tight format, there is little bloat, and Hong Kong have the misfortune of being grouped with three legitimate contenders for the trophy.They have played 16 T20Is this year, but nothing that comes close to the sharp uptick in quality they will need to reckon with in a group that also includes Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. They got to the UAE almost three weeks in advance, and booked themselves four warm-up games to get into tune ahead of the tournament: a pair against Oman, as well as two against local club sides. That they split the fixtures with each opposition is perhaps suggestive of their level, as well as the task that lies ahead of them against last year’s T20 World Cup semi-finalists.Related

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Asia Cup 2025: Politics, passion and a stage for new rivalries

However, there may not be a better time for Hong Kong to play Rashid Khan’s men. The fixture comes just two days after Afghanistan suffered a bruising defeat in the tri-series final against Pakistan, their batters looking totally ill-equipped against Pakistan’s spinners on a turning track in Sharjah. The emotional toll of that defeat, as well as the quick turnaround, offers Hong Kong a potential opportunity to catch Afghanistan out in Abu Dhabi.Realistically, though, that possibility is remote. Afghanistan are among the best sides in these conditions, and have a win over Pakistan as well as two against UAE from the tri-series under their belt. They boast a well-rounded bowling attack, as well as a batting lineup that combines destructiveness with a more classical poise. They demonstrated their strength in depth by rotating half the side against UAE in a dead rubber before the tri-series final, and still ended up winning. The shorter format and the timing may give Hong Kong the feeling they have a chance, but victory would still make this the greatest upset in Asia Cup history.Form guideAfghanistan: LWWWL
Hong Kong: LWWLW15:43

Can Afghanistan make the final of the Asia Cup?

In the spotlight: Rahmanullah Gurbaz and Hong Kong’s openersAfghanistan’s highest profile players are invariably the bowlers, but Rahmanullah Gurbaz bucks that trend. However, Afghanistan’s biggest batting superstar endured a rough week in the recent tri-series, scoring just 98 runs at under 110, 40 of which came in a dead rubber against UAE. The impact of his early dismissals has been somewhat mitigated by the remarkable consistency of Ibrahim Zadran and Sediqullah Atal, but none have the explosiveness Gurbaz does when in full flow. Simply put, Afghanistan won’t make a deep run without his impact, and a game against Hong Kong represents an ideal opportunity to blast his way back to form.If Afghanistan’s opener has hit a dry patch, that certainly can’t be said for his Hong Kong counterparts Zeeshan Ali and Anshuman Rath. Far and away Hong Kong’s two leading run-scorers, they have demonstrated themselves to be consistent as well as dynamic, with strike rates hovering in the mid 140s. Both boast T20I hundreds this year, while Rath’s consistency, in particular, has made Hong Kong especially dependent on his runs. He has scored a further five half-centuries, and averages just under 50 for the year, the standout innings an unbeaten 59-ball 100 in a mauling of Singapore. Hong Kong need a fast start, and in that department at least, their openers have a track record of taking care of business.Team newsSince reintroducing Noor Ahmad into their side, Afghanistan have favoured the extra spinner. Expect a similar team to the one that played Pakistan in the final.Afghanistan (possible): 1 Rahmanullah Gurbaz (wk), 2 Ibrahim Zadran, 3 Sediqullah Atal, 4 Darwish Rasooli, 5 Karim Janat, 6 Azmatullah Omarzai, 7 Rashid Khan (capt), 8 Mohammad Nabi, 9 AM Ghazanfar, 10 Noor Ahmad, 11 Fazalhaq FarooqiHong Kong (possible): 1 Anshuman Rath, 2 Zeeshan Ali (wk), 3 Babar Hayat, 4 Nizakat Khan, 5 Matthew Coetzee, 6 Yasim Murtaza (capt), 7 Ehsan Khan, 8 Aizaz Khan, 9 Ateeq Iqbal, 10 Nasrulla Rana, 11 Ayush ShuklaNoor Ahmad and Afghanistan will be expected to be a formidable force in familiar Abu Dhabi conditions•AFP/Getty Images

Pitch and conditionsAbu Dhabi is considered slightly less conducive to spin than Dubai, which may dull Afghanistan’s edge marginally. It is expected to be warm and humid in the evening, as is routine in the UAE this time of year.Stats and trivia In 21 years of their presence in the Asia Cup, Hong Kong have lost all 11 matches they have played. Afghanistan have a better T20I record in Abu Dhabi – the venue of the match – than at any other ground in the UAE, winning 11 and losing 5. However, they lost their only match against Hong Kong at this venue, in 2015.

خاص.. موقف محمد الشناوي من المشاركة في مباراة منتخب مصر وأوزبكستان

كشف مصدر داخل منتخب مصر، عن موقف محمد الشناوي حارس مرمى الفريق، من المشاركة في مباراة المنتخب أمام اوزبكستان الودية. 

ومن المقرر أن يواجه منتخب مصر نظيره منتخب أوزبكستان وديًا، غدًا الجمعة، ضمن استعدادات الفراعنة لكأس أمم إفريقيا المقبلة في المغرب. 

ويخوض منتخب مصر معسكرًا في الإمارات، ويتخلله دورة ودية أمام منتخبات أوزبكستان وكاب فيردي ومنتخب إيران. 

طالع.. منتخب مصر ينهي استعداداته لمواجهة أوزبكستان

وقال المصدر في تصريحات لـ”بطولات”: “محمد الشناوي كان خاض تدريبات استشفائية في مران الأمس بسبب معاناته من الإرهاق، ولكنه تعافى”. 

وأضاف المصدر: “محمد الشناوي تدرب اليوم بشكل طبيعي مع المنتخب وأعلن جاهزيته لمواجهة أوزبكستان الودية غدًا، وقرار مشاركته أساسيا من عدمها في يد حسام حسن المدير الفني”. 

يذكر أن الفائز من لقاء منتخب مصر وأوزبكستان سيواجه منتخب إيران يوم 18 نوفمبر، بينما يلعب الخاسر أمام الرأس الأخضر في 17 من الشهر ذاته على ملعب هزاع بن زايد، بعدما حسم المنتخب الإيراني تأهله بركلات الترجيح أمام الرأس الأخضر في المباراة الافتتاحية.

 

Ben Stokes on final-day bowling efforts: 'Nothing was stopping me'

Ben Stokes, England’s captain, admitted he had taken himself to some “dark places” with his bowling workloads but said “nothing was stopping” him as he embarked on two lengthy spells to help drag his side to a 22-run victory over India on the final day at Lord’s.Stokes was named Player of the Match after taking five wickets across 44 overs – the third-most he has bowled in a Test, and the most since 2019 – to go with innings of 44 and 33 with the bat, as well as the crucial run-out of Rishabh Pant in India’s first innings.On the third evening, he received an instruction from England’s head coach, Brendon McCullum, to call it quits after a seven-over spell, with the team management still wary about protecting Stokes’ fitness after hamstring surgery over the winter.Related

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But he again pushed his body to the limit on Monday, resuming his over from the previous evening and bowling a further 9.2 overs during the morning, which included the wicket of India opener KL Rahul. He followed up with a ten-over spell after lunch, eventually dislodging Jasprit Bumrah after a dogged 35-run stand with Ravindra Jadeja for the ninth wicket, as England sought to confirm victory and a 2-1 lead in the series.The Lord’s Test was also the second of back-to-back matches, with just a three-day turnaround from India’s win at Edgbaston, where Stokes bowled 26 overs. In the first Test, at Headingley, he sent down 35 overs and spoke afterwards about how hard it was to recover.”I have taken myself to some pretty dark places before. Today was… but look, bowling to win a Test match, if that doesn’t get you excited, I don’t know what does,” he said, speaking to Sky Sports at the post-match presentation.”With what today was, what was on the line. Yesterday [Saturday] was a bit different. You know, there was still more cricket to be played. And, you know, pulled myself off there. I mean, to be honest, I was absolutely cooked [on day three] as well. But again, today, you know, game was on the line. Nothing was stopping me [carrying on].”Ben Stokes appeals for KL Rahul’s wicket•Getty Images

Although Stokes hinted at a return to form with the bat, Lord’s extended his run without a Test fifty to ten innings. He is now averaging 29.18 in 20 Tests since his last hundred, at Lord’s during the 2023 Ashes, but said that his ability to impact games with the ball meant he had little time to dwell on his batting returns.”I’m an allrounder. I get four opportunities in a Test match to be able to influence the game. And one of the great things about being an allrounder is that if one thing doesn’t quite click, you’ve got an opportunity with the other. And that’s how I look at it.”Obviously, I would like to be scoring more runs at the moment, but as soon as I’ve got my whites on out there on the field, all my thoughts flip over to bowling. And that’s the great thing about being an allrounder, that you don’t really have a chance to sort of worry about anything. And everyone knows, I’ll always put in as much as I possibly can.”Jofra Archer took two crucial wickets in his opening spell•Getty Images

Stokes offered particular praise for Jofra Archer, playing in his first Test since 2021. Archer claimed match figures of 5 for 105 in a display of sustained hostility that regularly pushed the speed gun above 90mph/145kph. On day five, six years on from his heroics in the ODI World Cup final, he made the first breakthrough with the key wicket of Pant, and Stokes said he had backed Archer to do something special.”Yeah, part of the reason I went with Jof this morning, six years ago now to the day. He played a major role and I had a feeling he’d do something special and crack the game open. A bit of discussion, Brydon [Carse] had an amazing spell [last night], but I had a gut feeling that Jof’s going to do something in his first game back.”Speaking afterwards to Sky, Archer said that the long periods he experienced in rehab due to back and elbow problems between 2021 and 2024 were made all the more worthwhile by the taste of victory at Lord’s.As well as his involvement in the World Cup final, when he bowled the Super Over as England’s men lifted the trophy for the first time, Archer made his Test debut on the ground during the 2019 Ashes. However, he had not played a Test since February 2021 before his comeback against India, enduring a four-year absence from red-ball cricket while road-testing his body in the limited-overs formats.0:55

Manjrekar: Stokes always makes things happen

“I only played one other Test at Lord’s, but you know, the last one was just as special as this one,” Archer said. “A lot of rehab, a lot of training, but it’s moments like this that make everything worth it.”I feel the hardest part is playing cricket for the last year-and-a-half and then still having training, talking about workloads, and ‘bowl today, don’t bowl tomorrow’, stuff like that. That would probably be the hardest part, because some days you think that you’re ready, but you never know if you’re ready or not until you do it. But the safer way is the best way. So I’m not too fussed. This surely, surely is worth it.”On day two, Archer struck with his third ball on returning to the Test side, having India opener Yashasvi Jaiswal caught at second slip, and celebrated by sprinting away to square leg, where he was enveloped by his team-mates.”Guess I was a little bit emotional,” he said. “It was a long journey. I can’t tell you the amount of keyboard warriors that I had to put up with for the last three to four years as well. I told myself that I was going to try my best not to be [emotional] and when [Jaiswal] nicked it, and it went to Brooky [Harry Brook], I think all of that just went through the window. The joy, the whole crowd, the Long Room yesterday, I’ve never seen it like that ever in my life. So it’s just moments like this that made the rehab all so much worth it.”Archer also revealed what was behind his send-off for Pant on the final day, having removed the batter’s off stump from the ground. “It wasn’t a proud moment,” he said. “I just told him to charge that. Honestly, this morning, I was struggling a little bit, the ball just kept coming out full. One of the full ones, he just charged, and it p****d me off a bit. When the [wicket] ball nipped down the slope, honestly I was so grateful for that.”

'Gives us extra motivation' – Rodrigo De Paul believes Lionel Messi's announced extension sparked Inter Miami to Game 1 win over Nashville SC

Following Inter Miami’s 3-1 win over Nashville SC in Game 1 of the MLS Cup Playoffs, Argentine midfielder Rodrigo De Paul – Messi’s longtime national team teammate – praised the captain’s influence and form. He added that Messi’s decision to remain with the Herons beyond this season has given the squad an extra spark heading into the postseason.

Getty Images Sport'We just have to keep enjoying him'

With Messi's future secured, Inter Miami now carry momentum – and confidence – and aim to make noise in the playoffs. De Paul underscored the importance of Messi’s contract renewal for the locker room’s morale.

“Knowing we’ll be together for a few more years gives us extra motivation,” De Paul said. “We just have to keep enjoying him.”

“It makes me really happy to see what he’s doing…There will never be another like him. Having him on my team every week is an advantage.”

AdvertisementMessi overcomes back concerns

Inter Miami head coach Javier Mascherano also praised Messi’s impact after his two-goal showing in the playoff opener against Nashville SC. While concerns arose over a possible back injury, Mascherano downplayed them, saying too much was made of Messi’s brief absence from training. Messi showed no signs of slowing down on the pitch, guiding Miami to a crucial home win that places them on the brink of advancing to the second round.

“Everything that happens around Leo always takes on a bigger scale,” Mascherano said postmatch. “Sometimes there’s a lot of noise around him, so we preferred to protect him. At this stage of the season, less can be more – it’s about making sure he doesn’t take unnecessary risks and that any discomfort doesn’t get worse.”

Getty Images Sport'It was already agreed'

Mascherano also confirmed that Messi’s contract extension had been agreed upon for some time, even if it hadn’t been made official until recently.

“The club and Leo decided to make it formal before the playoffs to focus fully on the sporting side,” he said. “We were calm, because even if it wasn’t announced, it was already agreed.”

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Getty Images SportSlow start

The coach acknowledged that Miami struggled early in the match, especially with their high pressing, but praised his team for adapting quickly.

“It took us a bit to get our pressing right, but as the minutes went by, the boys adjusted really well,” he said. “In fact, the first goal comes from pressure, with Tadeo [Allende] winning the ball and allowing us to break quickly.”

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