Sports
What to make of the expansion rosters drafted by the Portland Fire and Toronto Tempo
The Portland Fire selected Bridget Carleton with the No. 1 pick in the 2026 WNBA Expansion Draft.
A member of the Minnesota Lynx since 2019, the Canadian sharpshooter will be a founding player for the rebirth of the Fire. Canada’s first WNBA team, the Toronto Tempo, selected Julie Allemand with the second pick in the expansion draft. The Belgian point guard has three seasons of WNBA experience, most recently playing for the Los Angeles Sparks in 2025.
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Here’s how the whole expansion draft unfolded:
First round
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Portland: Bridget Carleton (Minnesota; unrestricted free agent)
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Toronto: Julie Allemand (Los Angeles; restricted free agent)
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Portland: Carla Leite (Golden State; under contract)
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Toronto: Nyara Sabally (New York; under contract)
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Portland: Luisa Geiselsöder (Dallas; reserved)
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Toronto: Marina Mabrey (Connecticut; unrestricted free agent)
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Portland: Emily Engstler (Washington; reserved)
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Toronto: Aaliyah Nye (Las Vegas; under contract)
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Portland: Maya Caldwell (Atlanta; reserved)
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Toronto: Lexi Held (Phoenix; reserved)
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Portland: Chloe Bibby (Indiana; reserved)
Second round
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Toronto: Mariá Conde (Golden State; contract expired)
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Portland: Haley Jones (Dallas; reserved)
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Toronto: Maria Kliundikova (Minnesota; reserved)
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Portland: Nyadiew Puoch (Atlanta; rights held)
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Toronto: Adja Kane (New York; rights held)
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Portland: Sarah Ashlee Barker (Los Angeles; under contract)
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Toronto: Nikolina Milić (Connecticut; reserved)
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Portland: Sug Sutton (Washington; restricted free agent)
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Toronto: Kitja Laksa (Phoenix; reserved)
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Toronto: Kristy Wallace (Indiana; contract expired)
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Portland: Nika Mühl (Seattle; under contract)
Although free agency and the college draft still are to come, let’s evaluate the current state of the inaugural rosters for the WNBA’s 14th and 15th franchises.
Portland Fire roster analysis
The Fire roster reflects the basketball philosophies of general manager Vanja Černivec and head coach Alex Sarama. Černivec came to Portland after a season with the Valkyries, a team that prioritized system and culture over traditional star power to great success during their inaugural season, while Sarama, most recently an assistant with the NBA’s Cleveland Cavaliers, is known for his constraints-led approach, an offensive philosophy that empowers players to adapt to on-court circumstances rather than adhere to more scripted sets.
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Even more than the Valkyries did, the Fire, at least as currently consistuted, lack a typical star, but, headlined by No. 1 pick Carleton, the players seemed suited to help realize the vision of Cernivec and Sarama. It’s also a roster that provides an infrastructure for a higher-wattage star to eventually slide into, whether that happens in the upcoming free agency period, through the college draft or next offseason.
It makes sense that Carleton, with her experience in the Lynx’s sophisticated offensive system, appealed to Portland as their one unrestricted free agent draftee. Carleton also has demonstrated malleability across her pro career. Although a role player in Minnesota, she has assumed primary scorer responsibilities when playing overseas, as well as for the Canadian national team.
Considering Cernivec came from Golden State, it’s also unsurprising that Portland grabbed Leite with their second selection. It’s the second-straight year Leite has been an expansion draft selection, something that should be considered a compliment to the upside she’s flashed with both the Valkyries in the WNBA and Casademont Zaragoza in EuroLeague Women. Her value not only comes from her potential as an off-the-bounce scorer, but also from the fact that she’s under contract for three more seasons, including 2026.
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Emily Engstler, Maya Caldwell and Haley Jones, drafted from Washington, Atlanta, and Dallas, respectively, and all of whom are reserved players, bring different flavors of multi-positional versatility that would seem to fit with Portland’s philosophies. Sarah Ashlee Barker, a first-round pick by the Sparks in last year’s college draft, sports a skillset that suggests she could replicate the combination of high-volume 3-point shooting and creation of Carleton. Barker also has three years remaining on her rookie-scale contract.
On the big front, offensive skill was the priority for Portland, as both Luisa Geiselsöder and Chloe Bibby, arriving via Dallas and Indiana, are comfortable behind the arc and with the ball in the their hands, although, due to a lack of foot speed and strength, both leave something to be desired on the defensive end.
At the moment, Portland profiles as a potentially fun offense, one that will need to score a lot of points because they may also sacrifice a lot on the other end. After the draft, Černivec did suggest the team intended to prioritize bigs during free agency, with such players potentially enhancing the team’s defensive viability.
The point guards drafted can at least provide some defensive resistance, as former Mystic Sug Sutton and former Storm Nika Mühl, who will miss the 2026 season as she recovers from an ACL injury, can heat up the ball at the point of attack. Based on comment from Černivec, it appears the team intends to invest in Mühl as a longterm piece, in spite of her current unavailability.
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Toronto Tempo roster analysis
While the Fire’s roster seems to reflect a clear identity, it’s more difficult to discern the Tempo’s vision for their expansion season.
Thus far, it’s a roster much different from the ones head coach Sandy Brondello has manned in her previous two spots, both of which produced championships. In Phoenix, Diana Taurasi and Brittney Griner, along with one Skylar Diggins season, were the centripetal stars. In New York, she again was in charge of a super team, guiding the likes of Brenna Stewart, Sabrina Ionescu and Jonquel Jones.
Currently, Marina Mabrey most approximates a star. But while capable of star-level scoring nights, as she showed at Philly is Unrivaled, Mabrey lacks the night-to-night consistency of true WNBA stars, as demonstrated during her tenure with the Sun last season. After the draft, general manager Monica Wright Rogers emphasized that the organization valued Mabrey’s competitiveness, suggesting that Toronto’s decision to presumably make her their featured offensive player, as she was the team’s unrestricted free agent selection, extends beyond her on-court production.
Including Mabrey, Toronto has compiled a more traditional roster.
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With Brondello herself being a former point guard, nabbing restricted free agent Allemand, a steady offensive orchestrator, with the team’s first pick shouldn’t have been too surprising. Lexie Held, Mariá Conde and Kritsy Wallace, from Phoenix, Golden State and Indiana, respectively, give Toronto more on-ball operators. An experienced EuroLeague standout, Conde, a Spanish national who played collegiately at Florida State, has never suited up in the W; it will be interesting if she decides now is the time to take her talents stateside. Brondello also has extra familiarity with Wallace from the Australian national team.
Familiarity also describes Toronto’s frontcourt strategy, as they selected New York bench bigs Nyara Sabally and Adja Kane. Drafting Sabally with their second first-round selection was a bit curious, even though she is under contract for the coming season. While talented, injuries have prevented her from consistently playing, much less fulfilling her potential. Potential certainly describes Kane, a 6-foot-3 and 21-year-old big from France who was drafted by the Liberty last season but stayed overseas. Maria Kliundikova and Nikolina Milić give Toronto two more bigs with good size and a measure of offensive versatility, as both have experimented with a 3-point shot. Not in the WNBA since 2019, Kliundikova played for the Lynx last season. While drafted from the Sun, Milić last played in the WNBA in 2023, when she was a member of the Lynx.
Aaliyah Nye, certainly, will be expected to provide 3-point shooting for the Tempo. As rookie, she had some big games for the Aces, with her prowess as a 3-point shooter exceeding her 31 percent mark. Toronto can also benefit from her rookie-scale contract. Kitja Laksa offers the possibility of more 3-point shooting, although she also scratched under 32 percent from behind the arc in her first WNBA season with the Mercury.
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More than the Fire, the Tempo likely need a significant move or two in free agency, or to really hit on the No. 6 pick in the college draft, for this roster to credibly compete on a nightly basis, which, according to Wright Rogers, is the intention. Right now, Toronto seems too reliant on Mabrey outbursts or the occasional hot shooting night from Nye to generate wins.
What’s your assessment? Are you intrigued by the Fire? Do you see the vision with Tempo?
And, what do you wish we knew about existing teams’ protected player lists, who was actually available for drafting and any behind-the-scenes agenting or angling that influenced the selections made by Portland and Toronto?
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Share all your expansion draft analysis, curiosities and questions.
Sports
No handshake! Uzbek chess GM stuns India’s Harika Dronavali with ‘Namaste’ – Watch | Chess News
NEW DELHI: A light and heartwarming moment grabbed attention at the Grenke Freestyle Open when Grandmaster (GM) Harika Dronavali extended her hand to resign, but Uzbek GM Nodirbek Yakubboev responded with a polite “Namaste” instead. Both players smiled and walked away, making it a memorable and respectful exchange.Watch:The event itself is heating up in Karlsruhe, where Vincent Keymer and Hans Niemann are leading with perfect 5/5 scores. They’re set to face off next in a crucial match. Close behind is a strong group, including world number one Magnus Carlsen, keeping the competition intense.Interestingly, Daniel Hausrath, ranked far lower globally, is surprisingly holding his own among top players. With thousands of participants and a major prize pool, the tournament is one of the biggest in the world, and upcoming rounds are expected to shake up the leaderboard.This isn’t the first time Yakubboev avoided a handshake. Earlier, during a game against R Vaishali at the Wijk Aan Zee Challengers section last year, he did the same, which led to confusion. Later, he met her again with flowers and chocolates to apologise.“I’m sorry for what had happened? It was an awkward situation for both of us. I was hurrying that day. It looks like some misunderstanding. And I want to wish good luck for the remaining games for both of you. Just want to say. I respect you and your brother both. Both of you, and all the Indian chess players,” Yakubboev said.Vaishali responded kindly: “No, it’s clearly understandable. I didn’t take it that way, so we didn’t have to feel bad. You actually apologised. It’s totally fine. You don’t have to worry about it.”Yakubboev later explained it was due to “religious reasons”, adding, “I want to explain the situation… I do not touch other women for religious reasons.” He emphasized respect, saying, “I respect Vaishali and her brother as the strongest chess players in India. If I have offended her with my behavior, I apologise,” and clarified, “I do what I need to do… It is their business what to do.”
Sports
Oilers’ Hyman to miss next three games, won’t travel on road trip
Hyman missed Saturday’s loss to the Vegas Golden Knights with an undisclosed injury.
After the game, Oilers head coach Kris Knoblauch announced that the forward will not travel with the team on its upcoming three-game road trip.
Knoblauch added that Hyman could return for the Oilers’ second-last game of the season in Edmonton against the Colorado Avalanche, and at worst, will return for their regular-season finale against the Vancouver Canucks on April 16.
Hyman, 33, has 31 goals and 20 assists in 57 games for Edmonton this season.
Despite their loss to Vegas on Saturday, the Oilers remain tied with the Anaheim Ducks atop the Pacific Division with 87 points.
The third-place Golden Knights are now just one point back of both teams thanks to Saturday’s victory.
Sports
Hughes claims Caulfield track record in 2026 Victoria Handicap
In racing, a single year brings massive changes.
Twelve months prior, Hughes secured a benchmark 70 over the 1400m at Caulfield in his early days with Gavin Bedggood. Come Saturday, this gelding triumphed in the Group 3 Victoria Handicap (1400m), clocking a new track record.
Jett Stanley delivered a flawless ride on Hughes ($19), who trailed early then surged through the pack to triumph by 1½ lengths over Athanatos ($11), followed a length behind by Meridius ($9.50) in third.
Gavin Bedggood expressed surprise at the gelding’s display.
“He won a benchmark 70 on this day last year,” Bedggood said.
“But he’s a very easy horse to train. We learnt that fresh is best and we just try and space his runs.
“He was four weeks between runs today. He doesn’t do a lot of work. He had a gallop on Monday morning and then we’ve pretty much left him alone.
“It seems to work well for him, but I thought he might be getting to the end of it.
“He got very hot pre-race when I was saddling him up and I was worried about that, but it was a great ride and full credit to the horse.”
Bedggood’s post-Echuca Cup (1400m) win guidance to Stanley was uncomplicated.
“What I said was ride him ‘second half’,” he explained.
“He has to be ridden where he’s comfortable. We’ve tried riding him close in lesser grade and it hasn’t worked for him.
“John Allen got it right last time and Jett executed it to a tee today.
“He really likes that ducking and weaving sort of ride. He’s not a big horse, but he loves getting amongst other horses and it works very well for him.”
Next for Hughes is a quick beach holiday as connections plan ahead.
The trainer floated the Golden Mile (1600m) at Bendigo as a future option next month.
“He’ll go and have his week at the beach,” Bedggood said.
“Maybe the Golden Mile could be a race as that works within the four-week time frame, but he’ll tell us.”
Compare betting sites for the Victoria Handicap and beyond at trusted betting sites.
Sports
Oscar De La Hoya says he’s ready to make come back to face one man: “I’ve put in the work”
Oscar De La Hoya is willing to step back into the boxing ring with a clear target in his mind for a return.
De La Hoya is viewed as one of the best to ever lace up a pair of gloves, winning world titles in six divisions along with being involved in some of the biggest fights around during that time.
It’s nearly two decades since he last competed, with his last action coming in 2008, but he is willing to fight once again despite now being 53-years-old.
De La Hoya’s main target is a man that he knows well, after making his intentions perfectly clear to former rival Floyd Mayweather.
Mayweather had been set for a professional bout against Manny Pacquiao in September but that clash has been thrown into doubt recently, and posting on social media, De La Hoya said that he wants the fight instead.
“Mayweather, come on dude. Fight a real fight. You’re still trying to protect your 0? Yes you’re 50-0 on paper but people know you’ve lost. Your own father said you lost against me when we fought.
“What’s crazy is people don’t know that we had a rematch clause for one year, and what do you do? Your p**sy ass retires for one year and one day.
“Ever since I got beat up by Manny Pacquiao in my last fight, I’ve wanted to fight every single day but I couldn’t because I wasn’t right physically, emotionally. All that depression I had in my spirit. These last five years I’ve put in the work.”
Along with the callout of Mayweather, De La Hoya also revealed he would be happy to face YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul.
“I did a lot of work and I feel happy and at peace, and you know what? A man at peace is a dangerous f**king man. I can take on King Kong if I want and beat his ass. I’ll even fight Jake Paul. Let’s go.”
It isn’t the first time that De La Hoya has teased a return, and whether it actually ever comes to fruition remains to be seen.
Sports
‘I was thinking of Chisora’s kids’ – Wilder admits ‘holding back’
Following his win over Derek Chisora, Deontay Wilder revealed he “held back” against the Brit after thinking of him spending time with his family.
The fight at London’s O2 Arena is expected to be Chisora’s last professional bout.
READ MORE: Chisora beaten by Wilder in captivating bout
Sports
Iran soccer team honors victims of deadly missile attack on school children | Football News
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Iran’s national soccer team
Players held small backpacks as Iran’s national soccer team used a match against Nigeria on Friday to honor the victims of a deadly missile strike on an elementary school.
More than 165 people were killed, most of them children, when a Feb. 28 strike, likely launched by the U.S., hit the school in southern Iran. Neither the United States nor Israel has accepted responsibility for the attack, which has come under staunch criticism from the United Nations and human rights groups. The U.S. military is investigating and has said it would never target civilians.
During the national anthem Friday, the Iranian team honored the memory of the slain children by placing small pink and purple school backpacks in front of them.
Video of the ceremony also showed the players wearing black armbands in remembrance of those killed since the war began.
The match was played in Antalya, southern Turkey. Nigeria won 2-1 in a game that was a World Cup tuneup for Iran, ahead of the tournament being co-hosted by the United States, Mexico and Canada.
The Islamic Republic’s team is scheduled to play three group-stage matches in June in the U.S. The Iranian ambassador in Mexico City has said the country asked FIFA to move those three games to Mexico after U.S. President Donald Trump discouraged the team from attending, citing safety concerns.
Iranian government and soccer officials have said they do not want to boycott the World Cup but that it is not possible for the national team to go to the U.S. because of military attacks on Iran by Israel and U.S.
FIFA President Gianni Infantino has dampened Iran’s attempts to move its matches, saying global soccer’s governing body wants the tournament “to go ahead as scheduled.”
Separately on Friday, Iran’s judiciary threatened to seize the property of soccer player Sardar Azmoun, two semiofficial news agencies said. The announcement follows threats from Iran’s hard-liner judicial chief that authorities planned to seize the assets of celebrities viewed as critical of the government.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
First Published: Mar 28 2026 | 3:38 PM IST
Sports
Michigan vs. UConn will see unstoppable team meet immovable program in NCAA title bout
INDIANAPOLIS — Monday night’s national title game between Michigan and UConn will be the consummate clash of an unstoppable team meeting an immovable program.
The No. 1 seed Wolverines solidified themselves as the preeminent force of the 2025-26 season with their 91-73 bludgeoning of Arizona on Saturday night.
But for their ruthless tear through the NCAA Tournament — and through the entire season — to be remembered for the wholesale dominance which has defined it, the Wolverines will need to whack the boss.
Since 1999, UConn has hoisted six title banners under three different coaches. The No. 2 seed Huskies offered a reminder of their championship DNA during Saturday’s 71-62 win over Illinois, which long predates Michigan’s rise under second-year coach Dusty May.
That victory put the Huskies on the cusp of winning three titles in four years, a feat that has not been accomplished since John Wooden’s heyday at UCLA.
From an analytics perspective, slaying Arizona marked a bigger achievement for Michigan than a potential win over UConn. From a psychological perspective, beating the Huskies would mean far more.
UConn might be entering Monday night’s title game ranked No. 9 at KenPom, No. 9 at Torvik and No. 7 at EvanMiya.com (Michigan tops the chart for each).
But the game will be played on the court and not on a spreadsheet, and UConn is a veteran of these battles in a way that Michigan is not.
“I don’t think anybody is going to count UConn out,” Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd said after his team became Michigan’s latest victim. “So that’s why when everybody was saying this is the national championship game; it’s not the national championship game. Monday night is the national championship game, and you have to fight to get there.”
As Huskies coach Dan Hurley said before his team spoiled Illinois’ first Final Four trip since 2005, “we don’t hang banners for Final Fours at UConn.”
Michigan does hang banners for Final Fours. Otherwise, the Crisler Center would look a little barren with only the 1989 national championship banner adorning the rafters.
The eye test says Michigan — a team that led a previously dominant Arizona squad by as much as 30 in the second half on Saturday night — will control the Huskies.
It just might. Beating Michigan will take the most legendary performance of an already heroic tear through the NCAA Tournament for Huskies big man and former Wolverines center Tarris Reed. It will take more iconic March shot-making from freshman phenom Braylon Mullins and more gutsy play from hobbled guards Silas Demary Jr. and Solomon Ball. It will take every bit of Alex Karaban’s program-defining leadership.
All of Hurley’s schematic brilliance will need to be harnessed.
That’s just what UConn does, though. When the lights shine brightest, it rises the highest. It was the story of the Huskies’ unexpected run to the 2023 title as a No. 4 seed. It defined their 2014 title run as a No. 7 seed.
In fact, just two of UConn’s six championship banners were hung by a team that earned a No. 1 seed. Eliminating UConn will require Michigan to accomplish something that no team has ever accomplished before: beating UConn in the national championship game.
The Huskies are 6-0 all-time in national title games. Michigan is 1-6.
Past will meet present Monday night to create a potentially unforgettable title game bout. History is on UConn’s side, and it’s not for nothing. The Huskies can enter standing on the shoulders of past champions, including those of Hurley, his staff and those of Karaban. They already have rings for each ring finger.
But achieving the dynastic status that UConn is so tantalizingly close to reaching will require summiting the same type of mountain that its 1999 team climbed by upsetting a historically great Duke team for the program’s first-ever crown.
That was the only time in its six championship runs that UConn defeated KenPom’s top-rated team in the season’s final game. Duke was led by five future top-15 NBA Draft picks, while the Huskies countered with Richard Hamilton, who led the way with 27 points.
Michigan likely does not have five future top-15 picks on its roster, but its 36-3 record and +39.72 KenPom net rating put it in the same realm as the 1999 Duke team, which was 37-1 entering the title game and finished with a +43.01 net rating even after losing to UConn in the championship game.
The towering trio of Yaxel Lendeborg, Morez Johnson Jr. and Aday Mara combine with a group of flame-throwing guards to make the Wolverines a seemingly inevitable champion.
Michigan owns more 90-plus point games in this NCAA Tournament than any team in the event’s history. The Wolverines were already the only team in Big Dance history to score 90-plus points and win four games by double-digits. Arizona became their fifth such victim.
The Wolverines own a plus-108 point differential in the NCAA Tournament vs. a plus-41 mark for UConn. That’s tied for the largest gap in any national title matchup since 1963.
A Michigan team that looked a bit unmotivated during the Big Ten Tournament has been firing at a historical clip since hitting the NCAA Tournament stage.
Michigan’s machine-like dominance and UConn’s proud past make the national championship game exactly what a national championship game matchup should be: a mandate to do something of true championship caliber.
UConn has to beat the best team in college basketball. Michigan has to beat the best program in college basketball.
Sports
After Maria Jose Marin’s emphatic ANWA win, 1 scene told the story
Sports
Derek Chisora sums up Deontay Wilder’s power after two knockdowns in 12 rounds
This weekend in London, Derek Chisora became just the second man to lose to Deontay Wilder and hear the final bell.
The veteran heavyweight clash was suitably chaotic and entertaining, with both the Brit and the American having success in spurts. It was Wilder who scored the only two knockdowns in the fight, but he was also deducted a point for what referee Mark Bates deemed a push through the ropes.
Both men showed impressive chins, and Chisora, though he hit the canvas, appeared to go down as much through exhaustion as from being hurt. Wilder, however, claimed post-fight that he saw his opponent was in trouble and chose to have mercy, putting less into his shots and targeting the body.
However it happened, the 40-year-old from Tuscaloosa, Alabama managed to secure the 45th win of his career, but his knockout tally remains at 43.
Speaking at the post-fight press conference, Chisora said Wilder’s power does indeed matched the hype.
“Good 12 rounds. He can hit … Yeah [the power was as good as expected]. He loads it up though. He’s got tell signs before he chucks. But, when he gets you, he can hit.”
“Wilder’s got power for the first three rounds, then after he fades away. I’m not gonna take that away from him. He has got power.”
Asked if anything surprised him about the former WBC heavyweight champion, Chisora said:
“He likes to hold a lot. I thought he was good on the inside but he’s not. I know what I did. I love Deontay, but I know he broke two things – his hand and his rib.”
While Chisora did not fully commit on his pre-fight promise to retire after the bout, Wilder has left little doubt that he will carry on, and is expected to pursue fights with either Oleksandr Usyk or Anthony Joshua
Sports
Sheza Alibi excels in 2026 Doncaster Mile victory
During Black Caviar’s remarkable run, veteran Peter Moody rarely got teary, but post Sheza Alibi’s breathtaking win in the Doncaster Mile (1600m) at Randwick, emotions overflowed for the trainer.
From a position near the rear among 16 starters, the favourite at $1.90 confronted a tough ask swinging for home, only to devour rivals rapidly and bolt in by 4¼ lengths over Autumn Boy ($10).
Moody, who honed his skills at Randwick under T J Smith and cared for Lygon Arms, the 1988 Doncaster champ, described the success as deeply meaningful.
“I remember my time with T J and that’s why it’s always special. Randwick was always home to me,” Moody said.
“I’ve been blessed to train one of the greatest we have ever seen, but this filly is just amazing. I’m not saying she is Black Caviar, but how good.
“She is just a special, special horse. Crikey. Where’s the ceiling? You don’t know.”
The Doncaster Mile now counts Sheza Alibi as its first three-year-old filly winner since Sunline in 1999, positioning her among the top prospects.
Autumn Glow, unbeaten mare, sidestepped for the Queen Elizabeth Stakes, but Moody expects their paths to cross later.
“I’m happy Autumn Glow wasn’t here, I can tell you that,” Moody said.
“She’s a superstar and we saw her strut her stuff here earlier in the day.
“The day will probably come – let’s hope it does for Australian racing – where they meet.”
Snapped up online for $10,000 after a Rockhampton maiden debut loss, Sheza Alibi has triumphed in seven of 10 races.
Moody observed her unremarkable physique hides vast talent.
“She is so nondescript. She doesn’t stand out in the yard. She doesn’t stand out at home in training. She is just a tradesman, she’s got a great hip, a big deep girth and a hell of a lot of ability,” he said.
Jockey Jamie Melham, adding to his Doncaster Mile tally with Cascadian in 2021, was overwhelmed by her ride.
“I’ve sat on some very special horses before, but I don’t think any come close to the feel she just gave me then,” Melham said.
“What a horse. I trialled her the other day and she gave me a nice feel, but with blinkers on today, Jesus Christ. I’ve never sat on a horse that has given me goosebumps like that before.”
With attendance surpassing 15,000, Sheza Alibi mastered the field, Autumn Boy second gallantly, and Militarize ($41) from Chris Waller third by 1¼ lengths to the placegetter.
Discover leading betting sites offering racing odds for Doncaster Mile stars.
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