Indianapolis Colts quarterback Daniel Jones drops back and releases a pass from the pocket during the first half against the Los Angeles Chargers at SoFi Stadium on Oct. 19, 2025, scanning the field as the Colts offense worked to establish rhythm under the venue’s expansive roof. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images.
Daniel Jones stopped by the Minnesota Vikings for a few months of the 2024 season, eventually landing with the Indianapolis Colts, where he forged a wonderful season in 2025 before tearing his Achilles. Now, thankfully for his sake, the man is due back under center sooner rather than later.
The comeback timeline may be moving faster.
NFL.com provided an update this week on Jones, and Colts fans should be pumped.
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Indianapolis Gets an Encouraging Early Signal at Quarterback
Jones has unfinished business.
On Oct 26, 2025, in Indianapolis, Indiana, Colts quarterback Daniel Jones (17) stands on the sideline before kickoff against the Tennessee Titans at Lucas Oil Stadium, surveying the field during warmups as the team prepares for a divisional matchup in front of a home crowd anticipating another strong outing. Mandatory Credit: Robert Goddin-Imagn Images.
NFL.com: Jones Is Back at It
NFL.com did an “around the horn” of non-draft news to know this week about each team, and for the Colts, that was an advantageous development on Jones.
The staff wrote, “QB Daniel Jones (Achilles) has begun throwing the football and is performing well on his dropbacks, head coach Shane Steichen told reporters Tuesday. Jones underwent surgery in early December after suffering the season-ending injury.”
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Jones tore his Achilles tendon in November, and sometimes that injury can take a full year to heal. It seems he’s beating the odds, at least from the perspective of an April update.
ESPN’s Stephen Holder on Jones’s recovery: “The Colts have said throughout the offseason that they and their doctors believe a return for the start of the 2026 season is well within reason. To ensure that happens, the approach to Jones’ rehab has been an all-hands-on-deck approach for the organization.”
“To that end, Shane Steichen said he has consulted with Boston Celtics president of basketball operations Brad Stevens on how the team oversaw the Achilles recovery of Boston star Jayson Tatum, who sustained a torn Achilles in the 2025 postseason but has returned to the lineup and become a force for the Celtics. Both Tatum and Jones also shared the same surgeon for their Achilles repair.”
Tatum is doing just fine in Boston, as the Celtics are the frontrunners from the NBA’s Eastern Conference to reach the NBA Finals.
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“Still, the Colts will be cautious with Jones. They have not decided how much, if at all, he’ll participate in offseason workouts,” Holder added.
A Fat Contract, Too
When the offseason began, Jones’s status in Indianapolis wasn’t necessarily mysterious; most Colts fans knew the club loved him and would re-sign him. The questions were when and for how much?
Then, in March, just a couple of days into free agency, the Colts put their money where their mouth was, inking Jones to an extension worth $88 million over two seasons. The deal made him the NFL’s 13th-highest-paid quarterback per average annual value, which is fair because Jones played well before the Achilles tragedy.
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On Sep 28, 2025, in Inglewood, California, Colts quarterback Daniel Jones (17) delivers a pass during the first half against the Los Angeles Rams at SoFi Stadium, stepping into the throw with defenders closing in as Indianapolis looks to move the ball through the air in a road matchup. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images.
The contract includes $60 million guaranteed and is expandable to $100 million with incentivized bonuses.
The 2025 Performance
Jones’s season was quietly trending down before his December Achilles tear, a decline that largely went unnoticed by the NFL world. While things initially looked good on the surface, his underlying efficiency numbers told a different story.
For a significant stretch, Jones appeared to be a breakout quarterback — even an MVP candidate. He led Indianapolis to an impressive 8-2 start during September and October, earning the nickname “Indiana Jones” from fans and fueling the MVP conversations. Before his injury, he was on pace for outstanding full-season statistics:
4,055 passing yards
31 total touchdowns
10 interceptions
68.0% completion
7th in EPA+CPOE
However, the second half of the season saw his efficiency plummet. Here’s how Daniel Jones’ ranking in the NFL by EPA+CPOE changed in 2025:
Before Week 9: 4th
After Week 9: 28th
The Achilles injury proved to be the final, devastating blow. The Colts unraveled, their offense lost all footing, and Indianapolis grew desperate enough to coax Philip Rivers out of retirement. That gamble, however, failed to revive their playoff hopes.
2026 Expectations
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The Colts traded two 1st-Rounders last November to obtain superstar cornerback Sauce Gardner from the New York Jets. That was when the season was straight cooking, Jones hadn’t begun his dip, and the Colts had Super Bowl dreams.
On Sep 7, 2025, in Indianapolis, Indiana, former Colts quarterback Peyton Manning taps Daniel Jones (17) on the back before a game at Lucas Oil Stadium, a brief pregame moment connecting past and present as the franchise legend offers encouragement ahead of the season-opening contest. Mandatory Credit: Grace Hollars-Imagn Images.
Now, in the 2026 offseason, Indianapolis has renewed those hopes. A team can’t trade two 1st-Rounders and not shoot for the stars the following season. Therefore, the Colts are in it to win it, and a healthy Jones may put them in the thick of the AFC hunt.
Jones will operate with these offensive weapons from a pre-draft standpoint:
Jonathan Taylor (RB)
Alec Pierce (WR)
Tyler Warren (TE)
Josh Downs (WR)
The Colts may need to sign a free-agent wide receiver after the draft, as intriguing options like Stefon Diggs, Deebo Samuel, and Tyreek Hill remain unsigned. Indianapolis could also explore the trade sweepstakes of Brandon Aiyuk with the San Francisco 49ers.
The future of the Vancouver Whitecaps is suddenly in question, and fans are not taking it quietly. With stadium complications threatening the club’s long-term place in the city, the Cooligans break down what’s really happening behind the scenes and whether Vancouver can realistically keep its team. This isn’t just about one club—it’s about what MLS values most when push comes to shove: markets, money, or supporters.
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Then, Clint Dempsey joins the show for a wide-ranging conversation about the upcoming World Cup and the growing concern that real fans are being priced out of the biggest tournament in the world. He opens up about his Gatorade campaign, the mentality that made him one of the toughest players in U.S. soccer history, and the personal moment when he realized it was time to walk away from the game.
Finally, the guys react to Chelsea FC parting ways with Liam Rosenior and why the constant churn of managers says more about ownership than anything happening on the pitch. Plus, they hit the biggest stories around the global game—from Manchester City leading the Premier League race to Lamine Yamal’s injury and Pellegrino Matarazzo’s surprising Copa del Rey success.
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Timestamps:
(7:30) – Can fans keep the Whitecaps in Vancouver?
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(21:30) – Clint Dempsey joins The Cooligans
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(36:30) – Why BlueCo is to blame for Liam Rosenior’s failure at Chelsea
(47:30) – Rapido Reactions: Matarrazo makes history, Man City top PL & more
Apr 21, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Celtics guard Derrick White (9) passes the ball against the Philadelphia 76ers in the first half of a game two of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brian Fluharty-Imagn Images
Boston Celtics guard Derrick White was named the 2025-26 NBA Sportsmanship Award winner on Thursday.
White, 31, receives the Joe Dumars Trophy, named for the inaugural award recipient and Hall of Fame guard.
He is the second consecutive Celtics player to win the award following guard Jrue Holiday in 2024-25.
Presented since 1995-96, the award honors a player who best represents the ideals of sportsmanship on the court.
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Each NBA team nominated one of its players and a panel of league executives selected six finalists, one from each division. Current NBA players voted to select the winner.
White received 77 first-place votes and 2,826 total points to finish ahead of Indiana Pacers guard T.J. McConnell (83 first-place votes and 2,566 points) and San Antonio Spurs forward Harrison Barnes (73 and 2,466).
White averaged 16.5 points, 5.4 assists, 4.4 rebounds, 1.3 blocks and 1.1 steals in 77 games (all starts) this season for Boston.
An NBA champion with the Celtics in 2023-24 and a gold medal winner with Team USA at the 2024 Paris Olympics, White is a two-time member of the NBA All-Defensive Team.
With the 2026 NFL Draft kicking off this week in Pittsburgh — and watched on millions of TVs around the globe — long-time NFL coach Sean Payton joined this week’s episode of GOLF’s Subpar podcast to discuss exactly what it’s like in the lead-up to the draft and what happens in the team room during it.
Payton, the current head coach of the Denver Broncos, was the New Orleans Saints coach from 2006 to 2021, and he led the Saints to a Super Bowl victory in 2009.
But the NFL Draft often aligns with Zurich Classic of New Orleans week on the PGA Tour, and one year, in 2017, Payton had some company in the Saints’ draft night war room: Jordan Spieth and Ryan Palmer.
On this week’s Subpar, Payton explained how that moment came to life — especially with two Texans and lifelong Dallas Cowboys fans. Payton played in the Zurich pro-am with Spieth and Palmer that year, and he extended them an invite for Thursday’s first round of the draft.
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But before the draft even started, they had a little fun, too.
“I think Spieth made [caddie Michael] Greller run a 100-yard dash wearing a helmet,” Payton said. “And not a 40 — a 100.”
Payton set up the visitors with a table in the draft room, handed them draft books and let them take in the action. The Saints had the 11th pick and a big decision to make: cornerback Marshon Lattimore or quarterback Patrick Mahomes.
“Lattimore was a candidate; Patrick certainly was a candidate,” Payton said. “We had been to their pro days, been to their private workouts. And if you are picking 11, the old adage is you better have 11 players you like, or you trade back … there’s been a lot of back and forth on who would have been selected.”
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But the Saints never had to choose between the two. The Kansas City Chiefs swooped in at No. 10 and traded with Buffalo to take Mahomes. That meant the Saints took Lattimore.
“Right when they made that trade I knew it had to be for Patrick,” Payton said. “…Those guys had a chance to see it live.”
Lattimore was voted NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year and made four Pro Bowls in his 7 1/2 years with the Saints. Mahomes? He has three Super Bowl MVPs.
Naomi Osaka hopes travelling more with daughter Shai can help her find the work-life balance she is looking for.
The Japanese star cast doubt on her future in the sport after losing to Talia Gibson in her opening match at the Miami Open, saying: “I’m not going to stay on tour if I’m losing in the first round. I’d rather just be a great mom and be there for my daughter.”
Osaka subsequently took a month off and has returned to the tour at the Madrid Open with two-year-old Shai in tow and a more positive perspective.
“I was able to go home, pretty much be a mom,” said the former world number one.
“So I would take her to school, pick her up from school, and it was really cool. She’s here with me so just getting to see her face and going to practises and coming back, it’s been really special to me.
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“I think her growing older and just being able to figure out her schedule, with school, it’s been really helpful, and I also just really love travelling with her, showing her the world and just exploring.
“She loves travel. She loves the airport, she loves aeroplanes.”
Osaka struggled for consistent results after coming back to the tour at the start of 2024 but appeared to have positioned herself as a potential grand slam champion again when she reached the US Open semi-finals last summer.
However, she has not been able to kick on from there, with recurrent abdominal problems causing frustrating hiatuses.
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Osaka is confident she has the right approach on clay, though, saying after beating Camila Osorio 6-2 7-5 in her opening match in Madrid: “I think, for me, on clay, I have one goal, which is to go out on my own terms.
“I did OK in Australia, was doing OK in Indian Wells. I played (Aryna) Sabalenka. I think from there I learned a lesson of just trying to be more aggressive, and I’m trying to implement it here.”
Osaka has made more headlines for her outfits than her tennis this season, with Australia’s extravagant jellyfish-inspired look followed by a leopard-print dress at Indian Wells.
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In the Spanish capital, she paired an orange dress with a patterned headscarf, describing it as a “nod to European summers”.
“I know it’s weird to say it was a little simple for me given all the extraness that I’ve been doing recently, but I think it’s a really elegant look, and I’m excited because there’s different themes and stuff to do in Rome, so I’ll just keep trying to switch it up a little,” added Osaka.
Last year, Zhao came through four rounds of qualifying and then defeated 2024 runner-up Jak Jones, compatriot Lei Peifan and England’s Chris Wakelin before thrashing seven-time world champion Ronnie O’Sullivan 17-7 to reach the final.
Zhao’s 18-12 success over Mark Williams was a pivotal moment in the sport, instantly making the winner a national hero, and inspiring youngsters to take up snooker.
According to World Snooker Tour figures, more than 24.5 million unique viewers watched the third session of the final alone in China and during the whole 2025 tournament, it had a cumulative audience of 180 million on national broadcaster CCTV5.
The event also had 1.5 billion social media impressions in China over its 17 days.
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“When I go to China I’m famous now and when I’m walking around the street lots of people want to take pictures of me,” said 29-year-old Zhao. “It’s amazing and a big difference to before but I’m really happy to do it and I’m trying to becoming a great player.
“Before, older people would want to take pictures of me because they are snooker fans, but now it is their son or daughter that takes pictures – and I’m really happy for it.”
If Zhao is to retain his title, he has to do something none of the previous 20 first-time winners at the Crucible have done, by winning it again the following year.
But Zhao showed no signs of falling to the so-called ‘Crucible Curse’ in his first-round match, as he saw off English qualifier Liam Highfield 10-7.
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Before the tournament started, seven-time winner Stephen Hendry, speaking on BBC Television, said Zhao was his favourite to lift the trophy on Monday, 4 May.
“I think Xintong can retain his title,” said Hendry. “He is the future of the game for the next 10-15 years – he is going to dominate, no-one scores like him.
“He is not paying any attention to this stupid ‘curse’. Other Chinese players have got a huge lift from seeing their countryman lift the trophy.”
Former Arsenal star Perry Groves has urged Mikel Arteta to keep Viktor Gyokeres on the bench. He believes that Kai Havertz should remain as the club’s starting striker in the remaining matches.
Speaking to Metro, Groves claimed that Gyokeres’ goals should not make him an automatic starter, as Havertz links up better with his teammates on the pitch. He added the Manchester City game was a perfect example of the difference between the two forwards and said:
Thanks for the submission!
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“I’m a fan of Gyokeres. I’ve stuck up for Gyokeres all season because I like his attitude and the way that he plays. He’s still got his 18 goals. He’s getting used to us, we’re getting used to him, but I think what I liked about the game against Man City, not only did we press, which was aggressive, but we went long quicker.”
“David Raya went long, quick into Havertz on the touchline, on the diagonal, where Havertz could hold it up, or he flicks it on. And he probably just gives you that little bit more of control, where he’s better at holding it up, so Gyokeres might have to wait his turn.”
Havertz scored in the game against Manchester City after pressing Gigi Donnarumma and forcing an error from the goalkeeper.
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Arsenal warned about Newcastle United clash
Perry Groves has warned Arsenal that they need to be careful about the Newcastle United clash. He believes that the Magpies will sit back and try to lure the Gunners forward and attack them on the counter. He told the Metro:
“Newcastle will come and try and sit deep. They’re in really bad form at the minute, I think they’ve lost eight out of 11 in the Premier League, but historically, there’s always a needle in Arsenal against Newcastle. So they will come, they will up their game a little bit.”
“Guimaraes will probably come back in, so he’s a big plus for them, but this is all about Arsenal themselves. They can only control themselves and the way they approach the game and their attitude. They can’t control what Newcastle do, you know, whether they press, whether they sit deep.”
The Gunners have slipped to second in the Premier League table after their loss to Manchester City last week. The Cityzens jumped ahead on Wednesday, April 22, after they beat Burnley 1-0 in their game in hand.
The two sides are level on points and goal difference, but the Manchester side are ahead on goals scored.
New Zealand all-rounder Suzie Bates will retire from international cricket after this year’s Women’s T20 World Cup, ending an illustrious 20-year career on the world stage.
The 38-year-old will be part of the White Ferns’ 15-member squad for the T20 World Cup taking place from 12 June to 5 July in England, where they will also play three ODIs and T20Is against the hosts next month.
A right-handed opening batter, Bates is the all-time leading run-scorer in women’s Twenty20 internationals with 4,717 runs and fourth on the ODI charts, while she has also claimed 145 wickets and a record number of catches.
“When I look back on the past 20-plus years, I can’t quite believe how quickly the time has gone,” said Bates, who also won the 2024 T20 World Cup.
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“I’m immensely proud to have worn the fern so many times, and I’ve been filled with enormous purpose and joy in striving each day to be a better person, team-mate, cricketer, and athlete for this team.
“I have one final mission: to head to the UK – a place that holds so many special memories for me – and win another World Cup.”
Shardul Thakur came out to bat for Mumbai Indians during his team’s match vs Chennai Super Kings (CSK) in the IPL 2026 match on Thursday.Interestingly, Shardul Thakur was not part of the Mumbai’s starting XI and even not the impact player. Mumbai had already used opener Danish Malewar as its impact player in place of Allah Ghazanfar.Shardul Thakur came out to bat in the thirteenth over of the second innings, when Noor Ahmad dismissed Hardik Pandya and Sherfane Rutherford on consecutive balls.
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Why Shardul came to bat?Shardul Thakur came to bat as the concussion substitue for Mitchell Santner, who got injured in the first innings while trying to take a catch.Santner took one wicket and conceded 44 runs in his four overs before getting injured.Mumbai Indians were 95 for 7 at the time of writing the story.Earlier in the match, Sanju Samson scored his fifth IPL century. He reached the milestone on the final ball of the innings with a boundary off Krish Bhagat. It was his second hundred of the season, his second for Chennai Super Kings and fifth overall in the IPL.Samson remained not out on 101 from 54 balls and helped Chennai Super Kings post 207 for 6. He stayed till the end while wickets fell at the other end.He hit 10 fours and six sixes in his innings.For Mumbai Indians, AM Ghazanfar and Ashwani Kumar took two wickets each, while Jasprit Bumrah returned figures of 1 for 31.
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Should Shardul Thakur have been used as an impact player instead?
Sanju Samson carried his bat with a splendid 101 not out, while Akeal Hosein‘s stunning 4/17 powered Chennai Super Kings to a crushing 103-run victory over a listless Mumbai Indians in their Indian Premier League clash in Mumbai on Thursday. It’s CSK’s biggest win over MI. Samson stood tall with a 54-ball 101 (10x4s, 8x6s) in the first half, which took a faltering CSK to a challenging 207/6. In reply, Mumbai Indians endured a horror start, slumping to 11 for three inside the first three overs, and never recovered as they were bowled out for 104 in 19 overs.
Backed by a partisan crowd that made it feel more like Chepauk than the Wankhede Stadium, CSK produced a clinical all-round performance despite the absence of MS Dhoni.
In a season marred by poor returns in the powerplay, Mumbai Indians endured their worst start yet, crawling to 29 for three after six overs following an early burst of wickets.
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Danish Malewar (0) fell first in classical fashion, edging a Hosein delivery that gripped and spun away to be caught behind by Samson in the first over.
Mukesh Choudhary (1/31) then struck to dismiss Quinton de Kock (7), who chopped one back onto his stumps, before Hosein returned in the third over to clean up Naman Dhir (0) with a delivery that straightened and rattled the top of middle stump.
Despite the horror start, MI still had plenty of batting left in the form of last game’s centurion Tilak Varma, Suryakumar Yadav and Hardik Pandya, but none could spark a fightback.
Tilak and Suryakumar looked more intent on rebuilding than counter-attacking, stitching a 56-ball 73-run stand for the fourth wicket, but the effort only allowed the asking rate to spiral further out of reach.
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Suryakumar’s 30-ball 35, laced with five fours, was scratchy by his standards, with the India T20I skipper even missing his trademark flick off the pads twice.
On one occasion, he was left writhing in pain after being struck by an Anshul Kamboj delivery, and on the other, he thumped the ground in frustration as his bat slipped out of his hands while attempting the shot.
The floodgates reopened once again when Tilak, who scored 37 off 29 with five fours, played one back onto his stumps to become Hosein’s third victim in the 12th over. Hosein then completed a fine spell by dismissing Suryakumar, whose top-edged sweep was safely pouched at deep backward square leg.
Noor Ahmed then delivered a decisive double-wicket over, removing the out-of-sorts Hardik Pandya (1) and Sherfane Rutherford (0) to virtually seal the contest, leaving Mumbai Indians reeling at 87 for seven.
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Earlier, Samson anchored a faltering Chennai Super Kings with his second century of the season, steering the visitors to a competitive 207 for six.
With wickets falling around him due to poor shot selection and lack of application, the India wicketkeeper-batter held firm, pacing his innings to perfection and playing each delivery on merit to script another memorable knock.
Jasprit Bumrah (1/31) began with a tight opening over, though Samson still managed to pierce the field with a crisp drive through cover-point before flicking Hardik Pandya (0/38) off his pads for a six.
CSK had earlier made a bright start, with skipper Ruturaj Gaikwad (22) and Samson taking 19 runs each off Pandya’s first two overs in the powerplay, and despite a couple of early wickets, the visitors were well placed at 73 for two.
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Gaikwad looked to be easing back into form, beginning with a heave on the on-side off Pandya before pulling the pacer for a six to take 19 runs from the second over.
However, his promising start was cut short when he went inside-out against AM Ghazanfar (2/25) in the third over, only to be smartly caught by Tilak running in from long-off.
There was also no happy homecoming for Mumbai players in the CSK camp, with Sarfaraz Khan (14) and Shivam Dube (5) failing to make an impact. Dewald Brevis struck a few powerful blows in his 11-ball 21 before falling to a well-directed short ball from Ashwani Kumar (2/37).
Samson blended caution with aggression to keep the scoreboard ticking, and in the final over, he capped his effort in style by smashing Krish Bhagat for a towering six over cover before pulling the last ball for a four to bring up his fifth IPL hundred.
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Meanwhile, CSK players took the field wearing black armbands in tribute to Choudhary’s mother, who passed away
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Delhi vs Mumbai IPL 2026: Fans Flood Arun Jaitley Stadium for High-Voltage Clash
NEW DELHI: Chennai Super Kings registered their biggest win over Mumbai Indians in IPL history, beating them by 103 runs in their IPL 2026 clash at Mumbai’s Wankhede Stadium on Thursday.The defeat was also the biggest margin for MI in IPL by runs.Playing his first IPL ‘El Clasico’, CSK’s Sanju Samson scored an unbeaten 101 in the first innings, while Akeal Hosein returned figures of 4 for 17 in the second innings to demolish the Mumbai Indians batting.Mumbai Indians won the toss and chose to bowl. Chennai Super Kings posted 207 for 6, with Samson anchoring the innings. He hit 10 fours and six sixes in his 54-ball knock and stayed till the end, even as wickets fell regularly at the other end. The next highest score in the innings was 22.
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In reply, Mumbai Indians were bowled out for just 104 in 19 overs, their biggest defeat by runs in the IPL. Eight of their batters were dismissed for single-digit scores as they struggled against spin.Biggest win margin for CSK in IPL (by runs)
103 vs MI, Wankhede, 2026*
97 vs KXIP, Chennai, 2015
93 vs DD, Abu Dhabi, 2014
92 vs RCB, Gqeberha, 2009
91 vs DC, DY Patil, 2022
Biggest defeat margin for MI in IPL (by runs)
103 vs CSK, Wankhede, 2026*
87 vs RR, Jaipur, 2013
85 vs SRH, Vizag, 2016
76 vs KXIP, Mohali, 2011
66 vs KXIP, Mohali, 2008
Akeal Hosein led the bowling effort, while Noor Ahmad supported him with 2 for 23. The result helped Chennai Super Kings return to winning ways after their loss to Sunrisers Hyderabad.For Mumbai Indians, Tilak Varma (37) and Suryakumar Yadav (35) were the only batters to cross 30, but there was little support from the rest.Earlier in the match, there were signs of pressure from the start despite both teams coming in as seventh- and eighth-placed sides. On the first ball, Sherfane Rutherford missed a routine throw to the wicketkeeper, and the backing fielder at short fine leg also failed to collect cleanly.Bowler Jasprit Bumrah was seen asking his fielders to settle down before overstepping on the next delivery.During the chase, Tilak Varma and Jamie Overton were involved in a brief exchange on the field.For Mumbai Indians, AM Ghazanfar and Ashwani Kumar picked up two wickets each, while Bumrah finished with 1 for 31.
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