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Fantasy Baseball Spring Training: Key Injuries, Closers and Early Draft Takeaways

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Spring Training games are nearly here – things kick off Friday at 1:05 pm EST with the Yankees throwing a couple of big-time pitching prospects against the new-look Orioles, while a bunch of other teams will either be facing off against local colleges in exhibition games or kicking off their own Grapefruit or Cactus League action. Either way, we’re about to have real (or, mostly real) baseball to watch and analyze in just a few short days. 

But of course, Spring Training isn’t just about what happens on the field. For Fantasy players, it’s just as much about what happens in locker rooms and artificially lit hallways across Florida and Arizona. That’s where we learn about injuries, playing time developments, and everything else we really care about for Spring Training. This newsletter will be your one-stop shop to everything you need to know from spring, and in the coming days, we’ll be looking at the biggest questions and storylines from every team, plus a little guide to what actually matters during the spring. 

But we’ve already had some important headlines crop up in the first week or so since players reported, and with our recent focus on position previews, it’s been tough to catch up with them. So we’re hitting pause on the position previews for a few days to make sure you’re ready for the games that are about to kick off. 

Today, that means catching up on some key news that has already come out, starting, unfortunately, with some significant injury updates:

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Pablo Lopez has a torn UCL

Lopez dealt with a forearm injury late last season and couldn’t even make it through his first mound work of the spring without exiting with forearm soreness. An MRI revealed a torn UCL, and while the course of action has not yet been determined, Twins general manager Jeremy Zoll acknowledged that “surgery is very much on the table.”

Whether that ends up being a full Tommy John reconstruction of the UCL or the relatively less serious Internal Brace procedure – or, as has become increasingly common in recent years, both in a hybrid procedure – remains to be seen. That determination may not come until Lopez actually has the surgery, as is often the case, but either way, he’s almost certainly looking at missing the entirety of the 2026 season.

Which is a big bummer for Lopez, who overcame early-career shoulder injuries to throw 180-plus innings in each of the 2022, 2023, and 2024 seasons. He’ll be 31 the next time we see him on the mound, and he’ll be coming off a major elbow surgery. He could still be ready for the start of the 2027 season, and it’s not like we haven’t seen players in their 30s thrive coming off elbow reconstruction in recent years. But it’s a lost season of Lopez’s prime, and there’s no guarantee he’ll be back to his pre-injury form by then. 

The Twins do have some depth in their rotation, though it is little proven. Lopez’s injury would seemingly open up a spot for an open competition to take place, with the likeliest candidates to take that open rotation spot being Zebby Matthews, David Festa, and Mick Abel. All three have shown flashes at the MLB level, but none has emerged as a reliable option yet. 

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My best guess would be on Matthews taking the job – he has shown the ability to rack up strong strikeout numbers and avoid walks, but has been held back by poor results on balls in play. Those results were earned, as Matthews gives up a bunch of hard contact, but that’s also the part of a pitcher’s game that tends to fluctuate the most from one year to the next. If he fixes that issue, Matthews still has some breakout potential. If not, they’ll cycle through their options, with Kendrys Rojas, Connor Prielipp, and Andrew Morris looming as options in the upper minors. 

Blake Snell isn’t throwing off a mound yet

Snell is behind schedule as the team tries to manage lingering soreness and fatigue from last year’s World Series run. He has been limited to playing catch off the side, but manager Dave Roberts admitted in the early days of camp that he doesn’t know when Snell is likely to be ready for the season.

“He’s playing catch,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said of Snell. “He’s throwing. Once he gets off the mound, throws a pen, and faces some hitters, we will know more. But obviously, he’s not there right now. So until he gets off the mound, I just really don’t know.”

Snell is expected to throw a bullpen session soon, though even that hasn’t been determined yet. It’s not clear if Snell is currently dealing with an injury, but the team is taking every precaution to try to keep him healthy in 2026. Which highlights an inherent issue with every Dodgers pitcher that came to fruition in 2025: This is a team that only really cares about October. In his first season with the team, Snell only threw 61.1 regular-season innings due to a shoulder injury, but he was healthy and effective for the postseason as they went on to win a World Series, so nobody considered it a disappointing season.

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Obviously, the Dodgers can’t get 60 innings from all of their starters – they still need to get through the season and make the playoffs. But they have more than enough to get through the regular season without pushing anyone beyond their comfort zone, and having their best players healthy for October is really all they care about.

Hence, the lack of concern from the Dodgers camp about their $180 million pitcher potentially not being ready for Opening Day. Snell figures to be limited at least early on in the season, and given his track record, even that might not be enough to keep him healthy for a full season – he has only topped 130 innings twice in nine full MLB seasons. The upside when he’s on the mound might be worth chasing, but I need a bigger discount than his ~100 ADP in the month of February allows. 

Hurston Waldrep might need elbow surgery

The Braves already lost Spencer Schwellenbach to elbow surgery, and it sounds like Waldrep might be following him to the surgeon’s table. Waldrep will see Dr. Keith Meister after feeling soreness in his elbow during his first live batting practice session of the spring. 

An initial MRI didn’t show structural damage, so the injury sounds similar to Schwellenbach’s, with Waldrep dealing with loose bodies in his elbow. Sometimes, pitchers can pitch through that kind of issue, but the risk there is it can lead to both poor performance, lingering pain, and ultimately, further damage that requires more extensive surgery to repair.

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At this point, it looks like Waldrep could be heading for a similar outcome to Schwellenbach: Arthroscopic surgery to clean up the elbow, with a timetable that could see him back on the mound in about three months. That could see both back on the mound by mid-May in a best-case scenario, though anytime we’re talking about a pitcher’s elbow, assuming the “best-case scenario” is an easy way to steer yourself wrong. Both could be back after missing a few months, but any kind of setback could restart the whole rehab process – or worse. Schwellenbach is just in the late-round discussion for drafts, while Waldrep, who is both less of a sure thing as a pitcher and less assured of a role when healthy, should be left only for leagues with multiple IL spots to play with. 

Edwin Uceta is dealing with a “cranky” shoulder

The Rays entered spring with an expected battle between Uceta and Griffin Jax for the closer’s role, but that battle is already up in the air. Uceta wasn’t cleared to pitch for the Dominican Republic in the World Baseball Classic due to the injury, though right now it is mostly being discussed as a precautionary move.

“It was a difficult decision, but it’s a decision that had to be made for me to get ready for the season,” Uceta said through interpreter Kevin Vera. “Obviously very upset that I can’t represent my country, but it’s a decision that we had to make for the start of the season.”

Uceta was working in the Dominican Republic during the offseason and started to experience discomfort after taking a week off to attend his arbitration hearing. He had been playing catch during camp before taking a few days off, and at this point, it doesn’t sound like the team is too concerned about him being ready for Opening Day. 

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But given how close the competition between him and Jax is expected to be, any edge for one is a big deal. And Jax now seemingly has an edge, at least early in camp. Both can be high-end closers for Fantasy, and I’d still expect both to figure into the team’s plans. But if I were expecting something like a 50-50 split, I would lean more towards a 60-40 split in Jax’s favor right now. We might look back in two weeks and see no ill effects for Uceta that could even the score, but right now, Jax has to be the first reliever in the Rays bullpen taken in most drafts. 

Five playing time/position battle updates

  • Sal Stewart is focusing on 1B in camp – Stewart split his time between third and first base last season in the majors and has played second in the minors, but it seems like his slide down the positional spectrum is coming early in his career – which is fine, since the Reds have excellent defensive options at second and third and Stewart probably doesn’t have the arm for the hot corner, anyway. Coming off a .907 OPS across Double-A and Triple-A and a stint in the majors where he more than held his own while flashing plus power, Stewart should have the bat to handle first base. There are some mild playing time concerns here, but if he lives up to his upside, he’s going to force the Reds to keep him in the lineup. He remains a great draft target outside the top 200 in ADP. 
  • JJ Wetherholt is focusing on 2B – With Masyn Winn locked in as one of the very best defensive shortstops in baseball, Wetherholt always seemed likely to move to either his left or right, and left it is. Wetherholt figures to be very good at second base, and he doesn’t seem to have much left to prove in the minors. He played 47 games at Triple-A in 2025, hitting .314/.416/.562 with nearly as many walks (28) as strikeouts (33). He has 20-20 upside with the potential for a good batting average and should be a pretty safe bet for playing time on a rebuilding Cardinals side, making Wetherholt a worthy pick inside the top-200 on Draft Day. 
  • Alec Bohm is the likeliest cleanup option for the Phillies – Bohm made the All-Star game in 2024, but has been underwhelming since. However, he has a good approach for RBI, and hitting behind Trea Turner, Kyle Schwarber, and Bryce Harper would be a great spot for him to get back to the 90-plus range he was at in 2023 and 2024. Bohm’s ADP is down to 259.9, making him a pretty attractive late-round alternative at third base. At the very least, you should get a pretty good batting average and a bunch of RBI from him. 
  • Brandon Nimmo looks likely to lead off for the Rangers – Nimmo primarily hit fourth or fifth for the Mets last season, but his move to Texas will also see him moving to the top of the order. That’ll cause a drag on his RBI numbers, but hitting ahead of Wyatt Langford and Corey Seager should be great for his run scoring opportunities, and Nimmo’s on-base skills will fit well at the top of the lineup. I wonder if he could even see a little bump in stolen bases while setting the table, which would help make up for a likely drop in power production with Globe Life Field representing a downgrade in home park from Citi Field. 
  • Marcelo Mayer is starting out at 2B He primarily played shortstop coming up through the minors and third base as a rookie, but with the acquisition of Caleb Durbin, the Red Sox are looking at Mayer at second this spring. He platooned as a rookie and could do so again in 2026, though Romy Gonzalez‘s spring has been delayed by a shoulder issue, which might open up an opportunity for Mayer to play every day early on. He’s a sleeper to keep in mind at either third or second, the two weakest positions for Fantasy. 

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Cannae signals Derby ambitions with 2026 Caulfield Heath victory

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Following Cannae’s breakthrough win at Caulfield Heath, trainer Danny O’Brien welcomes possible inquiries from Hong Kong buyers.

Nonetheless, the three-year-old’s handler contemplates cross-border Derby targets after the gelding’s second-out success in the Sportsbet Race Previews Plate (1500m) on Wednesday.

O’Brien forked out $20,000 for the son of Maurice at the Adelaide Magic Millions yearling auction, aiming to train and race the gelding personally.

In conjunction with wife Nina, O’Brien described Cannae as a tardy foal and diminutive when selected, prior to his three-year-old phase.

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“I really liked him at the sales, and he was in the last 20 lots and was one of those ones that fell through the cracks, so I thought I’d give this one a crack myself,” O’Brien said.

“I’ll speck some, keep some to trade, and some to race.”

O’Brien indicated no foreign propositions for Cannae so far, yet the midweek result might prompt them.

“He was never going to be a horse that showed up in 800-metre trials,” O’Brien said.

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“He was always going to be one that had to develop into being this type of racehorse.

There is a decent enough market for these sorts of horses and Hong Kong loves these sorts of horses, three-year-old’s that are still lightly raced with the potential of getting to the Derby.”

Ridden by Damian Lane at $2.80 favourite status, Cannae prevailed by a short neck against Peeaitchdee ($3), with Somethingintheair ($13) one length adrift in third.

Cannae began his career at Sandown last month from a rearward position, and O’Brien highlights significant strides made by the gelding.

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“He’s building a foundation to being a pretty decent horse,” O’Brien said.

“He’s been picking up some pretty decent horses in his gallops. He has got that ability to quicken up and hit the line.

“His pedigree says, being by Maurice, he takes that leap at least to 2000 metres, so we’ve got plenty of options for at least the rest of his three-year-old year.

“We entered him last week for the Australian Derby, but that’s probably a bit soon and everything would have to fall into place, but there is also the South Australian Derby and Queensland Derby after that.”

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Discover top racing betting markets ahead of Cannae’s potential Derby appearances.

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Man United latest: Fresh Barcelona battle looms amid concerns over loan star

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Manchester United face a big three months as they look to clinch Champions League qualification under Michael Carrick

Manchester United are currently enjoying a two-week break due to their third round exit from the FA Cup but will need to quickly get back up to speed. By the time Monday’s game at Everton rolls around, some 13 days will have passed since Benjamin Sesko secured United a point at West Ham.

That doesn’t mean we’ve been free from headlines about United, though, with much of the chatter focusing on what’s to come this summer. A decision will need to be made regarding Michael Carrick’s future as manager, with 12 matches of the season left for him to make his case even more strongly, while some transfer activity is inevitable regardless of who occupies the dugout.

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United have already confirmed Casemiro won’t be at Old Trafford next season, with the Brazilian international aiming to leave on a high note. Things aren’t set in stone when it comes Marcus Rashford, who is currently on loan at Barcelona and could well still move to Camp Nou permanently.

We have an update on another of United’s loanees, as well as a separate Barca battle. Here are our latest discussion points from around Old Trafford.

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Lausanne decision causes Kone concern

The winter transfer window wasn’t the busiest for Manchester United but it did see Sekou Kone loaned out to Lausanne-Sport in early February. However, the Malian midfielder’s move hasn’t quite gone according to plan – at least not for his first few weeks in Switzerland.

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Kone made his debut coming off the bench against Thun in a league defeat. However, he has remained an unused substitute in Lausanne’s other two February fixtures, and has now been left out of the club’s Conference League squad.

United highlighted possible European involvement as justification for loaning Kone to Switzerland. Now, according to The Mail, the latest development has caused concern

Lausanne secured ninth position in the Conference League table before Christmas, suffering just one defeat in their six league phase fixtures. This means they’re seeded for the play-off round, where they face Czech outfit Sigma Olomouc.

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Double battle with Barca

Manchester United could see their transfer plans derailed by Barcelona not once but twice, according to reports from Germany. Borussia Dortmund right-back Julian Ryerson is one of two reported United targets also eyed by the Catalan club, as well as young German midfielder Kennert Eichhorn.

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According to BILD (via Sport Witness), Eichhorn has attracted attention from several major clubs with his performances for Hertha Berlin. Bundesliga sides Bayern Munich, Eintracht Frankfurt, Bayer Leverkusen and RB Leipzig have been mentioned as possible destinations, along with Barcelona, Real Madrid and United.

The wonderkid only celebrated his 16th birthday in July but established himself in Hertha’s first team before sustaining an ankle injury which has sidelined him for the last three matches. He has featured in 12 of his side’s 2. Bundesliga games this season as Stefan Leitl’s team occupy sixth place in the standings.

The defensive midfielder reportedly has a release clause around £10million. It’s anticipated that he will make a move this summer, even if Hertha manage to secure promotion back to the top tier.

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Decorum targets 2026 Rosehill Guineas path with latest success

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With three wins in only four starts, the lightly raced three-year-old Decorum has emerged as a prospect for the Group One Rosehill Guineas.

Trained by Michael Freedman and jumping at $1.65 in betting, the colt capitalised on his recent first-up score at Warwick Farm by grinding out victory in Wednesday’s Hyland Race Colours Handicap (1600m) at the same course, wearing down Lancelot Du Lac ($2.80) by a narrow half-length margin.

As the full brother to 2024 Coolmore Stud Stakes champion Switzerland, Decorum demonstrates a preference for stamina-testing distances over his brother’s sprint prowess, and victorious jockey Tommy Berry agrees on his bright outlook.

“I just can’t wait to get him to 2000 (metres). He feels like he’s looking for that sort of ground,” Berry said.

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“There is definitely a good race in him. I’m just not sure which one it is.”

Entries are in place for Decorum in multiple autumn carnival majors, including the Randwick Guineas and Rosehill Guineas.

Among the frontrunners for those is Spring Champion Stakes graduate Attica, resuming Saturday in Randwick’s Hobartville Stakes, whom Berry likens to Decorum.

Specifically, Attica had to dig deep to defeat Decorum in their joint debut at Warwick Farm last season, en route to Group 1 success three starts beyond.

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“Not that I’ve ridden Attica, but I’ve seen plenty of him, he reminds me a little bit of him a ‘prep’ ago, so he’s a prep behind him,” Berry said.

“He’s one of those horses, he’s a real working class horse and when the penny drops, which probably won’t be until the spring, he’s just going to keep going the way he’s going.

“The Randwick Guineas might be a little bit sharp for him, but you’ve probably got to go there on your way to a Rosehill Guineas.”

Decorum arguably posted the day’s top result, yet Nash Rawiller dominated the riding stakes with three winners from the opening trio of races.

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He piloted late addition Satirically for Tulloch Lodge to win first-up, before striking again with Wolf Gap from Anthony and Sam Freedman and Straand Beauty for John O’Shea and Tom Charlton.

Head to the betting sites for competitive racing betting markets on the Rosehill Guineas.

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Watch Live: Canada vs. Norway Olympic men’s curling at 3:05 a.m. ET

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Canada wraps up round-robin play in men’s curling with a game against Norway at the Winter Olympics. First shot is scheduled for 3:05 a.m. ET / 12:05 a.m. PT on Thursday.

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Real's Vinicius slams 'cowards' after racism row interrupts Benfica Champions League clash

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Real Madrid striker Vinicius Junior took aim at racist “cowards” after he was allegedly abused by Benfica’s Gianluca Prestianni on Tuesday during the first leg of their Champions League play-off, prompting the referee to briefly stop the match and activate an anti-racism protocol.

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No. 17 St. John’s continues winning ways versus Marquette

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NCAA Basketball: St. John at MarquetteFeb 18, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Marquette Golden Eagles guard Adrien Stevens (10) and St. John’s Red Storm forward Zuby Ejiofor (24) reach for the ball during the first half at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images

Bryce Hopkins had 23 points and 10 rebounds and Oziyah Sellers added 12 points as 17th-ranked St. John’s held off host Marquette 76-70 in a Big East matchup Wednesday in Milwaukee, Wis., extending its winning streak to 12 games.

St. John’s (21-5, 14-1 Big East) moved atop the conference, a half-game in front of No. 5 UConn, which was upset by Creighton 91-84 on Wednesday. The Red Storm has not lost since a 77-71 setback against Providence on Jan. 3.

Nigel James Jr. had 25 points and Royce Parham 13 for Marquette (9-18, 4-12 Big East), which has lost four of its last five games.

Joson Sanon’s 3-pointer put St. John’s up 67-61 with 6:37 remaining, but neither team scored again until Zuby Ejofor hit a free throw with 4:10 left to make it 68-61.

Sanon’s subsequent free throw put St. John’s up 71-63 with just under three minutes left. Adrian Stevens hit a 3-pointer and Tre Norman hit the second of two free throws to pull Marquette within 71-67 with 44 seconds remaining.

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James converted a three-point play to make it 72-70 with 27.5 seconds left. Ejofor’s two free throws pushed the lead to 74-70 with 21.1 seconds remaining.

Marquette’s Chase Ross missed a baseline runner and Hopkins added a pair of free throws.

Marquette erased a nine-point halftime deficit with an 11-point run to open the second half. Ross’s 3-pointer from the top put the Golden Eagles in front 46-44 as St. John’s missed its first five shots after the break.

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James scored on consecutive drives to put Marquette in front 56-50 with just under 12 minutes remaining.

St. John’s responded with a nine-point run, going in front 59-56 on Hopkins’ 3-pointer.

St. John’s closed the first half with a 10-4 run for a 44-35 halftime lead. The Red Storm shot 54.8 in the first half, hitting 7 of their final 8 shots.

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–Field Level Media

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Ranji Trophy: Jammu and Kashmir dare to dream under pressure – A big leap long in the making | Cricket News

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Ranji Trophy: Jammu and Kashmir dare to dream under pressure – A big leap long in the making
Jammu and Kashmir’s players celebrate after the team’s victory in Ranji Trophy semifinal against Bengal. (PTI Photo)

KALYANI: History had barely settled in when the phone rang. A familiar face flashed up on a video call. Minutes after Jammu and Kashmir sealed a spot in the Ranji Trophy final, the team heard from BCCI president Mithun Manhas, a former head of the J&K cricket’s ad-hoc committee. It was fitting. J&K first entered the Ranji Trophy in the 1959-60 season. For decades they were treated as plucky participants, rarely as genuine threats. The transformation into a side that now talks — and plays — like title contenders has had Manhas’ imprint on it.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!“We have done it, Mithun,” J&K coach Ajay Sharma shouted out on the phone, “Mithun and I go back a long way. He made his debut for Delhi under me. I know how hard he had worked for this.”There is a fairy-tale quality to J&K’s rise as a cricketing power: overcoming odds, brushing aside doubts, and learning the most important skill of all — self-belief. But this isn’t a story built on romance alone. It has also been shaped by method, patience and the hard labour of building a culture.

Why Pakistan don’t trust Babar Azam any more | T20 World Cup 2026

Former Delhi player Sharma himself admits he struggled to get a grip when he first took charge before the 2022-23 season. “When I joined for the first time, I was handling 38 boys. I was alone then,” Sharma said.The set-up looks very different now. J&K have a bowling coach in P Krishnakumar and Dishant Yagnik as their fielding coach. These are small additions on paper, significant ones in a dressing room trying to grow into a winning unit.“Initially it was challenging because it was a very different culture in J&K. It took me around two years to understand these kids. It took time to bond with them,” he said. “I was hard on them initially. But today they see me as an elder brother.”The first shift, Sharma believes, had to happen in the mind. “These boys only think about white-ball cricket and the IPL. We have players from the state in the IPL. But Mithun, as J&K cricket administrator, had a vision and that is to win the Ranji trophy. Ranji trophy still remains the country’s premier tournament. If you do well here your name goes ahead,” Sharma said.From there, the work became more deliberate: identify a core and keep backing it. A group of 24-25 boys began to take shape — some, like left-arm pacer Sunil Kumar, emerging through talent-hunt competitions. “It’s the same bunch which has developed as we kept giving them confidence,” Sharma stated.Alongside confidence came ambition — not the loud, throwaway kind, but some-thing planted carefully and watered over seasons. “I slowly made them understand that you are all talented guys and you are all around 19-20 years of age. You have the game in you so if you apply a little, you can play for India,” he said.Infrastructure, too, mattered. J&K’s push included pitch preparation, with Sharma noting the state now has both black and red soil pitches, a rare advantage for a side looking to be versatile at home and resilient away.Preparation became a season-defining theme. “Pre-season is very important and we started playing the Buchi Babu (in Chennai) for the last two-three years,” Sharma pointed out. Facing bigger sides there, and surviving those examinations, helped the group believe it could beat anyone.“J&K has become a team to reckon with. Everybody is scared of playing J&K now,” Sharma thundered. “We have all bases covered having both quality fast bowlers and spinners. We have won both the knockout matches away from home.”

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Why golfers keep playing ‘frustrating’ game, according to Scottie Scheffler

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US ski star Shiffrin beats Swiss world champion Rast to win Olympic slalom gold

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US skier Mikaela Shiffrin won gold in the slalom event on Wednesday, finishing a whopping 1.50sec ahead of Swiss world champion Camille Rast.

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Champions League: What happened on Real Madrid bench and tunnel after Vinicius Jr racism allegation?

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Champions League Match of the Day pundit Guillem Balague, who attended Real Madrid’s match at Benfica on Tuesday, explains the aftermath of the alleged racist incident between Vinicius Jr and Gianluca Prestianni.

READ MORE: Vinicius: Eight years at Real Madrid, 20 cases of alleged racist abuse

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