We wondered just how good this England team could be after they stumbled through this T20 World Cup, winning tight games from difficult positions to reach the semi-finals without ever producing the complete performance. Here, India provided the stiffest possible test at their spiritual home, the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai. Could England pull another win out of the fire in one of cricket’s most intimidating cauldrons?
There was an answer of sorts, as India crashed England’s bowlers to all corners of a tight ground to record a monstrous 253, the biggest score against England in T20 history. England responded with yet another one-man stand – this time it was Jacob Bethell who delivered a blistering century from 45 balls – but the top order spluttered again. More importantly, their bowlers simply couldn’t contain India’s breathtaking firepower.
England had won the toss and sent India in to bat. The hosts embraced the challenge, launched by Sanju Samson’s brutal 89 off 42 balls. Harry Brook dropped Samson on 15 and India’s opener made the England captain regret it.
The lofty target did at least clear heads and focus English minds, with no option but to go out and go hard. They gave chase, and Bethell’s majestic century gave genuine hope of a historic win. It was his first hundred in the format, completing the set just a couple of months after his maiden Ashes ton. Even in a losing cause it was one of the great T20 innings by a 22-year-old who may well go on to become one of the great T20 players.
But crucial at the death was the bowling of Jasprit Bumrah and Hardik Pandya, who both delivered brilliantly controlled overs when India most needed them to slow the chase. And while India have fielded woefully at times in this tournament, here it was a key point of difference. Both teams enjoyed the bat-friendly pitch. Both teams crashed relentless boundaries into the stands. But only one team took big catches at crucial moments.
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One player, in fact: Axar Patel took a brilliant running catch to dismiss Brook for 7, then pulled off an even better grab in the deep to remove Will Jacks, catching while charging towards the boundary and having the wherewithal to chuck the ball to Shivam Dube, standing nearby, as he tumbled over the rope.
India will head to Ahmedabad to face New Zealand in Sunday’s final. England will catch the next flight home. Could they have done any more? What next for Brendon McCullum? And will we ever see Jos Buttler in an England shirt again? There will be time to reflect on the bigger picture over the coming days as the dust settles on their tournament.
Certainly, this was an opportunity missed, and Brook will replay that drop in his mind. Samson miscued trying to hit Jofra Archer back down the ground and Brook giddily bounded across to his left, only for the ball to bounce out of his fingers.
Samson was already motoring but from there he freed his hands and began teeing off, smashing a variety of boundaries: punching through covers for four, carving into delirious fans on the off-side for six, heaving down the ground for six more. Ishan Kishan joined in the fun as India raced to 119-2 from 10 overs.
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Samson was magnificent and it felt a little unfair that he didn’t reach his century, caught near the boundary swiping at a wide-ish Will Jacks delivery on 89 from 42 balls. But the damage was already done. Tilak Varma and Hardik carried India home attempting to reach the stands with every ball.
England’s response stuttered at first as Phil Salt fell in the second over – his partnership with Buttler this tournament ends averaging 12 runs and lasting nine balls – before Brook was caught in the deep after being deceived by Bumrah’s slower ball. That appeared to be that. England were heading home.
What followed was a century that showed another glimpse of England’s future; their present, too. Buttler, when he does walk away, will leave a titanic legacy in English white-ball cricket. Bethell has already started building his own.
Elena Rybakina beat Jessica Pegula for a fifth straight time to move into the Miami Open semi-finals, winning 2-6 6-3 6-4.
Australian Open champion Rybakina was the losing finalist in Miami in both 2023 and 2024, while her American opponent was runner-up in last year’s competition.
Pegula, 32, took a 4-0 lead on her way to the first set, but Rybakina rallied and hit 15 aces and saved eight of 10 break points to come through.
She will face either world number one Aryna Sabalenka in a rematch of the Australian Open final, or the unseeded American Hailey Baptiste in the last four.
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“It’s always very difficult playing Jessica,” said Rybakina, 26.
“She started playing well, and I was rushing and frustrated, but I’m happy that I managed to bounce back and turn it around in the second set.”
American fourth seed Coco Gauff and Karolina Muchova of the Czech Republic play in the other semi-final on Thursday.
If Gauff reaches the final, she will overtake former world number one Iga Swiatek to move third in the WTA rankings next week.
“Rocky” is a good name for a caddie and an excellent description for the lie where my errant drive has settled.
It’s midday, midwinter on the edge of the Mojave. The sky is cobalt blue. The grass is emerald green. And everything beyond the fairway of the short par 4 I’m playing is stone-hard and black as night.
Once it was molten. Millions of years ago, volcanoes belched magma from the belly of the earth, spilling rivers of fire across what we now call southwest Utah — flows that cooled into the black lava fields that ring the desert city of St. George today. They make for arresting scenery and an awful place to miss.
My ball has come to rest in the ebony rubble, where little but a scuffed wedge or a sprained ankle awaits. Even Rocky Price, my look-on-the-bright-side looper, sees no point in trying to advance it.
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“Drop one,” he says. “You can still get up and down for par.” Or blunder on to double bogey.
On the plus side, the blemish on my scorecard is outshined by the beauty of the setting. Not just the jagged, inky lava underfoot but the multicolored canvas all around. In the near distance, ruddy Red Mountain shows its blushing face, backed by the white-dusted peaks of Snow Canyon, their sharp lines cutting the horizon.
It’s golf inside a geology textbook, and if the scenery looks familiar that’s no coincidence. You may have seen it last fall, when Black Desert Resort staged the Bank of Utah Championship, which debuted in 2024 as the first PGA Tour stop in Utah in more than 60 years. A coming-out party of sorts for Black Desert, the final golf course design completed by the late Tom Weiskopf, the event also signaled something broader: St. George’s growing presence in the game.
The 3rd hole at Dixie Red Hills in St. George, Utah.
Brian Oar
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THE CITY WAS ALREADY on the map for other reasons. Situated near the Arizona border, a two-hour drive from Las Vegas and at the gateway to Zion National Park, St. George has long been known as a magnet for two groups: outdoor recreationists and retirees. The young and restless come for the adrenaline, the silver-haired show up to slow things down. Golf happens to appeal to both. But in a region that marks time by reading lines on ancient rocks, the sport is a relatively recent arrival.
St. George got its first course in 1965, a seven-hole layout that came into being as a roadside temptation. The idea was to get travelers to stop rather than barrel straight through toward the Strip. Dixie Red Hills soon expanded to nine holes but retained its quirky traits, etched through sandstone outcrops at a city-owned facility where the dress code today leans toward denim and the clientele skews AARP. It’s one of 14 courses within a 20-mile radius in Washington County, ranging from high-end resorts and pedigreed daily-fee layouts to modest munis, all spread across a landscape shaped by forces far greater than a dozer.
Rocky fits neatly into the region’s arc of change. Born and raised in northern Utah, one of 13 kids, he moved with his wife to St. George eight years ago, drawn by warmer weather and cleaner air. Year-round golf was part of the pull too, but Rocky didn’t get out as often as he liked. He was in his 50s and had worked more than half his life as a banker when a health scare prompted him to press refresh. That was in 2023. Fifteen months later, he left Wells Fargo. Six months after that, he started looping at Black Desert.
The transition suits him. He has lost weight, shed his wristwatch and let his hair grow, tying it back in a ponytail.
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“I love my new office,” he tells me as we move to the next tee. “You can’t beat the views, and it’s so much more relaxed.”
In migrating from north to south, Rocky followed a path blazed more than 150 years earlier by travelers with very different motivations. In 1861, 309 families set off from Salt Lake City, answering a call from the religious leader Brigham Young to settle this sun-scorched corner of Utah. The Civil War had erupted and Young envisioned a cotton-growing settlement in a friendly climate — a Mormon answer to the Confederacy’s stranglehold on the textile trade. His grand plan earned St. George the nickname “Utah’s Dixie,” a moniker that hasn’t aged especially well, though a bold letter D still sits on a hillside overlooking the city, looking like a radically shortened version of the Hollywood sign.
Young had a penchant for prophecies. One was a promise that St. George would become a “city of spires.” That vision was realized in the late 1800s with the construction of a temple and tabernacle, both built from rock quarried from the same slopes that flank Dixie Red Hills today.
What Young couldn’t have foreseen was everything else. In downtown St. George, the city has designated an 11-block historic district that blends contemporary commerce with trips in the wayback machine. On and around Main Street, pioneer-era buildings share blocks with art galleries, farm-to-table bistros and boutiques selling $150 overalls. A jailhouse built in the late 1800s out of black lava rock now houses an ice cream shop. At Thomas Judd’s General Store — the oldest continuously operating business in town — you can get a throwback soda from a fountain and a grape-studded chicken salad sandwich served on a croissant.
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St. George is a Mormon town, but it’s not a dry town. On a late-day stroll through the historic district, I have my pick of watering holes, their taps flowing with local craft beers, their wine lists stocked with homegrown petite sirah and cabernet sauvignon. The hills here are alive with many things. I hadn’t known that vineyards were among them.
In the area? Stop at Thomas Judd’s General Store.
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Brigham Young’s winter home still stands downtown as well, preserved as a museum. A brochure for a self-guided walking tour refers to its original inhabitant as “St. George’s first snowbird.” It’s an apt description for a man whose seasonal retreats from Salt Lake City’s bitter cold presaged the exodus of cold-climate transplants who have since flocked here, trading ice storms for tee times. St. George has swelled to accommodate them. A population that stood at 5,000 in the 1950s now tops 100,000. What was once considered an inhospitable patch of desert — too hot, too remote, too austere — is now one of the fastest-growing metro areas in the country, with a real estate market to match. The key, it turned out, wasn’t cotton. It was recreation.
Of the area’s outdoor sports, golf is the biggest economic engine. Momentum behind it surged in the 1990s, when courses like Sky Mountain — with its postcard views of Zion — and Entrada arrived in quick succession. The latter, a private club originally designed by Johnny Miller and later renovated by David McLay Kidd, boosted the area’s bona fides. Coral Canyon followed, its holes flanked by arroyos and rock walls that blaze orange in afternoon light. Other headliners have taken shape more recently, including Copper Rock, now a stop on the Epson Tour and host of the 2024 and 2025 LPGA Legends Championship. But the course that first gave St. George a national golf profile was Sand Hollow, a John Fought and Andy Staples design that opened in 2008 alongside a state park of the same name. It has since become a fixture on Top 100 lists (including GOLF’s Top 100 You Can Play in the U.S.) and the star of countless photo spreads and Instagram posts.
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IT’S EASY TO SEE WHY influencers love Sand Hollow. A massive red rock outcrop looms beside the pro shop and the first tee, which tumbles downhill, a gentle warm-up for what’s ahead. The front nine is the mellower half, with big, sweeping fairways and plenty of red rock scenery but also houses framing the holes. The back nine, by contrast, is entirely undeveloped, which underscores the drama of its arresting holes. Greens nestle into red rock amphitheaters. Fairways curl along sheer bluffs, dizzying drops that make me think of Wile E. Coyote crashing-landing in a cloud of dust.
Rocky’s with me for this round — not carrying my bag but playing alongside. He golfs every chance he gets. He also seems to know everyone we see: the head pro, the superintendent, the guy filling divots on the 14th tee. As we make our way up the final hole, we bump into a foursome unloading their bags. The group includes Gifford Nielsen, former quarterback for the Houston Oilers who went on to a career as a broadcaster and to a leadership role in the Church of Latter-day Saints. I don’t recognize him but Rocky does. The two embrace. Of course, they’re friends.
Like Rocky, Nielsen has roots farther north in Utah but now calls St. George home. “I’ve played a lot of desert golf around the southwest area, but this is just different,” he tells me later. “You don’t get scenery like this in Scottsdale or Palm Springs.”
There are other ways to experience the landscape: on foot, by bike, or from the basket of a hot-air balloon. You can rappel into slot canyons, kayak rivers and reservoirs, or do what any sensible person does when confronted with miles of dunes and granted access to an ATV.
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“How’s this for a course to play on?” Jason Reeves asks me. It’s early morning, in teeth-chattering cold that’s typical of winter in the desert, where it takes a few hours for the sun to do its work. We’re on Sand Mountain, and Reeves is my guide with Mad Moose Tours for a two-hour tour on a vast expanse that could pass for planet Tatooine. The sand glows burnt ocher in the early light. Alien rock formations rise from the dunes.
Hole Nos. 17 and 2 at Coral Canyon in Washington, Utah.
Brian Oar
Reeves is an off-road guy in all seasons, a ski instructor who also races ATVs. Time was when he did a lot of motorbike racing too, until a bad collision recast his relationship with speed.
“There’s a saying in off-roading,” he says, patting the roll bar of his Polaris. “With age comes a cage.”
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I’m happy to have that protection on our tour, which pivots from pedal-to-the-metal runs along snaking rutted paths to slow rock-crawling climbs over terraced sandstone, up slopes I’m certain will be too steep to summit, through channels in the rock that look too narrow to pass.
It’s exhilarating. But nothing we traverse compares to what lies 30 minutes north. The entrance to Zion National Park is there, and on a clear winter afternoon I drive a scenic route into the canyon, retracing in reverse the patient work of the Virgin River, which, over epochs, carved these sheer, soaring walls and still courses along the canyon floor. Without summer’s crowds, Zion’s grandeur only grows, along with the sense of perspective it imparts. How small we are in the big picture, how silly it is to fret about our score.
It’s a thought that lingers the next morning when I tee it up at Dixie Red Hills. It’s a modest operation — $27 for nine holes — and the price is only part of its popularity. There’s also its winning personality: classic muni golf, unfussy and authentic. No bag drop, no starter, just a pro shop P.A. system to announce the next group. Tee times get snatched up as soon as they’re released.
I’m paired with a couple of old pals, Sid and Jerry, both in blue jeans, both of the Greatest Generation. Sid wears a bucket hat that reads “Been there, done that, can’t remember.” What I won’t forget is the 7-wood he smacks from 68 yards to birdie range on a par 3 that plays over a dry riverbed. I tip my own non-bucket hat in tribute.
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Back at Black Desert, the landscape commands a different kind of respect. A tournament-level test that accommodates resort play with an assortment of tees, the course was built with the brute force of dynamite blasts in places but also with artful choreography. The routing works through the compass to showcase the panoramas, bringing lava fields and ridges into play in ways both scenic and strategic.
I’ve read enough about the place to pick up some facts. I’m aware, for instance, that Snow Canyon State Park, just across the road, was where portions of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid were filmed. I’ve also learned that Jay Don Blake, a St. George native who spent years on the PGA Tour — remember the Sansabelts and the ’70s ’stache? — practices regularly on property. He was given a special exemption into the Utah Championship. He missed the cut but made a lot of people’s day.
Black Desert is big-time golf, and ownership has talked of adding more of it on nearby reservation land. But for now the course is all that I can handle.
It’s late afternoon as our round winds down, the sun painting the landscape in shades of rust and amber. Rocky and I are moving up the 18th fairway. He’s reflecting on his new life and the liberating feeling of being unburdened of what used to weigh him down. I realize I’m doing something of the same—not dwelling on the double at the 2nd or the three-putt on the 10th, or…why take inventory? I’m pushing forward, soaking up the splendor. Out here, where Rocky has found his reset and the landscape puts poor shots in proper context, the only reason to look back is to enjoy the view.
Barcelona took control of their Women’s Champions League quarter-final with an impressive, dominant away first-leg victory at Spanish rivals Real Madrid.
Brock Lesnar recently took part in an interview with Splittin’ Chiclets, where he was able to open up about his reasons behind his WWE return and his legacy.
The former World Champion noted that he made his return because of his children and even joked about his grocery bill before revealing that his children were his legacy.
Thanks for the submission!
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His daughter, Mya Lesnar, who has already been able to make a name for herself as an athlete, recently reacted to his comments on her Instagram.
Mya Lesnar has reacted to her father’s comments
Brock Lesnar returned to WWE at SummerSlam back in 2025 after more than a year of uncertainty when it came to his future.
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The Beast’s return came as a massive shock, and he has since been able to set up an interesting feud for himself heading into WrestleMania as well.
Brock Lesnar will face Oba Femi at WrestleMania 42 in less than a month
Brock Lesnar faces off against Oba Femi at WrestleMania in less than four weeks time, and it seems that The Beast could have finally met his match. Lesnar could argue that he was caught off guard two weeks ago when Oba Femi initially accepted his open challenge and hit him with a Powerbomb on RAW.
This past week, Lesnar was prepared and even set up the former NXT Champion for his F5 finisher, but the Nigerian was able to fight out and then threw Lesnar on the floor, and he was left looking embarrassed outside the ring.
It’s unclear if Lesnar will now change up his thinking and show Femi that he is not a man to be messed with, or if Lesnar will prove to be an easy task for the newcomer, who is yet to visit Suplex City courtesy of the former UFC Champion.
Manchester United host Bayern Munich in the first leg of their Champions League quarter-final tie tonight with the winner facing Real Madrid or Barcelona in the semi-finals
An under-19 football coach at German Bundesliga club FC St. Pauli publicly came out as gay this week and used the opportunity to criticize attitudes towards homosexuality in the game.
Christian Dobrick, 29, told German broadcaster RTL and news magazine Stern on Tuesday that gay men are “still treated like extraterrestrials” in professional men’s football.
He said he suspected that, while he’s certain he’s not the only one, there are probably fewer gay men in the professional game than in the general population.
“The pressure to lead a hetero-normative life is so big that fewer gay footballers make it to the top because they have to use up their energy on problems which have nothing to do with sport,” he said.
The situation is very different in women’s football, where sexual orientation has never been such a taboo topic.
Bundesliga: Homophobia in men’s football
Dobrick joined St. Pauli, a club based in Hamburg, in summer 2025 after coaching youth teams at TSG Hoffenheim and Holstein Kiel. According to him, the vocabulary used in and around men’s football has contributed to a general, subconscious homophobia in the game.
“If a player complains about too much physicality, he’s quickly labeled a puff,” he said. “It’s hard to get rid of these insults and the warped image of gay men that they construe.”
Therefore, Dobrick kept his sexual orientation a secret for fear of damaging his chances of one day coaching at the first-team level — perhaps even in the Bundesliga.
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“For a long time, I was uncertain whether I would be harming my career prospects by coming out,” he said — and he still is. “But this game of hide-and-seek was costing me too much strength.”
Dobrick’s announcement was made independently of his employer, FC St. Pauli, which is well-known for its tolerant stance and political activism in football. Rainbow flags are a common sight in the stands at the Millerntor stadium in Hamburg, and the captain wears a rainbow-colored armband on the pitch.
Unsurprisingly, club president Oke Göttlich said the club stands fully behind its under-19 coach. “It’s simple and it applies to everyone: love whoever you want!” he said.
“As a coach, you can be whoever you want, but you have to stand for something, you have to be yourself,” Klopp reportedly said at an event with young coaches in Salzburg — where the 58-year-old currently works as Global Head of Soccer for the energy drink brand Red Bull.
For Dobrick, the message became a work-life motto, and he urged other gay players to “take the plunge into the cold water and swim!”
While no active male player has yet come out in German football, there are openly gay officials in the game, such as VfB Stuttgart chief executive Alexander Wehrle. His predecessor, former Germany international Thomas Hitzlsperger, became the first and most prominent German ex-player to come out in January 2014.
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Following his coming-out, Dobrick took to Instagram to thank colleagues and followers. “The same coach as I was yesterday,” he said. “Now, full focus on the weekend against Dresden!”
The 2026 NFL schedule won’t be released until May, but Week 1 is already taking shape. The upcoming season kicks off on a Wednesday, which marks just the second time in 75 years that the NFL season started with a midweek game.
The NFL will also hold a Thursday night game in Week 1, and that matchup will feature the NFL’s first regular-season game in Australia with the Los Angeles Rams facing the San Francisco 49ers.
The Wednesday opener will take place on Sept. 9, followed by the Thursday game on Sept. 10.
Why Seahawks will get rare Wednesday opener
The winner of the Super Bowl generally hosts the Thursday night opener in the following season, but the NFL made an exception this year. The league is putting the Australia game on Thursday, but the NFL still wanted to make sure the defending champion would officially kick off the season, so the Seahawks were moved to Wednesday.
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Over the past 75 years, the NFL has only held one Wednesday game in Week 1. That came in 2012 when the NFL scheduled the Cowboys vs. Giants in a way to not conflict with Barack Obama’s acceptance speech at the Democratic National Convention.
Since the Seahawks are the home team, that means they face either the Cardinals, Cowboys, Giants, Bears, Chiefs, Chargers or Patriots (We ranked all the options here). The NFL could put a Super Bowl rematch in that spot with Seattle facing New England, but the league could also go with the Cowboys or Bears. One team you probably won’t see in that spot is the Chiefs. That’s mainly because it’s still unclear if Patrick Mahomes will be available for the game. Mahomes tore his ACL back in December. Although he’s aiming for a Week 1 return, it’s not set in stone yet.
The Thursday night game will kick off at 8;20 p.m. ET on NBC. The opponent will be revealed when the full schedule is released in May.
Details on Rams-49ers kickoff time in Australia
For the first time, the NFL is holding a game in Australia, which created some serious logistical issues that the league has now worked through.
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Since the start of International play in 2007, the NFL has had to deal with some major time changes so far, but this one is the biggest. The game between the Rams and 49ers will kick off at 10:35 a.m. on FRIDAY in Melbourne, which will create an 8:35 p.m. ET kickoff on Thursday night in the United States. The iconic Melbourne Cricket Ground will be hosting the NFL’s first game Down Under.
Due to the lengthy flight and extreme time difference, the NFL wants to make sure that both teams have enough time to get ready for their Week 2 game, which is why the league is having the Rams and 49ers play earlier in the week.
Broadcast-wise, the NFL is selling the rights to the Australia game, and that will be part of a mini-package that contains five or six games overall, according to multiple reports, so although we know the kickoff time of the is game, we won’t know the TV details until the schedule comes out.
There will not be a Friday game in Week 1
The NFL opened with a Friday game in Week 1 in both 2024 and 2025, but that won’t happen this year.
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Under the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961, the NFL isn’t allowed to televise any games on Friday or Saturday from the second weekend in September through the second weekend in December (Those two days have been earmarked for high school and college football). This is why you don’t see any Saturday games on the NFL schedule until late in the season.
The NFL always kicks off after Labor Day, which is why there’s an issue this year. The first Friday on the NFL calendar is Friday, Sept. 11, but that will be the second Friday in September and the league isn’t allowed to play on that day.
The NFL can schedule a Friday (or Saturday) game during the first weekend of September, and that option is available when Labor Day falls on Sept. 1, 2 or 3, which happened in both 2024 and 2025. After this year, the holiday won’t fall on one of those three dates again until 2029, so that will likely be the next time we see a Friday game in Week 1.
Meanwhile, Rangers are attempting to schedule a meeting of Premiership clubs to discusss the use of video assistant referees (VAR), a discussion which may happen in the next fortnight.
Many clubs have publicly expressed concerns about VAR and the general state of refereeing in Scotland.
It’s believed that Rangers have not ruled out withdrawing their financial support of VAR but broadly they believe the system is here to stay.
They might even be prepared to invest more in the technology – for example extra cameras – if they had sufficient confidence that increased investment would lead to better quality decision-making.
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When the meeting of clubs takes place there will be an emphasis on coming up with ways to improve the product and get better value for money.
Last month, Paraag Marathe, then the club’s vice-chairman as well as chairman of Leeds United, stood down after discussions with Uefa about multi-club ownership.
Another Rangers director at the time Gene Schneur, also left his role at Ibrox at that time. Neither will be replaced.
Cavenagh also offered his support for manager, Danny Rohl, ahead of the title run-in.
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“We are three points off the lead, with seven matches to play,” he said.
“We have complete confidence in Danny, his staff, and our squad. We will approach each match as it comes, and fingers crossed, we will be at the top of the table after 38 matches.”
NEW DELHI: Gujarat Titans have made a key change ahead of IPL 2026, bringing in left-arm pacer Kulwant Khejroliya as a replacement for the injured Prithviraj Yarra. As the new season approaches, the team is focusing on stability and building on its strong past performances.On Tuesday, captain Shubman Gill stressed the importance of staying composed and trusting the team. “I think I’m just being myself, and the calmness comes from a sense of belief and security that I have within my group and in my own game,” Gill said.
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Gujarat Titans confident ahead of IPL 2026: ‘We’re here to win, not participate’
He explained how staying calm helps decision-making, adding, “Staying calm in any situation gives you an eagle-eye view, you’re able to look beyond the moment, see the bigger picture, and have a much clearer, long-term vision.”Gujarat Titans, who have been consistent performers since joining the IPL, are aiming to continue that success under Gill’s leadership.The team management has largely stuck with its core group, making only minor changes. Director of Cricket Vikram Solanki said, “As far as this season is concerned and putting a squad together, we had a really good year last year. We just fell at the final hurdle. We made very small changes at the auction, it just needed a little bit of adjustment.”He added, “There were five players who came in, and Matthew Hayden has joined us as well. The work is essentially shared among all of us, and we all try to work very hard. We are mindful of supporting these players as best as we can.”Gujarat Titans will start their IPL 2026 campaign against Punjab Kings on March 31, followed by their first home game against Rajasthan Royals on April 4, entering the season with confidence and a clear plan.
Iran’s men’s national football team has trained in southern Turkey as the players gear up for two crucial pre-World Cup friendlies.
Their preparations are unfolding against a backdrop of heightened geopolitical tension, with the squad anticipated to attract significant attention amid the US-Israeli war on Iran.
The team conducted a training session in Belek, a resort area near Antalya, under stringent media restrictions.
Officials stated the measure was to prevent distractions ahead of matches deemed vital for their World Cup readiness.
This cautious approach aligns with recent revelations from federation President Mehdi Taj, who last week confirmed discussions with Fifa regarding relocating Iran’s World Cup fixtures from the United States to Mexico due to player safety concerns.
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Trump indicated it would not be ‘appropriate’ for Iran to play at the World Cup (AFP/Getty)
This follows a warning from US president Donald Trump that it would not be “appropriate” for Iran to play in this summer’s tournament.
The Iranian camp has largely sought to maintain a low public profile, anticipating intense political and media scrutiny as the tournament approaches.
In Belek, no interviews with players or coaches were granted, with a team media representative emphasising the squad’s complete focus on their immediate competitive programme.
The team is scheduled to face Nigeria on Friday and Costa Rica on Tuesday in Antalya, fixtures that were originally planned for Jordan but moved to Turkey following the outbreak of the Iran war.
While players appeared relaxed during the sunny training session, with staff and team members observed chatting and joking, individual controversies have recently emerged.
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Forward Mehdi Taremi faced scrutiny after swapping shirts with an Israeli opponent while playing for his club, Olympiacos, in Greece.
Separately, prolific striker Sardar Azmoun, who boasts 57 goals in 91 internationals, was omitted from the squad.
Iranian media reported his exclusion stemmed from a perceived act of disloyalty to the government, following an Instagram post featuring him meeting Dubai’s ruler, Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum.
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