Sports
Olympic champion Alexei Ramirez tested positive for four steroids at World Baseball Classic
Former Chicago White Sox star Alexei Ramirez has been provisionally banned from baseball after testing positive for four anabolic steroids during the World Baseball Classic in March, where he made headlines as the tournament’s oldest ever player.
The International Testing Agency (ITA) confirmed on Wednesday that the 44-year-old Cuban tested positive for “metabolites of mesterolone, metandienone, oxandrolone and stanozolol.”
These substances, the Lausanne-based agency noted, are “associated with promoting rapid muscle growth, increased strength and enhanced physical performance.”
The ITA informed Ramirez of the positive result from a sample taken during the tournament.
Ramirez had returned to the Cuba roster after a 20-year absence, featuring as a bench player to break the record previously held by Roger Clemens, who was 43 when he represented the United States in the 2006 WBC.

Cuba failed to advance from the pool phase in the recent tournament.
Known for his nine-year career in Major League Baseball, Ramirez spent seven years at the Chicago White Sox between 2008 and 2015.
He was the runner-up for the American League Rookie of the Year award in 2008 after making his debut earlier that year at the age of 26.
He also played in the Major League Baseball All-Star Game in 2014 and won the Silver Slugger Award twice in 2010 and 2014.
Ramirez went on to have short spells at the San Diego Padres and the Tampa Bay Rays in 2016 before walking away from Major League Baseball.
He also boasts an Olympic gold medal with Cuba from the 2004 Athens Games and won the Baseball World Cup the following year in Rotterdam, Netherlands, before being part of a silver medal-winning team at the 2006 World Baseball Classic in San Diego, California.
During his MLB tenure through 2016, he hit 115 home runs and recorded 590 RBIs.
Sports
Chelsea forward Mykhailo Mudryk appeals to CAS amid reports of four-year ban
Chelsea forward Mykhailo Mudryk has lodged an appeal at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) amid reports he has been handed a four-year ban for a breach of anti-doping rules.
Mudryk was charged by the Football Association in June last year, having been provisionally suspended since December 2024.
A statement from CAS read: “CAS confirms it has received an appeal by Mykhailo Mudryk against the FA.
“The parties are currently exchanging written submissions, and a hearing is yet to be scheduled.”
The CAS statement did not mention what sanction Mudryk was appealing against, but it has been widely reported that a four-year ban has been imposed.
Under Regulation 77 of the FA’s anti-doping policy, a four-year ban would result if the violation related to a non-specified substance, unless the player or his camp could establish that the violation was not intentional.
Where the violation relates to a specified substance and the FA can establish the violation was intentional, a four-year ban would also apply.
The FA and Chelsea declined to comment when contacted by the Press Association on Wednesday.
In a statement issued at the time of his suspension, Mudryk said the positive sample had come as “a complete shock” and he had “not done anything wrong,” with Chelsea adding the player had “never knowingly used any banned substances”.
The result was returned shortly after he had been away on international duty with Ukraine in November 2024.
Mudryk last played for the club in a 2-0 win away to Heidenheim in the Conference League on November 28, 2024. He was then an unused substitute for the 3-0 Premier League win against Aston Villa three days later.
Mudryk joined Chelsea from Shakhtar Donetsk in January 2023 in an £88million move.
He has scored just 10 goals in 73 appearances in all competitions and has rarely held down a regular place in the team.
Sports
2026 PWHL Walter Cup Playoffs Preview: Fleet vs. Charge
For the second straight year, the Ottawa Charge earned their ticket to the playoffs at the last possible moment, but despite their post-season presence coming right down to the wire, they cannot be considered underdogs in this one.
Sure, the seeding tilts in favour of their opponents, the Boston Fleet, who clinched a playoff berth faster than any other team in PWHL history. But the Charge have two things going for them to help tip the scales: Experience and momentum. More specifically: Ottawa fought all the way to Game 4 of the Finals last season, plus they’re coming off a four-game win streak.
In short, the 18-point regular-season gap between these squads doesn’t do the matchup justice. None of their four contests this year were decided in regulation, and the Charge owned their season series.
With the Fleet and Charge so closely matched, expect high-pressure moments and extra time in this series.
Game 1 goes Thursday at 7:00 p.m. ET in the Tsongas Center.
Fleet X-Factor: Aerin Frankel
Aerin Frankel is the driver behind the Fleet’s dominance this season. With a record eight shutouts and an impressive .953 save percentage (just .002 behind league-leading Montreal Victoire keeper Ann-Renée Desbiens), she has anchored the Fleet to 19 regular-season wins. The 26-year-old Northeastern University alum will be the biggest difference-maker in the Fleet’s post-season run. If she can keep up the stellar stat sheet, it will be difficult for the Charge to snag an advantage.
Charge X-Factor: Experience
Ottawa knows the heightened environment of the Walter Cup Playoffs well after competing in the Final last year. Plus, they have a critical player who met that stage with an MVP-worthy performance in netminder Gwyneth Philips. Meanwhile, the Fleet missed the playoffs entirely last season. While there are plenty of lessons to be taken from the Minnesota Frost’s two-peat and the fact that the higher-seeded team has never won a playoff round, two of the most fundamental are clear: experience trumps regular-season success, and anything can happen when the Cup is on the line.
With USA’s clutch Olympic goal-scorer and all-around defensive superstar Megan Keller and rookie of the year candidate and young sensation Haley Winn lining up together on the blueline, there’s no doubt defence is what makes Boston such a threat. Combined, these two boast 41 points on the season, better than any other pair of defenders from any other PWHL team. On both sides of the sheet, these two are an unparalleled force.
The Fleet have been one of the most consistent forces in the PWHL since puck drop in November. After a five-game win streak to start the season, they remained at the top in a battle with Montreal for the No. 1 seed that went to the very end.
The playoffs always add an extra level of compete and toughness, but after close games all season —16 of their 20 were decided by a single goal, half of which finished in their favour— the Fleet are comfortable under such pressure-filled circumstances.
Shootouts won’t be around to save the Fleet in the playoffs.
All four of their regular-season meetings with Ottawa were decided in extra time, with three going to shootouts, as was the case for many of Boston’s games this season. The Fleet are exceptional at holding on to force extra time and finish in a situation where they could put the game on the back of their best player: Frankel.
The importance of defence shouldn’t be discounted here — in fact, the Fleet’s excellence on the blueline is a big reason they are still playing this spring — but at some point, the game comes down to who can score. Holding on until shootouts simply won’t be a strategy they can use in the playoffs.
Getting hot at the right time
The Charge had a tough first half of the season, after expansion ruffled the lineup that took them to the Final last year. Since the slow start, however, players like Brianne Jenner have recovered and excelled. Jenner has scored at least a point in each of her last four games — all of which the Charge won — and a total of seven in that span.
Ottawa has been playing important games for a few weeks now and is used to the must-win pressure that shrouds the playoffs. Added stakes have not been an issue for them.
They win-eth with Gwyneth
As we saw last season, netminder Philips was created for the playoffs. After Charge starter Emerance Maschmeyer was injured late in the season and ruled out for the 2025 playoffs, Ottawa had to take a chance on Philips and it paid off: she didn’t lose a game in regulation in last year’s post-season and made history as the first rookie and first player of the losing squad to win playoff MVP honours
Since then, she’s assumed the full-time starting role in Canada’s capital and filled the crease for a whopping 28 of 30 regular-season contests. Philips has the most game experience in the league after making a record 786 saves and facing 844 shots this season. Just two years out of college, she’s the third-best goaltender in the world, but if she shows up like she did in 2025, she has the potential to contend with, and even top, the performance Frankel gives on the other end of the ice.
The return of Carla MacLeod
Head coach Carla MacLeod shared her breast cancer diagnosis with the hockey world in November. Since then, she has spent some time away from the bench, including most recently missing the last five games of the season.
However, last year’s Head Coach of the Year finalist is set to make a return for the playoffs.
Despite the difficult journey MacLeod, and her club, have navigated this season, the changes behind the bench haven’t caused instability to creep into the on-ice product. Ultimately, it seems the Charge have even more to play for — something that is sure to continue motivating players into the playoffs.
Sports
“Give me him”: Unbeaten American knockout artist sets sights on Conor Benn fight
Conor Benn’s return to welterweight is imminent and when he finally arrives, there may be an unlikely opponent waiting for him, with one former world champion promising that he would knock the Briton out if they fought.
Benn’s last welterweight outing came in April 2022 against Chris van Heerden. Since then, he has fought as high as middleweight in his two bouts against bitter rival Chris Eubank Jr.
Nevertheless, Benn remains as the WBC’s mandatory challenger for their welterweight world title and ‘The Destroyer’ is on his way back down, having successfully stopped off at a 150lb catchweight contest against Regis Prograis earlier this month.
Now, Benn’s eyes are firmly on welterweight honours, with a fight against reigning WBC champion, Ryan Garcia, possible to take place on a Netflix card in September.
Although, should he opt to remain in the 147lb division after his clash with ‘King Ry’, former WBO lightweight world champion, Keyshawn Davis, told the Inside Ring Show that he wants a clash against Benn and labelled the potential encounter as ‘easy money’.
“I will stop Conor Benn, like guarantee, I will stop him. Easy money. Easy. So, I would love to fight Conor Benn when I move up, I would love to fight Conor Benn or Devin Haney, but bro, give me Conor Benn. I will stop him, for sure.”
Davis has fought just once since being stripped of his lightweight world title, that coming in a super-lightweight scrap with Jamaine Ortiz back in January.
Still, despite only recently moving up, ‘The Businessman’ is expected to soon campaign at welterweight, but he first rematches Nahir Albright as a 140lber in three weeks’ time where he will be hoping to add to his record of 10 knockouts in his 14 career victories.
Sports
Mikel Obi Explains Why He Left Chelsea in 2017
Former Super Eagles captain John Obi Mikel has revealed why he left Chelsea FC in 2017.
Mikel joined Chelsea in 2006 after a transfer battle involving Manchester United FC. During his 11 years at the club, he won several major trophies and made 372 appearances.
The former Nigerian midfielder left Chelsea in January 2017 after reaching a mutual agreement with the club.
Speaking on the Vibe with Five podcast, Mikel said former Chelsea manager Antonio Conte played a major role in his exit.
According to Mikel, things changed after Conte arrived at Chelsea in 2016. The club had also signed N’Golo Kanté from Leicester City, increasing competition in midfield.
Mikel and fellow Nigerian player Victor Moses were later invited to represent Nigeria at the 2016 Olympic Games in Brazil. However, the tournament clashed with Chelsea’s pre-season preparations.
Mikel said Conte warned him that he would not play for Chelsea again if he decided to go for the Olympics.
“Conte told me that if I went to the Olympics, my time at Chelsea would be over,” Mikel said.
Despite the warning, Mikel chose to represent Nigeria at the Olympics, where he captained the team to a bronze medal.
After returning from the tournament, Mikel said he was moved to train with the reserve team and spent months training alone.
He added that Conte later asked him to return to the first team when Chelsea’s performances dropped, but he had already decided to leave the club.
Mikel also revealed that former Chelsea striker Didier Drogba advised him to move on and start a new chapter in his career.
After leaving Chelsea, Mikel played for clubs including Middlesbrough FC, Trabzonspor and Stoke City FC before retiring from football in 2022.
Sports
Boston Fleet Playoff Tickets 2026: See the Cheapest Prices, Seats, Schedule for PWHL Postseason Games in Lowell
Boston Fleet Playoff Tickets 2026: See the Cheapest Prices, Seats, Schedule for PWHL Postseason Games in Lowell originally appeared on NESN. Add NESN as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
The Boston Fleet head to the PWHL Playoffs for the first time since the league’s inaugural season. The team attempts to reach the finals once again, this time looking to win it all.
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Boston went from not qualifying for the playoffs last season to becoming one of the best teams in the league this year. That’s thanks to the efforts of Abby Newhook, Alina Muller and Olympic heroes Megan Keller and Aerin Frankel.
BUY NOW: Get tickets to Fleet playoff games on StubHub
After securing one of the top playoff spots, the Fleet will face Ottawa in the semifinals. Boston aims to beat a team that gave them trouble this year and earn its first Walter Cup.
Looking to support the Fleet? Here’s how you can get the best deals for every Fleet game during the PWHL Playoffs.
Boston Fleet 2026 playoff tickets
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Tickets to Fleet playoff games are available on StubHub!
Boston will play Ottawa in the semifinals. The first two games will be played at the Tsongas Center in Lowell. Tickets for Game 1 start at $28 and can reach up to $171. Ticket prices for Game 2 start at $30 and can reach up to $468.
If a Game 5 is necessary, ticket prices start at $43.
Click below for the latest look at prices and availability.
BUY NOW: Latest prices, seats for Fleet PWHL Playoff games
Boston Fleet 2026 playoff schedule
Boston will take on the Ottawa Charge in the semifinals of the PWHL Playoffs.
Here’s a complete schedule of upcoming games:
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Semifinals vs. Charge
|
Game |
Date |
Opponent |
Time (ET) |
|
1 |
April 30 |
vs. Ottawa Charge |
7 p.m. |
|
2 |
May 2 |
vs. Ottawa Charge |
7 p.m. |
|
3 |
TBA |
at Ottawa Charge |
TBA |
|
4 |
TBA |
at Ottawa Charge* |
TBA |
|
5 |
TBA |
vs. Ottawa Charge* |
TBA |
*If necessary
PWHL Playoffs 2026 dates
The PWHL Walter Cup Playoffs are about to begin. Below is a look at key dates throughout the postseason.
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April 30: First day of playoffs – Boston Fleet vs. Ottawa Charge
-
May 2: First day of playoffs – Minnesota Frost vs. Montreal Victoire
-
TBA: Start of PWHL Finals
PWHL Playoffs 2026 bracket, matchups
Semifinals
-
Boston Fleet vs. Ottawa Charge
-
Minnesota Frost vs. Montreal Victoire
Finals
Sports
Big Ten takes the top spot for 1st rounders, while SEC sets record for total players drafted
The SEC’s reign as the king of the first round of the NFL draft was toppled by the Big Ten.
But the conference that coined the mantra “It Just Means More” for its dominance of college football in the 2010s remained in the top spot for the entire draft after the SEC set a record for the number of players picked over the three days.
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Thanks to recent national champions Indiana and Ohio State, the Big Ten led the way with 10 first-round picks, marking the first time the SEC didn’t have the most players taken in round one since 2015. The SEC only had seven — down from a record 15 last year — and the lowest total for the conference since that 2015 season when the ACC and Pac-12 led the way with nine first-rounders each and the SEC had seven.
The first player drafted from an SEC school came when LSU cornerback Mansoor Delane went sixth overall to Kansas City, marking the first draft without a top five SEC player since 2018 when Roquan Smith was the first taken at No. 8 overall by the Bears.
But the depth of the SEC shined on the final two days with the conference leading the way with 29 day two picks in rounds two and three and 51 more over the last four rounds on the final day of the draft. The 87 players in total were the most ever and easily beat the total of 67 from the Big Ten.
The SEC has had the most players picked for 20 straight drafts since the ACC took top honors in 2006. Florida won the national title the following season, starting a stretch where the conference won 13 of 17 national championships.
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That run of dominance ended when Michigan won it all in 2023 with fellow Big Ten members Ohio State and Indiana following that up with titles of their own.
The other two power conferences were far behind with the Big 12 and ACC each having six first-rounders and 38 players picked in all.
The recent realignment that added more schools to all four power conferences, along with reduced restrictions on transfers and the advent of NIL payments all have combined to consolidate the talent at the biggest schools.
San Diego State cornerback Chris Johnson was the only player who didn’t finish his college career in the SEC, Big Ten, Big 12, ACC or Notre Dame who was taken in the first round after going 27th to Miami.
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The next Group of Six player off the board was Toledo safety Emmanuel McNeil-Warren at No. 58 to Cleveland and only one other was picked on the first two days with Georgia State receiver Ted Hurst going 84th to Tampa Bay.
In all, just 14 players from the Group of Six were drafted with the American and MAC leading the way with four each. There were 39 others who transferred from a Group of Six school to a Power Four conference.
Seven players came from FBS independents with Notre Dame having six and UConn one.
There were four players who came from FCS-level schools and one who didn’t play college at all with Philadelphia taking Nigerian native Uar Bernard in the seventh round as part of the NFL’s International Pathway Program.
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Record low draft for running backs
The first round of the draft provided some memorable milestones for running backs with Jeremiyah Love becoming the first top five back in eight years when Arizona took him third overall. His Notre Dame teammate Jadarian Price went with the final pick of the round to Seattle.
That marked the sixth time in the common draft era starting in 1967 when two running backs from the same college were taken in the first round of the same draft with it last happening in 2008 with Arkansas’ Darren McFadden and Felix Jones.
Running backs mostly were an afterthought after that.
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The next back off the board came near the end of the third round when San Francisco took Indiana’s Kaelon Black 90th overall, marking the fewest running backs taken in the first three rounds of the common draft.
Only 10 more running backs went on the final day with the 13 total the fewest taken in any draft.
Tight ends had a banner weekend with 22 picked, the most since 2015, according to Sportradar, when there were also 22 selected as the league’s trend of more multi-tight end formations put a premium at the position.
The trenches as usual were dominant with teams drafting 51 defensive linemen and 50 offensive linemen. There also were 46 defensive backs, 36 wide receivers, 26 linebackers, 10 quarterbacks and three specialists.
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Ohio State leads the way
Ohio State was the third fastest school ever to have four players picked in a draft with Carnell Tate, Arvell Reece, Sonny Styles and Caleb Downs all going in the top 11 of the draft.
The only schools ever to have four players picked that quickly were Michigan State with four of the top eight in 1967 and Notre Dame with four of the top 10 in 1946.
The Buckeyes didn’t slow down from there with seven more players drafted, giving them the most of any school this year with 11. Alabama and Texas A&M each had 10, followed by Clemson, Miami and Texas Tech with nine apiece.
This also marked the 88th straight draft that both Michigan and USC had a player picked for the longest streaks of any school. Notre Dame has missed only one year (1977) of having a player picked in the regular draft since 1938 but did have running back Al Hunter taken in the supplemental draft that year.
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Wisconsin had its streak of at least one player picked each year since 1979 snapped.
Speeding up the draft
The NFL shortened the time between picks in the first round from 10 minutes to eight minutes, cutting the total duration of the round to under three hours.
The league said the first round took 2 hours, 53 minutes, down 36 minutes from last year and 40 minutes less than the average of the previous five drafts.
The duration of the first round has been cut in half since commissioner Roger Goodell’s first draft in 2007. Teams that year had 15 minutes to make their picks in the opening round, leading to a 6 hour, 8 minute round in 2007.
Sports
Vikings Get Crushed by Utterly Ugly Power Ranking
The Minnesota Vikings are one of the NFL’s very worst teams. Source? Look no further than NFL.com, a site that called Kevin O’Connell and Kyler Murray’s squad the league’s fifth-worst after the draft.
A No. 28 ranking feels detached from Minnesota’s actual roster profile.
Yes, the ranking truly befuddled the masses, as most purple fans are generally excited about the Vikings in 2026.
Minnesota Has Too Much Talent for a Basement Forecast
This can be considered an offseason low point in the court of public opinion.
NFL.com: Vikings Rank 28th
Fans opened the batch of power rankings this week and scrolled, scrolled, and kept scrolling to the fifth-worst spot on the list.
Eric Edholm defended the placement:
After the surprise of the Caleb Banks pick wore off, the Vikings settled into a little groove with a few of their selections. Among the value picks I liked: LB Jake Golday, OT Caleb Tiernan, S Jakobe Thomas and CB Charles Demmings. Even a fullback in Round 5 didn’t offend me; if anything, it made me nostalgic.
I certainly understand Vikings fans could feel differently about it, given their personal investment in the team, but if Max Bredeson becomes the next C.J. Ham, it’s a good pick. This was not a year where fifth-round picks needed to be treated like military codes. Most of the same questions about Minnesota that existed last week still remain, although trading Jonathan Greenard both adds a worry and clears up cap space.
I wouldn’t be shocked to see the Vikes make a veteran addition or two in the coming months. They could use a center, a safety and maybe another receiver.
That right there is motivation for the Vikings to beat the odds.
… with the NFL’s 3rd-Best Defense?
It’s difficult to stomach a ranking this horrid because the league’s fifth-worst football team would likely have to feature a bad offense and a bad defense, or, in this case, a bad offense and a middling defense.
That’s just not the case in Minnesota, not with Brian Flores in charge. Since Flores arrived in the Twin Cities three years ago, the Vikings’ defense ranks second in the NFL per DVOA and EPA/Play and even checked in at No. 3 last year behind the Houston Texans and Seattle Seahawks.
If one assumes that Flores’s defense retains its efficient ways — or even falls to No. 8, for example — teams with Top 10 defenses don’t usually scrape the bottom of the barrel in wins and losses.
In that regard, it seems Edholm’s power ranking fundamentally disregards Flores’s employment in Minnesota.
… and Kyler Murray?
Furthermore, Minnesota now has Murray in the saddle as the QB1, and some have mistakenly treated him like a poor quarterback who needs O’Connell’s Midas touch.
Murray isn’t a Sam Darnold or Daniel Jones — down on his luck with poor past performance and teetering on a career-long bust outcome. Murray has played in 74% of his team’s games in his career, a figure that would have approached 80% had the Cardinals not eased his workload late in 2025. He boasts two Pro Bowl selections, 4.38 speed (recorded during his 2019 draft year), a deep ball capable of traveling 70 yards, and accuracy ranked among the top five ever.
At age 28, he maintains a career EPA+CPOE of 0.090, surpassing figures from Baker Mayfield, Trevor Lawrence, Daniel Jones, and C.J. Stroud. This efficiency aligns with Justin Herbert’s performance in 2025. When playing a full 17-game season, Murray typically averages:
- 3,997 Passing Yards
- 30 Total Touchdowns
- 11 Interceptions
- 67.1% Completion Rate
- 623 Rushing Yards
That level of production is comparable to Lamar Jackson’s. Murray’s remarkable speed is evident on the field; his 2019 40-yard dash time alone would instantly make him the fastest QB in Vikings history, even surpassing those of current Vikings wide receivers Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison.
Edholm’s pecking order for the Vikings suggests a) the Flores defense will fall off b) Murray will stink or get hurt.
Only Thing Left Is to Prove Them Wrong
Of course, this is an April power ranking, 4.5 months before the start of the regular season. Nobody will care about Edholm’s ranking next autumn and winter, especially if the Vikings win several games and reach the postseason. Power rankings are merely a thermometer of public opinion and carry no mandate for anything.
Therefore, the Vikings have a simple mission in 2026: prove that an NFL 28th-place ranking is silly. And based on the fact that they finished 9-8 last year with the league’s fifth-worst quarterback play per Dropback EPA, the sky is the limit with Murray in the house.
Power rankings be damned.
Sports
MI vs SRH LIVE Score, IPL 2026: Ryan Rickelton Nears Ton, MI En Route For 200-Plus Total vs SRH
Mumbai Indians Squad: Quinton de Kock(w), Danish Malewar, Suryakumar Yadav, Tilak Varma, Hardik Pandya(c), Naman Dhir, Sherfane Rutherford, Shardul Thakur, Krish Bhagat, Ashwani Kumar, Jasprit Bumrah, AM Ghazanfar, Raj Bawa, Will Jacks, Mayank Rawat, Rohit Sharma, Corbin Bosch, Deepak Chahar, Trent Boult, Ryan Rickelton, Raghu Sharma, Keshav Maharaj, Mayank Markande, Robin Minz, Mohammed Salahuddin Izhar.
Sunrisers Hyderabad Squad: Travis Head, Abhishek Sharma, Ishan Kishan, Heinrich Klaasen, Salil Arora(w), Nitish Kumar Reddy, Aniket Verma, Pat Cummins(c), Shivang Kumar, Sakib Hussain, Praful Hinge, Eshan Malinga, Smaran Ravichandran, Liam Livingstone, Harsh Dubey, Harshal Patel, Kamindu Mendis, Jaydev Unadkat, Zeeshan Ansari, Shivam Mavi, Gerald Coetzee, Dilshan Madushanka, Krains Fuletra, Onkar Tarmale, Amit Kumar.
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Should you use the same shaft in your driver and fairway woods?
Sports
The last fighter to drop Naoya Inoue sums up Junto Nakatani’s chances of victory
Ramon Cardenas, who managed to drop Naoya Inoue in their 2025 bout, has shared his thoughts on this weekend’s historic showdown with Junto Nakatani.
Inoue has been dropped twice over the course of his outstanding 32-fight career, but rose to win in emphatic fashion on both occasions to remain undefeated. This weekend, he takes on what should be his most difficult challenge yet in a fascinating scrap with fellow Japanese pound-for-pound star, Junto Nakatani.
A three-division champion, Nakatani has been somewhat in the shadows of Inoue, in hot pursuit of a clash with his countryman, which he has now finally secured.
Speaking to Ring Magazine, Cardenas, who lost to Inoue last year and has sparred a total of 99 rounds with Nakatani, explained that, for the latter to pull off the upset, he must use his range.
“When the going gets tough, Junto still sticks with the game plan, even if it may be difficult. For Junto to win this fight, he needs to use his reach to do what he wants that night. He can’t let Inoue control the pace.
“And with Junto’s length, it could be hard to get into range. Junto is very good at using his range. When I fought Inoue, I said going in that I had to be perfect for 36 minutes. But for Junto, I feel that it could be a 50-50 fight.”
However, the Texan added that Nakatani may have more difficulty landing the overhand that he and Luis Nery did in Inoue’s two career knockdowns, due to the adjustments made by the debatable pound-for-pound king.
“It’s going to be difficult for Junto to drop Inoue with the overhand left the same way Luis Nery and I did because Inoue is expecting it, one hundred percent.
“You can tell that Inoue has worked on neutralising the left hand connecting on him ever since fighting me. I’ll bet you anything they are constantly drilling to keep the right hand tucked to the chin to not let the left hand get through.
“Whoever makes the first big mistake is going to pay. I don’t know if it will be a knockout or not in this fight, on either side, because they both know how to adjust.
“If Hernandez couldn’t knock out Junto, I don’t think Inoue can necessarily do it either. I see both guys imposing their dominance.”
‘Dinamita’ refused to offer a prediction for the contest, but finished off by giving credit to both men for accepting such a difficult fight and setting an example for their fellow boxing superstars.
“I’ll keep who I actually think will win to myself. The best answer I can give is that boxing will win. This is the kind of fight that boxing needs – the top guys, the best fighting the best. Other people should take note. It’s not about being undefeated; that’s bogus.”
Inoue-Nakatani takes place on Saturday, May 2 at the Tokyo Dome.
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