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Raptors distance themselves from play-in picture, rout dispirited Magic

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Team building in the NBA is very difficult. 

Consider the Orlando Magic. They have patient, deep-pocketed ownership, smart and experienced management with an eye on the big picture and loads of high-end talent. 

They sold off an underwhelming core at the right time and turned the draft capital into one of the best young forwards in the game in Franz Wagner, taken eighth overall in 2021 with one of the picks they got from the Chicago Bulls. They tanked briefly but effectively and ended up with Jalen Suggs, taken No. 5 in 2021, and Paolo Banchero, taken first overall in 2022. Banchero became an all-star in his second season at age 21, and Suggs was all-defence in his third season at 22. 

Having made the playoffs two years in a row, the Magic then went for it and cashed in some draft capital (as in four unprotected first-round picks and a pick swap) for Desmond Bane, a tough, two-way wing to bolster their biggest weaknesses: shot creation and three-point shooting. 

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He’s played well this season. 

There are more good moves — drafting up-and-coming Anthony Black in the lottery in 2023 and Tristan Da Silva in 2024. Both look like long-term rotation players. 

But sometimes things just don’t come together. For the Magic, it’s been most of this snake-bitten season, but it may have culminated Sunday evening at Scotiabank Arena. 

In a game with significant Eastern Conference playoff implications, the Magic looked like a team fiddling through the pre-season.

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The Raptors’ 139-87 win doesn’t quite capture the Magic’s capitulation. Over a nearly eight-minute stretch in the first half, the Raptors scored 31 unanswered points, an NBA record for the play-by-play era (since the 1996-97 season, roughly 30 years). 

“I actually didn’t know that that was even happening,” said Scottie Barnes, who set a new career-high with 15 assists to go along with 23 points and three steals in 28 minutes. His three steals gave him a career-best 102 on the season, and along with his 109 blocks, make him the only player in the NBA to top 100 of each so far this year. “I think we were all super locked in. Just trying to keep causing turnovers and keep trying as hard as we can on defence that it just helped the lead grow for us.”

Orlando gave up 19 turnovers in the first half, which the Raptors turned into 30 points. It was the second-most turnovers in a half for which there are available statistics. Toronto led 70-43 at halftime.

The Raptors were their typically handsy, pesky selves as they made a season-high 18 steals, but on multiple occasions, the Magic simply made careless passes out of bounds or over their teammates’ heads or through a forest of arms and legs.

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The result was ugly. The 52-point winning margin was the second-largest in Raptors history.  

The whole thing was a little weird. For the second time in a month Raptors head coach Darko Rajakovic credited a higher power, for his team’s performance, which was one way to explain how his team played their most dominant basketball of the season with Brandon Ingram (heel inflammation), Immanuel Quickley (missed his fourth straight game with plantar fasciitis) and Colin Murray-Boyles (back spasms) all out of the lineup. Jamison Battle (illness) was out, too. 

But who can the Magic blame? Orlando Magic head coach Jamahl Mosley tried to shoulder the blame, but he’s not passing the ball to the other team.

To their credit, against some adversity, the Raptors rallied. 

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“Obviously we dealt with several injuries today and I felt in the locker room before the start of the game there was a lot of determination there. The guys really wanted to go out there and compete,” Rajakovic said.

What was the Magic’s excuse? It’s hard to fathom. 

The game represented arguably Orlando’s last best chance to pull itself into contention for a top-six finish and a guaranteed playoff spot in the East. It would have given the Magic a 2-1 edge in the season series with the Raptors and pulled them within one game of Toronto. 

Now it’s the Raptors that have the tiebreak, and they are three full games ahead of eighth-place Orlando (39-35) with eight to play. Toronto still has a fight on its hands to stay in the top six. They are 42-32 and a half game up on Atlanta in sixth and one game up on Philadelphia in seventh. But if they slip back into the play-in tournament, it likely won’t be due to the Magic. 

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The Raptors aren’t a perfectly constructed team. What would Barnes be able to do if he actually could be something close to a full-time point guard, surrounded by shooters who can stretch the floor in every direction? We’ve never been able to see it in Toronto. Even after converting 13-of-29 threes against Orlando, the Raptors are 25th in made threes this season and 23rd in three-point percentage. 

But put the ball in his hands and good things happen. Barnes has 49 assists in the last four games, third in the NBA over that span. 

The Raptors do have a collective energy that, for the most part this season, has made them better than the sum of their parts. 

It’s allowed a previously unproven Sandro Mamukelashvili to take his first shot at regular playing time and thrive as the first big off the bench. He was +47 on Sunday and finished with 19 points on 13 shots. 

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It’s there when RJ Barrett battles through a shoulder injury to put up 24 points on 8-of-14 shooting. It’s there when Alijah Martin and A.J. Lawson, the Raptors’ little-used two-way contract players, step into a crucial game and contribute 22 points on 8-of-13 shooting combined. 

Injuries are a huge part of the Magic’s story: their core of Wagner, Banchero, Suggs and Bane have played just 130 minutes together this season. They are +10.1 per 100 possessions when they do. 

But if the flesh is weak, the spirit doesn’t seem much better. 

They were only missing Wagner on Sunday and they completely no-showed. It was their seventh loss in eight games, their only win coming over the lowly Sacramento Kings.

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The Raptors haven’t done everything right over the past three years. A talent sell-off and four years out of the playoffs have hardly yielded a bucket full of top lottery picks. Who the future star is that will ride alongside Barnes is still very much to be determined. 

But they have played together and they have committed to playing a high-energy style of defence. They pass the ball.

They have a very good chance at making the playoffs; teams a lot further along the talent acquisition curve — the Magic just being one of them — are in danger of missing them. 

Credit where credit is due. 

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Georgia on their minds: Mamukelashvili and Orlando Magic centre Goga Bitadze had a lengthy catch-up at centre court before the game started. The two big men are the only Georgian players in the NBA and represented the national team this past summer at EuroBasket. They have known each other forever. “Me and Goga played each other when I was like, six or seven years old, and he was tall and he was the only person able to block my shot and I really hated it. I was thinking, ‘Who is this tall guy?’ I was the tallest and he was the tallest. He was always a physically gifted and strong guy. I feel like he was the first player or second player against who I really had to adjust. [But] I’m so happy for him and hopefully he gets better. But I’m super happy to play him and I think he’s representing the country amazingly.”

To dunk or not do dunk: When you’re six-foot-one, dunking can be stressful. The outcome is not guaranteed. But every once in a while, Jamal Shead (12 points, 10 assists, three steals) will decide it’s time. “Whenever I’m actually open, I’ll try,” said Shead. “I need the time to get my legs under me. I don’t like dunking. It’s scary. It’s a long way for me.” But the stars aligned early in the fourth quarter with the Raptors leading by 51 points. Shead shot the gap, was off on a breakaway and loaded up. It was his third dunk of the season (on three attempts) and the sixth of his career (on nine attempts). 

Yes, they follow the standings: “I think everyone goes home and checks it,” said Mamukelashvili. “We’re right there. We fought through the whole year to kind of get ourselves in a good position. We slipped up, we came back. Now we know that everything is so stacked, the margin of error is so small, I feel you got to be aware of it. I watch other games, Miami, Orlando, Atlanta — all the teams that are right there with us, what they’re doing and how they’re doing it and make sure we stay on top.”

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Denny Hamlin wants a Kansas restart do-over

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In hindsight, Denny Hamlin wishes he would not have let Kyle Larson force him three-wide middle on the final restart on Sunday at Kansas Speedway. Of course, if he could do it all over again, he also would likely have restarted on the outside as well.

That was the overall sentiment from Hamlin on Monday during the latest episode of his Actions Detrimental podcast, one in which he feels everything went against him in a race that looked like his to lose.

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He had just retaken the lead from Tyler Reddick with four laps to go and was half a lap away from taking the white flag when Cody Ware spun due to a flat tire. Then, he simply got beat on the restart but factors both in and out of his control.

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Even during the restart, Hamlin feels like he would have had a shot at winning if not for Tyler Reddick putting Christopher Bell into the wall and into his path.

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“Like, of the Reddick contact with Bell doesn’t happen, and I don’t get (driven) all the way down to the apron … Kyle (Larson’s) car was so bad those last two laps,” Hamlin said. “That’s what happens (extreme tight balance) when you put on (right sides) and have really old lefts. That’s why it looked like Tyler was superman. …

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“I thought I was going to be three-wide with (Larson and Reddick) entering turn three because of the run I got on the top.”

As far as Larson taking him three-wide going into Turn 1, he wants a redo on that too.

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“I know, because I’ve been there before, that (Larson) is not going to push,” Hamlin said. “He’s going to try to get everything he can to go three-wide and I’ve just got to drive him down to the apron. ‘If you want to go three-wide, you have to go to the middle,’ and this is just a forewarning. …

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“If this happens again, he’s going to have to go the middle. I will not let him. I will run to the apron or keep him on the apron next time. I will not get beat low at this racetrack again.”

So then, the fair and obvious question is why did Hamlin choose the bottom over the top as the control car driver. The data suggests the best restarts come from the bottom but that expects a push from behind that Larson was never going to give in that scenario.

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“Should have, I should have, as strong as I know my cars are on the top on mile-and-a-half tracks, I absolutely should have started at the top, no matter what,” Hamlin said. “I could hold more throttle than everyone else.”

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So again, why didn’t he?

“The bottom is the preferred line,” Hamlin said. “The bottom wins by the numbers. The data says the bottom.”

Just not on the final restart as it turns out.

“People are not content pushing anymore,” Hamlin said. “Everyone is just going to go for themselves. And that’s where you have to just throw the numbers out.”

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Ultimately, Hamlin was extra disappointed because he knows next season is his final season, and this now makes two wins that got away from him in 2026 — Martinsville and Kansas.

“I took this one a little tougher because I just want to capitalize,” Hamlin said. “I’ve only got 60 races left and I just want to get these wins when I should be winning and it’s just not happening.

“It was the loose wheel at the end of Martinsville and a lot of stuff that’s not going great in the luck category or the creating your own luck category, which is what I chalk this up to.”

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Three NFL Teams That Can’t Afford To Screw up 2026 NFL Draft

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credits: Sue Ogrocki | source: APcredits: Sue Ogrocki | source: AP

The NFL Draft is finally almost here.

Which for some general managers could end up being their kiss of death. Every year, teams use the NFL Draft to improve their rosters. Both Super Bowl teams, the Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots, proved how important it is to build through the draft in order to rebuild quickly.

But other organizations aren’t as fortunate, selecting the wrong players in the improper slots and butchering the NFL’s biggest event each spring.

That generally results in GMs getting fired and franchises navigating into completely different directions. With that amount of pressure in mind, these teams can’t afford to mess up this year’s draft.

New York Jets

The Jets absolutely have to take a step in the right direction.

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Aaron Glenn’s first year was a disaster that led to the roster purge at the NFL trade deadline which traded away Quinnen Williams and Sauce Gardner for three total first-round draft picks.

Unfortunately for the Jets, there’s no clean path for Gang Green to find a quarterback in this year’s class. They’ll be bad enough to draft one in 2027, but they absolutely need to draft difference makers in key defensive positions and find playmakers to support whoever suits up at quarterback.

New York Giants

Mar 30, 2026; Phoenix, AZ, USA; New York Giants head coach John Harbaugh during the 2026 NFL Annual League Meeting at the Arizona Biltmore. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn ImagesMar 30, 2026; Phoenix, AZ, USA; New York Giants head coach John Harbaugh during the 2026 NFL Annual League Meeting at the Arizona Biltmore. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Both New York teams!

All eyes will be on general manager Joe Schoen for his first draft of the John Harbaugh era.

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Harbaugh could’ve picked any NFL team and he picked the Giants. They already have some key pieces including Jaxson Dart, Malik Nabers and Cam Skattebo. They also have two premium draft picks, No. 5 overall and No. 10 overall.

If Schoen somehow botches this situation, he’ll be gone, and Harbaugh will be hiring a replacement in just a few months.

Las Vegas Raiders

Dec 7, 2025; Paradise, Nevada, USA; Las Vegas Raiders defensive end Maxx Crosby (98) leaves the field following a game against the Denver Broncos at Allegiant Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn ImagesDec 7, 2025; Paradise, Nevada, USA; Las Vegas Raiders defensive end Maxx Crosby (98) leaves the field following a game against the Denver Broncos at Allegiant Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

What? Aren’t the Raiders supposed to be the Belle of the ball?

They’re getting their golden boy at quarterback, Fernando Mendoza. But now comes the hard part – trying to win with him right away.

The Raiders thought they were going to have two bonus first-round picks before the Baltimore Ravens screwed them out of the Maxx Crosby trade. With Mendoza and Crosby, they might as well try to replicate their AFC West rival Denver Broncos by competing right away. By Denver’s standards, it would be a tad disappointing if the Raiders can’t bounce back quickly. After all, the Broncos got off the mat in just two seasons after eating Russell Wilson’s outrageous cap hit.

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Basilinna readies for 2026 Mornington Cup campaign

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Basilinna’s owners are pursuing yet another ‘win and you’re in’ race opportunity at the Mornington meeting.

Basilinna qualified for the Melbourne Cup ballot last season via her success in the Andrew Ramsden (2800m) at Flemington in May.

Trainers David and Emma-Lee Browne are open to targeting the Andrew Ramsden again, but prioritise the Listed Mornington Cup (2400m) on Saturday first.

Winning the Mornington Cup offers a ballot exemption to the Group 1 Caulfield Cup (2400m) scheduled for October.

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The mare has had a brace of runs this preparation – 1800m and 2000m – and according to David Browne, the Saturday 2400m trip is a superior match for her.

Nevertheless, the trainer thinks she could be one start away from full fitness, impacted by a bone chip that cut short her prior spring and barred her from last year’s Melbourne Cup.

“She’s got a good soft draw so she should be able to sit in a good spot,” Browne said.

“Then we’ll need some luck getting out and hopefully there’s a bit of rain as that will help her out as well.

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“A Soft 6 or 7, I would be happy, but if it stays a Soft 5, it’s still good for her.”

Browne has been happy with the mare’s two efforts this campaign, even though she was outclassed in those events.

She ended up last on her return in the Peter Young Stakes (1800m) at Caulfield, then eighth in the Group 1 Australian Cup (2000m) on March 28 at Flemington.

“I thought her run in a high-pressure race, against very good company, was excellent last time,” Browne said.

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“She beat the horses she needed to beat, and that’s all you can ask.

“She feels better than she ever has, so we’re pretty happy in that way but the hardest thing with her is she has been one run behind.

“When you take a chip out like we had to last year, that puts you behind because she was a bit burly to start with, so that is why we had to go to the Australian Cup to play a bit of catch up and get a run into her.

“The first two weren’t suitable races for her to go in, but I thought she did a good job.”

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Following this weekend, Basilinna’s path forward is unclear.

She could head to the Listed Warrnambool Cup (2350m) on May 7, or the Listed Andrew Ramsden at Flemington on May 16.

“If she went to Warrnambool, that might pull her up for the campaign as it is a pretty quick back-up to Flemington,” Browne said.

“I think we’ll play that last one by ear, whether we do both or pop her out.”

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For the latest racing betting markets, visit trusted betting sites before the Mornington Cup.

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Report: North Carolina G Seth Trimble enters portal

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Syndication: The Greenville NewsNorth Carolina Tar Heels guard Seth Trimble (7) drives to the basket Thursday, March 19, 2026, during the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament first round game against the VCU Rams at Bon Secours Wellness Arena in Greenville, South Carolina.

After four seasons at North Carolina, guard Seth Trimble entered the transfer portal, On3 reported Monday.

Trimble started all 24 games he played for the Tar Heels and averaged 14.0 points with 3.8 rebounds and 3.0 assists. He missed the first nine games of the season after breaking his arm during a pre-season workout with the team. Trimble earned an All-ACC Honorable Mention selection last season.

He started 18 of 34 games in 2024-25 and averaged 11.6 points with 5.0 rebounds and 1.3 assists.

In his four seasons in the UNC program, the Wisconsin native averaged 7.7 points with 2.9 rebounds and 1.3 assists in 126 games (45 starts).

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The Tar Heels went 24-9 last season, losing to VCU 82-78 in overtime during the first round of the NCAA Tournament as a No. 6 seed.

–Field Level Media

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Robert Garcia delivers honest verdict on Mayweather vs Pacquiao 2: “He’ll be the fresher man”

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Esteemed trainer and former world champion Robert Garcia has revealed who he believes is the “fresher man” between Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao.

The two pound-for-pound icons are set to enter a professional rematch on September 19, headlining a Netflix event at The Sphere, Las Vegas.

Their first encounter, which took place over a decade ago, saw Mayweather claim a comprehensive points victory, before taking his record to 50-0 with a 10th-round finish over Conor McGregor in 2017.

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Pacquiao, however, has fought as recently as July 2025, boxing to a contentious draw against then-WBC world welterweight champion Mario Barrios.

This saw him end a near four-year layoff, which followed his points defeat to Yordenis Ugas, while Mayweather has not fought professionally since defeating McGregor.

Instead, the 49-year-old has been involved in several exhibition matches, a trend he is expected to resume with Mike Tyson and Greek kickboxer Mike Zambidis.

Whether these two non-competitive affairs actually materialise, it remains to be seen, but Mayweather has nonetheless agreed to face Pacquiao in September.

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Speaking with BoxingScene, top coach Garcia has opined that, while being the marginally younger man, Pacquiao is perhaps approaching their rematch with more miles on the clock.

“Manny takes training camps very [seriously]. We see him running in the mountains, and running around so many fans and boxers.

“He doesn’t want to be the last one [to finish], so he’s running hard. At 47 [years old], that’s not easy. But he wants to prove to everybody that he’s still a great athlete.

“When it comes to sparring, I guarantee you he’s sparring hard. Whoever they bring in for sparring wants to look good against Manny.

“On the other side, Mayweather is doing this without even showing it to the world. I guarantee you he’s staying in shape… and I think he’ll be the fresher man.”

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Initially, it was reported that Mayweather-Pacquiao 2 would be a professional bout, only for Mayweather to later claim that it would instead be an exhibition.

Since then, though, Pacquiao has insisted it will be a fully-sanctioned contest, presenting him with the opportunity to exact his revenge.

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Exclusive | Shreyas Iyer In Line For Captaincy As BCCI Prepares 2-Team Structure For T20Is

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Indian cricket’s talent pipeline has given the selectors an opportunity to think big. With the IPL continuing to churn out match-ready performers, the Board of Control for Cricket in India is planning on building a 30-35 player pool capable of fielding two competitive T20 sides simultaneously. Plans beyond a single core squad have to be framed immediately as India faces overlapping international commitments later this year, with the Asian Games clashing with a T20 series against the West Indies.

A BCCI official told NDTV, “The Asian Games and India vs West Indies T20 Series are going to be at the same time. So we have to look at two T20 teams playing. It is important from now to have a pool of 30-35 cricketers who can be called up for International assignments. For the upcoming Ireland tour, like most tours to UK, a bigger pool of players will be kept in the squad. This will extend for the Asian Games.”

The Board is actively planning for parallel assignments this year and in the future as well since cricket is now a part of multi discipline sporting fixtures as well, including the Olympic Games in 2028. The emphasis is on depth, flexibility, and readiness. These are the qualities increasingly demanded in a packed global calendar.

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The upcoming Ireland tour is expected to serve as a testing ground. Tours like these have traditionally been used to blood fringe players. This tour could now feature an expanded squad, mirroring the long-term vision of a larger talent pool extending through the Asian Games. India are also set to play Afghanistan in a 3-match T20I series in September, though the schedule for the tournament is yet to be finalised.

The names under consideration reflect the IPL’s growing influence. In the batting department, talents like Vaibhav Sooryavanshi, Yashasvi Jaiswal, Priyansh Arya and Angkrish Raghuvanshi have caught the selectors’ attention with their fearless strokeplay. The likes of Rajat Patidar and Ayush Badoni are also on the selectors’ radar.

The all-rounder slot, often the backbone of T20 balance, could see opportunities for players like Shashank Singh, and Anukul Roy, the cricketers who bring versatility and adaptability.

On the bowling front, there is a mix of youth and experience. Ravi Bishnoi continues to be a standout in white-ball cricket, while Khaleel Ahmed (depending on availability), Prasidh Krishna, Ashok Sharma, and Kartik Tyagi offer them with pace options.

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Behind the stumps, Dhruv Jurel is among the leading contenders. It is likely to be a team led by Punjab Kings Captain, Shreyas Iyer.

With IPL throwing up a massive pool of youngsters, Indian cricket is preparing to utilise their services by making a parallel force capable of winning and defending titles. Keeping up with the demands of international cricket and coping up with the challenges of changed international fixtures will require two strong T20 teams, that could soon become a necessity.

It is a message to all youngsters this IPL season that BCCI is not just looking for the best 15, but the best 35.


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“Heard Many Saying ‘Rinku SIngh Was Good When He Was Poor,’ Aren’t You Ashamed?” Ex-India Star Rips Into Trolls

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Rinku Singh in action for KKR.© BCCI




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Rinku Singh fought through his lean patch to once again emerge as Kolkata Knight Riders’ saviour. After registering back-to-back low scores, Rinku rediscovered his form against Rajasthan Royals on Sunday and guided KKR to a four-wicket victory. The win also marked KKR’s first of the season after suffering five consecutive defeats. Chasing a target of 156, KKR lost wickets in quick succession. However, Rinku-renowned for his finishing prowess-rose to the occasion with a composed and match-winning unbeaten knock of 53 off 34 balls. He steered his side home with two balls to spare, showing remarkable calm under pressure.

Amid his struggles earlier in the season, Rinku had been subjected to severe trolling on social media. Some fans even made classist remarks, suggesting that the KKR batter was a “better player when he was underprivileged.”

Former India opener Aakash Chopra came out strongly in Rinku’s support following his decisive knock and slammed those making such insensitive comments.

“I feel very good for Rinku because he was being trolled a lot. The kind of nonsense people say is unbelievable. I heard many saying, ‘Rinku was good when he was poor.’ Aren’t you ashamed of saying that? How would you feel if someone said the same thing about you?” Chopra said on his YouTube channel.

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“People called him a useless player and forgot that he is a world champion. He doesn’t get many chances. The position he bats at is not easy, and the team hasn’t always used him well. Everyone goes through bad form. Rinku was trolled as if he had committed a crime,” he added.

After the win, Rinku spoke about his mindset during the innings and revealed that his sole focus was on taking the game deep and finishing it for his team.

“My mindset was to take the game till the end because I had conversations with the coach and also with my batting partner. The idea was to take it deep since the match was in a tricky situation. (When he got a reprieve early in the innings) That’s what happens sometimes, sir. In that moment, the mind doesn’t work properly and you end up playing such shots,” said Rinku. 


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Injured Alcaraz waits on wrist tests as French Open clock ticks

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MADRID — Defending two-time champion Carlos Alcaraz has put his participation at the French Open in doubt because of a right wrist injury.

Medical tests in the next few days will determine whether Alcaraz will be able to play in the Grand Slam tournament in a month, he said on Monday.

“We’ll see,” he said when asked whether he’ll play. The Spaniard was at the Laureus Awards in Madrid with his right wrist immobilized. He pulled out of the Madrid Open last week.

“The next (medical) test will be crucial,” the seven-time Grand Slam champion told Spanish television channel TVE.

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“We’ve been trying to do everything we can do to make sure that this test goes well. I’m trying to be very patient. But we are good, we are just waiting a little bit. We have a few tests in the next few days and then we will see how the injury is, and what the next steps will be.”

No. 2-ranked Alcaraz withdrew in Barcelona a day after he had his wrist treated during his opening match, a 6-4, 6-2 victory over Otto Virtanen.

The next tournament after Madrid is the Italian Open, which he won last year.

“For now, I’ve been trying to stay positive, to stay upbeat, even though these days have become a bit too long,” said the 22-year-old Alcaraz, who was awarded Laureus’ world sportsman of the year on Monday.

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Wilson produces superb fightback to beat Moody, 19

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Kyren Wilson produced a superb fightback from 6-2 and 7-3 down by winning seven frames in a row to deny 19-year-old Stan Moody a memorable victory on his World Championship debut at the Crucible.

English teenager Moody led 6-3 at the mid-session interval and was on course to become the youngest player to win a match at the famous Sheffield theatre since a 19-year-old Ronnie O’Sullivan beat Dave Harold and Darren Morgan before falling to Stephen Hendry in 1995.

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In a thrilling match, arguably the best of the championship so far, 2024 champion Wilson punched the air in delight when he won the 17th frame on a black-ball finish to seal a 10-7 success after Moody had missed a chance to extend the match.

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“Just too many bad frames,” said Moody. “I had the match won at 7-3 but then I missed the red to go 8-3 and he won it with three snookers.

“I felt comfortable out there, but bad frames like that hurt. But I will come back stronger. Hopefully I will be here next year. I just try to learn what shots to play at the right time and to miss less balls.”

Moody, 44th in the world rankings, had to win two matches to qualify.

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On the day before his final qualifying match, last Tuesday, he had been in hospital with tonsillitis. But Moody discharged himself before playing, going against medical advice, and beat China’s Jiang Jun 10-9, with a century in the deciding frame, to earn his Crucible spot.

Stan Moody stretches over the snooker table to play a shot

Stan Moody is 44th in the world rankings and had to win two matches to qualify [PA Media]

Higgins and Ding advance into last 16

John Higgins

John Higgins has won the world title in 1998, 2007, 2009 and 2011 [Getty Images]

Four-time champion John Higgins had led 4-0 against Ali Carter on Sunday, only for the Englishman to win five frames in a row to hold the overnight lead.

Higgins, 50, made breaks of 63 and 81 to go ahead, before Carter’s 106 in frame 12 made it 6-6, although the Scot won four of the next five frames to advance 10-7.

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That sets up a last-16 match against either seven-time champion Ronnie O’Sullivan or Chinese debutant He Guoqiang.

“That’s the first time here I’ve been 4-0 up and then gone 5-4 behind so it was not a great sleep,” said Higgins. “But I tried to forget about that and get on with my game.

“There’s nobody that has more respect for Ali as a snooker player than me, I’ve played him so many times and sometimes he has been cueing like a dream.

“Deep down when my name was pulled out against him I was not happy – you know you’re in for a mammoth game so I’m over the moon I got the win.”

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Carter, beaten by O’Sullivan in the 2008 and 2012 finals, has now gone out in the first round in the Crucible in four years in a row.

“I made a couple of mistakes and got punished severely, just a little bit of a run of the balls – I’m as sick as a dog,” said Carter.

Ding Junhui, the 2016 runner-up, completed a 10-5 win over David Gilbert, having held a 7-2 lead following Sunday’s opening session.

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In an all-Chinese last-16 tie, Ding will take on Zhao Xintong, who became the country’s first world champion in 2025.

China’s 10th seed Wu Yize made one century and five half-centuries in a one-sided session to lead compatriot Lei Peifan 8-1.

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Capitals giving Ovechkin time to decompress before meeting about future

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The Washington Capitals are doing right by their franchise player as he mulls over one of the biggest decisions of his life.

With Alex Ovechkin‘s retirement decision looming over the team’s off-season plans, the Capitals have decided to give the franchise legend some space and time as he weighs the possibility of hanging up his skates.

“Team’s position is we’re giving him some time here to get away from the season a little bit and think things through and talk to his family, and then he’ll meet with both [president of hockey operations Brian MacLellan] and I, and we’ll continue to support him in however his decision process plays out,” Capitals general manager Chris Patrick told reporters at his end-of-season availability on Monday.

“We could’ve met with him the day after the season ended, but I don’t think he was ready at that point to have that conversation. I think he needs to take some time. Just get away from it, I mean, he just played 82 games in a really hard season, just have a few days with his family to just kind of veg out a little bit then he can start thinking about what the future holds.”

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Last week, at his own end-of-year availability, Ovechkin said that he hopes he hasn’t played his final NHL game and that he’s not yet ready to give a definitive answer on what his future holds.

He told reporters that he has something of a timeline figured out, stating that he may have a clearer idea of where he stands in two weeks, but that he’s “pretty sure it’s not my last game.”

Though Patrick said that the team would “like to know going into the draft” as to whether or not Ovechkin would return, he made it clear that the NHL’s all-time leading goalscorer had “earned the right to do the process how he wants to. So we’ll just work with whatever we get from him, information-wise.”

Either way, the Capitals are heading into the off-season prepared.

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With $36.5 million in projected cap space to work with this summer, per PuckPedia, the team believes they have the financial flexibility to improve their roster whether Ovechkin returns or not.

“I think we’ll be able to have a plan with or without him. No different than really any off-season where you have some players that are expiring. You can go down different paths depending on what happens with them,” Patrick said. “So same thing with him, even though he’s the greatest goalscorer of all time. If he decides to stay, we’ll go one way; if he decides to retire, we’ll go a different way.”

Ovechkin is coming off another solid campaign that saw him build on his all-time goal-scoring lead, potting 30 markers while suiting up for all 82 games at 40 years old. He also surpassed the 900-goal plateau, becoming the only player in NHL history to do so.

What may be harder to deal with should Ovechkin retire is the impact he provides off the ice, for the Capitals, the community, and for the game of hockey.

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“I think his presence is huge. When he decides to leave, it’s gonna leave a big hole, personality-wise, leadership-wise,” MacLellan said. “You see he brings it to the team plane, the team bus, to the dressing room, to pre-game warmup — he’s got a big presence.”

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