Sir Jim Ratcliffe has praised Michael Carrick’s work as interim head coach and also made a big Champions League admission
Sir Jim Ratcliffe has praised Michael Carrick’s work at Manchester United, though he declined to confirm whether the interim boss would be handed the role permanently. The 44-year-old was appointed caretaker manager until the season’s conclusion earlier this year after Ruben Amorim’s dismissal.
Carrick has so far secured six victories from eight possible matches, prompting inevitable speculation about his long-term prospects at Old Trafford. Co-owner Ratcliffe, who is in Shanghai with Mercedes for the Chinese Grand Prix, addressed the matter during an impromptu interview following qualifying.
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“He’s doing an excellent job,” he told Sky Sports. When pressed on whether Carrick would be appointed permanently should results continue, he smiled and replied: “I’m not going there.”
Regarding Champions League qualification for next season, he added: “Clearly we’re thinking about that but there’s still seven or eight games to go.” As Ratcliffe correctly pointed out, there remain plenty of points up for grabs, though United find themselves well positioned.
Manchester City and Arsenal are the only sides currently above United in the table as they sit on 51 points, level with weekend visitors Aston Villa. Unai Emery’s outfit were comfortably third but a disappointing spell has seen them slip down a place ahead of their journey to Old Trafford.
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Carrick has benefited from having nearly a complete squad at his disposal for the majority of matches during his tenure, although fitness worries have mounted lately.
He said on Friday: “Mason is back with the group, which is fantastic. He’s not 100 per cent, because he’s only trained with us a small amount of time, but he’s back, and that’s good for us. So, we’ll see if he’s involved or not.”
Speaking on the latest edition of BBC podcast The Wayne Rooney Show, he said: “I can’t believe people are questioning whether he should get the job. Manchester United have waited about 12 years – they’ve gone for proven, legends, everything since Sir Alex [Ferguson].
“And the one time they are starting to play well, get results, the fans are on board – you’re telling me at the end of the season if he gets third [place] they will say ‘thanks, but no thanks’. How is that possible?”.
Adelaide Oval will play host to Friday’s
Round 4 AFL game between Adelaide Crows and
Fremantle Dockers. The game kicks off at 7:15 pm with Adelaide Crows heading into the game as favourites with the bookmakers. Continue reading for our in-depth preview of the Adelaide Crows vs.
Fremantle Dockers
game and give you our free tips and bets.
Two sides fully invested in their 2026 ambitions face off in what shapes as a revealing early-season encounter. Both teams have shown flashes of high-end performance, but consistency remains a work in progress. Midfield battles and turnover efficiency are expected to be pivotal, with each side looking to control tempo and territory. Defensive structures will also come under scrutiny against attacking units capable of quick scoring bursts. With pressure building to deliver results, this match offers a valuable insight into which team is better equipped to sustain performance and handle key moments.
The Oklahoma Sooners moved to 37-3 and 10-1 in SEC play with a 9-1 run-rule win over the Kentucky Wildcats on Friday. It was the Sooners’ fourth straight win and their 11th game in a row in which the pitching staff allowed fewer than four runs.
The Sooners fell behind in the first inning once again when Kentucky took a 1-0 lead on Carly Sleeman’s lead-off home run. But starting pitcher Miali Guachino settled in to retire the next three hitters in order. That kicked off a run of nine straight Kentucky hitters retired by Guachino. The Wildcats’ next hit wouldn’t come until the fourth inning, a lead-off single from No. 2 hitter Allie Blum.
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In the win, Guachino allowed just three hits over four innings, striking out three, to move to 11-0 on the season.
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It didn’t take long for the Sooners to answer the first inning home run by Sleeman. In the bottom of the first, Lexi McDaniel and Ailana Agbayani earned two-out walks with the bases loaded to push across a pair of Oklahoma runs to retake the lead.
In the second inning, Oklahoma’s lineup went to work. Kendall Wells’ sacrifice fly moved Abby Dayton to third on a sacrifice fly, and Kasidi Pickering drove Dayton in on an infield single. Ella Parker doubled to drive in Gabbie Garcia to make it 4-1, and Lexi McDaniel’s two-RBI single made it 6-1 Sooners.
After a strong night hitting with two outs on Thursday, the Sooners picked up right where they left off with each of their first six runs coming with two outs on Friday.
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In the third, Kendall Wells hit her 29th home run of the season, giving her eight home runs in 11 SEC contests in her true freshman season.
Fellow freshman McDaniel put Oklahoma in run-rule territory with a two-run home run, giving her five RBIs on the day. The home run was her ninth of the season. It was McDaniel’s first home run since March 11 against Tulsa.
With the win, the Sooners secured the series against the Wildcats. They’ll close the series with a Saturday morning contest vs. Kentucky, looking to complete the three-game sweep ahead of their series with the Texas Longhorns next weekend in Austin.
Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on X (formerly known as Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes, and opinions.You can also follow John on X @john9williams.
Ruturaj Gaikwad blamed his spinners for Chennai Super Kings’ five-wicket loss to Punjab Kings in their IPL match on Friday, saying an off day from them hurt the team despite a strong total on the board.Chennai Super Kings posted 209 for 5, with Ayush Mhatre scoring 73 off 43 balls. But Punjab Kings chased down the target in 18.4 overs, led by captain Shreyas Iyer, who made 50.After the match, Gaikwad pointed to the performance of his spinners, Noor Ahmad and Rahul Chahar, as a key factor in the defeat. Chennai had seam options like Gurjapneet Singh and Jamie Overton available as impact substitutes but chose to bring in Chahar.“We felt we had three seamers going in, and obviously we have two good wrist spinners (Noor Ahmad and Rahul Chahar) bowling in tandem, especially in the middle after the powerplay. We felt that, you know, it will help,” said Gaikwad.“But I think, you know, slight off day for both of them. So, I think, that is what cost us. Sometimes we executed really well. Sometimes we just didn’t execute at the right time,” he added.He said the team could not build pressure in the middle overs.“There was a point when it (required run-rate) went to 11, and a couple of good overs would have taken it to 12-13. We just did not get momentum in the middle (with the ball).”Gaikwad added that the batting had positives, with contributions from Mhatre and Shivam Dube, but said the bowling needs to improve.Punjab Kings captain Shreyas Iyer said the start given by openers Priyansh Arya and Prabhsimran Singh played a big role in the chase.“The way we started today, that was an exceptional start for us. I feel the way they (Arya and Prabhsimran) have been batting has been phenomenal and it stabilises the rhythm for us,” Iyer said.“I am glad everyone is getting to bat. It gives immense confidence to the team. Whenever we are in a pressure situation, people are aware on how to handle it. We just decided in the dressing room, we will play a brand of cricket to impress each other — that gives us a certain sort of clarity, and basically challenging each other.”In the chase, Iyer’s 50 off 29 balls and his 59-run stand with Nehal Wadhera helped Punjab reach 210 for five. The target was 209.Punjab also got contributions from Priyansh Arya (39 off 11), Prabhsimran Singh (43 off 34) and Cooper Connolly (36 off 22).Iyer started slowly, scoring 8 off 9 balls while Connolly took charge. After Connolly fell to Anshul Kamboj, Iyer took control and targeted the spinners. He reached his fifty in 26 balls but was later dismissed by Kamboj while going after a wide delivery.Punjab completed the chase in 18.4 overs, handing Chennai their second loss in a row.
The NFL announced April 3 it had concluded its investigation into the accusations made against Rice by his former girlfriend, as ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports.
Rice was named in a civil lawsuit filed by his ex-girlfriend in the Dallas County (Texas) court system on Feb. 16, 2026. The lawsuit alleged Rice assaulted the woman multiple times over a 19-month period. Police have not filed criminal charges related to the allegations against Rice.
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The complaint alleged that the Chiefs wide receiver had “grabbed, choked, strangled, pushed, thrown, scratched, hit, and headbutted” his ex-girlfriend. She also alleges Rice threw things at her, “destroy[ed] property, punch[ed] walls, [broke] furniture” and locked her out of their shared home “in the middle of the night.”
Rice’s former girlfriend, who is also the mother of their two children, shared an Instagram post on Jan. 7 alleging she had been the victim of domestic violence for several years. She did not mention Rice by name in that post, which featured a picture of her with a bloody lip. The post has since been deleted.
“It’s been nothing but hell,” she wrote, adding, “I’ve protected his image too long and I’m done doing that. It’s time to protect my peace, protect my children and stand up for myself.”
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According to the lawsuit, Rice’s ex-girlfriend was pregnant during much of the alleged abuse. She is seeking more than $1 million in damages in the civil suit.
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The lawsuit remains open, according to Dallas County court records.
USA TODAY Sports’ Jack McKessy also contributed to this report.
Teofimo Lopez could be handed an immediate opportunity to bounce back in a major way following a one-sided defeat to Shakur Stevenson.
Lopez put his WBO super-lightweight world title on the line against Stevenson back in January. Despite boasting a size advantage, the champion was thoroughly outclassed by the challenger, with Stevenson winning almost every round on the scorecards to become a four-weight world champion at just 28.
Not long after the loss, Lopez announced that he would be moving up to welterweight to join a stacked division, complete with champions Devin Haney, Ryan Garcia, Lewis Crocker and Rolando Romero.
‘King Ry’ won the WBC belt by handily beating Mario Barrios three weeks following Lopez-Stevenson. Though he has publicly targeted a unification fight with WBO champ Haney – a rematch following their controversial 2023 meeting in 2023 – he appears to have settled on a voluntary defence against Lopez, who is not yet ranked in the division.
The fight, however, is not official, and it would be a bold move for the WBC to allow yet another voluntary defence of their belt, with a mandatory fight not enforced in several years.
Barrios was upgraded from interim to full champion in 2024, and made his first defence against number eight ranked Abel Ramos, retaining the belt with a draw.
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He then made another voluntary defence against returning Manny Pacquiao, drawing again to retain the title, before facing Garcia in yet another non-ordered bout. The sanctioning body made Conor Benn mandatory challenger at the beginning of this year.
Dec 21, 2025; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy (9) and head coach Kevin O’Connell hug before the game at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Robert Deutsch-Imagn Images
Some have insisted that Kevin O’Connell is now the top decision maker in the Twin Cities. Minnesota’s well-respected head coach is the CEO over all things football, getting the final call on contracts, trades, draft picks, and so on.
Not so.
Rob Brzezinski is functioning as the team’s GM. Part of that job involves getting the final call on draft picks, just like a normal GM even if that’s not his official title. Mr. Brzezinski clarified the detail in a recent conversation with The NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport and Tom Pelissero, getting the detail across the finish line before the 2026 NFL Draft.
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Kevin O’Connell is the Vikings’ HC, Not Team CEO
The question had to do with how to settle disagreement within the front office when Minnesota is on the clock. Who gets the tiebreaker if there’s disagreement? Turns out the answer is quite clear.
Check out how Brzezinski discussed the hypothetical: “You’re hoping that you can have the answers to the test before you’re in the firing line. But there are times, maybe, when issues crop up. And the Wilfs have asked me to handle that in the event that we get into a position like that.”
Dec 14, 2025; Arlington, Texas, USA; Minnesota Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell before a game against the Dallas Cowboys at AT&T Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Jairaj-Imagn Images.
Pretty straightforward.
The Wilfs are the team’s owners. For a long time, Brzezinski has worked for the Wilfs, meaning there’s a track record of trust in what the executive can do. Logically, there’s then some willingness to lean on him to make the final call if there ends up being an issue.
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What’s similarly fascinating is that Brzezinski doesn’t foresee an issue. A situation where Kevin O’Connell is advocating for a specific player while Brian Flores is pushing for another while Chisom Opara, Jamaal Stephenson, and Ryan Grigson all make cases for their guys just isn’t going to happen.
Why not? Good question.
The reason why that scenario is very unlikely is because the debate is occurring right now. The powerful people working in Eagan are putting the finishing touches on the evaluation process, forming opinions along the way. Part of that process is internal debate, discussion, and disagreement. All healthy, all part of the process.
At some point, a final call is going to be made to form a draft board. There will then be a hierarchical list to rank the players. The Vikings will assemble a minimum of 18 players whom they’re comfortable with — nay, excited about — choosing in the 1st. Doing so ensures that there’s a minimum of one of those names left standing when decision time arrives.
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Dec 8, 2024; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell looks on during the second quarter against the Atlanta Falcons at U.S. Bank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-Imagn Images.
Kevin O’Connell clarified at the league meeting that he does jump into player evaluations. He’s therefore going to toss his name into the mix as perhaps the most important influence on the final decision, but he’s still just one voice within a vast chorus.
In theory, some debate could exist if two or three of the best players are there at No. 18. Maybe the grades are identical, leading to a true flip of the coin. In that scenario, Rob Brzezinski makes the final call if there’s internal debate.
Likewise, a situation could exist where the debate is between a trade option or choosing a coveted young lad. If so, then Brzezinski gets the final call. He’s functioning as the GM, meaning he gets the authority of a GM.
Quite possibly, Brzezinski asks for Kevin O’Connell’s opinion and then choose to do what his head coach wants to do (personally, I’d do what Flores thinks is best, but that’s just me). O’Connell has proven to be pretty good at his job, so there are worse ideas in the world than opting to side with the 2024 NFL Coach of the Year. But, crucially, that will be the decision of the fill-in at GM.
Feb 6, 2025; New Orleans, LA, USA; Minnesota Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell poses with the Coach of the Year award during Super Bowl LIX NFL Honors at Saenger Theatre. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images.
Kevin O’Connell is going to have opinions. He’s going to be encouraged to offer them, but that’s not going to involve him hijacking the process on the night of Thursday, April 23rd.
This weekend’s heavyweight banger between Derek Chisora and Deontay Wilder hit a stumbling block just a day out.
The pair of veteran heavyweights co-star in an intriguing match-up that promises to end in at least one retirement. There has been little tension between the pair, but there was drama behind the scenes today – something promoter Kalle Sauerland described as ‘a big issue.’
It is currently unclear in what way Wilder’s chosen gloves fell short of the required standard – it could be as simple as the brand not being approved – however officials are understood to have stood firm on the rules, and would have had to have received such a request weeks in advance.
“I’ve broke my hands so many times and [I wasn’t happy] with the gloves that were provided. We had an issue with the glove being too tight on my hand. We’ll see what happens and get it straightened out.”
Speaking to the media afterwards, Chisora – who had previously said he was not aware of the issue – summed up the situation.
“The gloves are sorted out now. It’s done now. He wanted to use his own gloves, but I said no because they’re not board approved. So, I stood on my toes and said this is business. It’s all done now.”
The fight marks number 50 in the professional ranks for both men, with Chisora insisting he will retire win, lose or draw, but Wilder, confident of a win, saying he plans to fight on and look to regain the heavyweight world title.
Gian van Veen admitted his next clash with Luke Littler may not be “very friendly” following their tense exchange during the Premier League Darts in Manchester on Thursday.
The Dutchman avenged his World Championship final defeat to Littler in the quarter-finals at the AO Arena, coming out on top in a last-leg decider.
Van Veen missed a match dart, which led to Littler celebrating in front of the crowd, before the two-time world champion gestured at his opponent on his return to the oche and failed to wrap up the match himself.
His 23-year-old rival then sealed a 6-5 victory, but not before Littler produced a cry baby action and brief handshake as he walked off the stage.
Van Veen, who lost his fourth nightly final of the campaign to Josh Rock, said after his opening win that Littler was a “bad loser” and that his conduct on the oche was “out of order”.
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On Thursday evening, 19-year-old Littler shared an image of Van Veen’s comments on his Instagram Stories, adding three laughing emojis below.
Speaking to Swedish streaming service Viaplay about the incident, Van Veen said: “No, we haven’t spoken.
“He hasn’t approached me either. I saw his reaction on social media. He thought it was funny.
“Well, I don’t think things will be very friendly between us anytime soon.
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“I’m here for myself. He’s a fantastic darter, the world number one, so what he does for the sport is great, but I care little about what he thinks of me.”
The pair will not face each other in the European Tour event held in Munich this weekend as Littler has not entered.
World number three Van Veen returns to action during Sunday’s second round against either William O’Connor or Sebastian Bialecki.
The 2026 NFL draft starts three weeks from today, but who the Seattle Seahawks will target in the draft is as up-in-the-air as it’s ever been.
The team’s needs are relatively mild coming off their Super Bowl LX win. They only hold four picks total, but they get to choose the best player available without worrying as much as the majority of other teams about plugging holes in certain positions.
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There are definite vacancies to fill. Free agency saw them lose four key starters- running back Kenneth Walker, cornerback Tariq Woolen, safety Coby Bryant, and edge Boye Mafe. Almost every single mock draft you see will replace one of these four positions in the first round.
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Seahawks.com put out an article this morning showing the plethora of options John Schneider and the team’s brass have from a roster construction standpoint. They include nine different analysts’ opinions on who the Seahawks should take at No. 32. Seven of the nine have them taking a cornerback- four for Clemson’s Avieon Terrell, two for Tennessee’s Colton Hood, and one for South Carolina’s Brandon Cisse. Pete Prisco has them taking Oregon safety Dillon Thieneman, and Josh Edwards has them taking Clemson edge T.J. Parker.
But not everything needs to be an eye for an eye.
Ty Okada could plausibly step into Coby Bryant’s role, and Rodney Thomas II could fill Okada’s backup spot. Zach Charbonnet, Emanuel Wilson, George Holani and Kenny McIntosh could be the running backs they go with. Witherspoon and Woolen were the main starters at cornerback last year and don’t need a replacement desperately. As one of their many current mottos goes, the Seahawks have the flexibility to chase edges anywhere they find one in this draft.
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When they took Jaxon Smith-Njigba 20th overall in 2023, some questioned the decision to take a “number 3 receiver” when they had other needs to fill. Look how that turned out.
There will always be roster needs in a sport with 22 starting players (and more if you include substitution packages), but the Seahawks will find the best way to improve the team, no matter how it looks on paper.
It is 10am at Lord’s, an hour before the County Championship season begins, and all is quiet. Gloucestershire’s Cameron Bancroft walks across the deserted pitch towards the pavilion, as rain drizzles from skies gloomy enough to still technically be considered night-time. The thermometer reads seven degrees. It is 3 April and spring has, in fact, not sprung after all. Red-ball cricket is back, and so is winter.
By the start of play an hour later, about 75 brave souls have taken their seats in the main public stand. The Hundred sold half a million tickets last summer, but on first glance, this Division Two match between Middlesex and Gloucestershire barely meets the definition of a spectator sport.
Yet despite the inauspicious start, there is a layer of excitement around this season that has been missing in recent years. After the disappointment of a dismal Ashes, the ECB has vowed to repair its link to the domestic game, a link which Rob Key admitted last month had “disintegrated” under his watch. Brendon McCullum and Ben Stokes will be watching closely, Key insists. England’s Ashes players will be getting their hands dirty for their counties, too, in a bid to retain their places. Overseas talent remains plentiful, standards are high, and competition is fierce after Surrey’s dominance was ended by Nottinghamshire last summer.
Gloucestershire wicket-keeper James Bracey takes to the field (Getty)
There are six rounds of county cricket before England’s first summer Test against New Zealand in June. And, if the hierarchy are true to their word, there are career-changing opportunities at stake.
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There is a reason we are here, now, already playing cricket. The domestic season has been condensed and dismantled and shunted into the darkest corners of the calendar. Cricket has always been played outside the traditional summer months, but rarely this much, this early. Four of this season’s 14 rounds will take place in April.
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It points to a reason why McCullum and Stokes eschewed the county game when selecting the Test team. A five-wicket haul in Arctic conditions at Glamorgan or Durham doesn’t necessarily inform who might dislodge Travis Head in Perth or Yashasvi Jaiswal in Mumbai. England’s hierarchy viewed the two tasks as entirely separate, in the same way the world darts champion isn’t necessarily good at archery.
That approach was interpreted as one of disregard and even disrespect around the county game. Sussex head coach Paul Farbrace said McCullum had “no interest” in the Championship. England’s contracted players didn’t show up for their clubs, and the England coach didn’t turn up to watch.
Besides, it is a flawed theory that the domestic game doesn’t breed Test cricketers. The County Championship is a place to be hardened. You cannot score runs or take wickets without technique, without patience, without deep wells of concentration. Perhaps most importantly, the county game demands something of a lost art during England’s Bazball era: to read the ebbs and flows of a game, to feel the changing conditions, to sense the decaying red ball and adjust your game accordingly.
England managing director Rob Key (right) speaks to head coach Brendon McCullum (PA Archive)
It is not entirely true to say county players have been ignored by England, given Ben Duckett’s rise off the back of Championship runs. But most of the league’s high performers over the past four years have either been given little opportunity in the England setup or none at all. Haseeb Hameed scored the second-most runs last season and captained Nottinghamshire to the title, but told The Analyst podcast he hadn’t heard from anyone at England for two years.
Now the ECB has gone back to the counties on a charm offensive. McCullum won’t be seen at any grounds this week because he’s at home in New Zealand, but he did at least hold a Zoom call to speak with county directors about what type of players England are looking for. The fact that the call made headlines was indicative of just how far the relationship had fallen.
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Stokes joined in the PR wave with an interview on the ECB website, giving slight hostage energy, in which he encouraged county players to “push their case” for England over the next two months. “It’s a great opportunity for a lot of people around the country,” he monotoned.
It means the existing England squad have places to defend after a torrid winter, albeit only a handful were involved on Friday. Ollie Pope and Jamie Smith appeared for Surrey, and Zak Crawley turned out for Kent. Ben Stokes is recovering from facial surgery but could play for Durham next month. Others are away at the IPL. Joe Root and Harry Brook are resting but will eventually bolster Yorkshire’s lineup, and their clash with the all-powerful Surrey in mid-May could be essential viewing.
England captain Ben Stokes is recovering from a facial injury (Getty)
It is the same old regime running English cricket, but it is, perhaps, a fresh start. Whenever an Ashes series ends, a new cycle begins. There is a new end goal, too: next summer’s home Ashes is all the more reason to select players who perform in English conditions over the next 15 months.
Players who’ve been discarded by England in the past now hold a sense of cautious optimism. Hameed admitted this week that he still dreams of an England recall. Dom Sibley told The Cricketer that his “hunger is higher than it’s ever been”. Ollie Robinson told The Athletic he is determined to seize the moment. “It’s up to me to knock the door down by taking wickets and ripping up trees,” he said. “If you do that now, I think they will pick you.”
They have hope, hope that hard work is recognised, that the grind is worth it, that there is a path beyond the domestic circuit. And right now, county cricket needs a little bit of hope.
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All is not well. Bank balances are unhealthy. Sussex lost £1.3m in 2024-25 in their bid to buy a title-winning side, and are paying the price in debts and points sanctions. Middlesex are in a mess, in debt, without a permanent CEO and struggling to make money from their games at Lord’s.
Those counties that do not own a Hundred-hosting ground are falling behind, and that gap will soon be a chasm without ECB intervention. Many of the 18 first-class counties are already reliant on ECB handouts to stay afloat, and the sale of a chunk of The Hundred franchises last year generated £500m that became vital salvation for counties in need.
Investors have poured lavish sums into the game in return for stakes in the eight city-based teams (PA Archive)
But the Hundred sale was not a panacea for all cricket’s ills. Some handouts cleared debts, but the ECB did not want to spend it all on the day-to-day running costs of counties who have at times proved unable to balance the books. The ECB wants to invest the majority of the windfall in assets that deliver long-lasting returns, meaning counties must still pay their way. Sussex are investing in their pub, the Sussex Cricketer, to generate income.
None of this has much to do with playing cricket, and there is a clear disconnect between performing well in the County Championship and making money. That applies to players, too, looking to increase their earnings. Treasuring your county wicket won’t win a Hundred contract or an overseas franchise deal. But the carrot of international recognition offers some reward for a few of those players outside the white-ball gold rush.
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If McCullum stayed up late in bed last night to livestream this particular game, he would have been forgiven for drifting off. Middlesex scored 7 runs in the first 30 minutes. There were no boundaries or wickets in the first hour. The first batter finally fell at 12.20pm; a steward opened the double doors and Josh De Caires trudged back through the Long Room, slamming his bat on the hard floor as members offered a ripple of applause for his 12 runs from 51 balls.
The morning session was either county cricket in all its grizzled beauty or abominable sporting fare, depending on your viewpoint. Perhaps it was both. Cold hands, dropped catches. Batters failing to turn starts into scores. Neither of these sides are expected to win promotion to Division 1, and it could yet be a long summer for both.
Josh de Caires was out having scored 12 runs from 51 balls (Getty)
But there is something worth guarding here, a cultural artefact to be preserved. The stands filled a little and the official attendance reached 1,400. At lunch, three young lads played their own game against the wall of the Compton Stand. There is optimism that the appearance of England’s star players will help bolster gate receipts around the grounds over the coming weeks.
It is sad that it has taken a woeful Ashes campaign for the England camp to appreciate county cricket, but the relationship can still be one of healthy symbiosis. The County Championship needs England’s interest, its attention, its players, its role as a destination for high performers. And England must benefit from the abundance of talent at its disposal, and a thriving – or at least surviving – county scene that grows future Test players.
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Time will tell just how committed the ECB is to its renewed love affair with the domestic game. But for the first time in four years, the England hierarchy is showing a concerted interest. It is up to clubs and players to grasp the moment, whatever the weather.
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