Bastidores da crise: o que aconteceu no Internacional em 2025
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Não é porque o rebaixamento ficou para lá, logo ali, uma posição e um ponto abaixo, que tudo deu certo no ano. Muito pelo contrário. Afinal, nos bastidores, o planejamento era, além do título do Gauchão, brigar pela taça nas copas do Brasil e Libertadores, bem como ficar na parte de cima da tabela até o final do Campeonato Brasileiro e, assim, conquistar mais uma vez vaga na competição mais importante da América do Sul. Não deu certo. Bem longe disso. O Lance! traz os bastidores da crise e mostra o que aconteceu no Internacional que saiu de candidato a títulos a quase rebaixado.
continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasInternacionalAnálise: Internacional na base do drama e da mística de Abel BragaInternacional08/12/2025Fora de CampoSóbis aponta responsável pela permanência do Internacional: ‘Mostrou o que era amor’Fora de Campo08/12/2025InternacionalInternacional deve ter mudanças em cargos na direçãoInternacional07/12/2025
➡️Tudo sobre o Colorado agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso novo canal Lance! Internacional
É possível dizer que 2025 só não foi pior do que 2016, quando foi rebaixado, na história dos pontos corridos. Mesmo assim, os números se equivalem. Em 38 jogos, esse ano, foram 11 vitórias, 11 empates e 16 derrotas, saldo de -13, e 38,6% de aproveitamento. Quando caiu há quase dez anos, foram 11, 10, 17, -6 e 37,7%, respectivamente.
Este ano, porém, o time bateu um recorde negativo na história dos pontos corridos: nunca antes o Internacional sofreu tantos gols quando no Brasileirão de 2025. Ao todo, a defesa foi vazada 57 vezes nas 38 rodadas.
continua após a publicidadeTroca de técnicos ano sim, ano também
O que aconteceu com o Internacional em 2025 começa na posse do presidente Alessandro Barcellos, em 2021. Ou no decorrer da gestão. Isso porque, apesar do vice no Brasileiro de 2020 — que, por causa da pandemia, acabou no início de 2021 —, sua administração seguiu à risca um dos principais itens da cartilha do rebaixamento. Em cinco anos na presidência trocou de técnicos oito vezes, com oito nomes passando pela casamata – um deles, Abel Braga, duas vezes.
Ou seja, em nenhuma das temporadas, Barcellos iniciou e terminou com o mesmo técnico. Pelo menos duas vezes, com Manos Menezes, em 2023, e Eduardo Coudet, em 2024, o técnico contratado não aproveitou as contratações da janela de meio de ano. Ambos, saíram em julho, antes dos reforços chegarem. Além disso, cada técnico que chegou ao Beira-Rio tinha uma ideia de jogo diferente do anterior, o que dificultava o começo do trabalho.
continua após a publicidadeOs técnicos da era BarcellosAbel Braga – 11/2020 a 2/2021Miguel Ángel Ramirez – 3/2021 a 6/2021Diego Aguirre – 6/2021 a 12/2021Alexander Medina – 12/2021 a 4/2022Mano Menezes – 4/2022 a 7/2023Eduardo Coudet – 7/2023 a 7/2024Roger Machado – 7/2024 a 9/2025Ramón e Emiliano Díaz – 9/2025 a 11/2025Abel Braga – 11/2025 a 12/2025A falta de reforços em 2025
Depois de duas contratações de hierarquia, ou de jogadores de seleção – o equatoriano Enner Valencia, em 2023, e o colombiano Rafael Borré, em 2024 – o cofre fechou para Roger Machado, que chegou em julho do ano passado. Com isso, o técnico demitido em setembro enfrentou as quatro competições deste ano praticamente com o mesmo time de quando chegou. Para piorar, perdeu peças importantes, como Fernando e Wesley.
É que, junto às contratações insuficientes, em número e qualidade, até mesmo atletas que haviam desembarcado no Beira-Rio durante o ano fora embora. Ao todo, o clube trouxe dez nomes nas duas janelas, somente dois deles, Alan Rodríguez e Vitinho, estavam no salvador 3 a 1 sobre o Bragantino. Por outro lado, saíram 16, seis deles chegaram a ser titulares, tanto com Coudet como Roger.
Ou seja, time perdeu seis jogadores – Gabriel Carvalho, Fernando, Rômulo, Rogel, Wanderson e Wesley – usados com frequência e recebeu apenas dois.
Racha interno no grupo
As eliminações nas copas do Brasil e Libertadores, bem como o 4 a 1 para o Palmeiras e uma derrota para o Bahia em jogo atrasado do Brasileiro, praticamente racharam o elenco. Se antes dos confrontos contra Fluminense, Flamengo, Verdão e Esquadrão, o grupo não era lá muito unido, mas lutava pelos resultados, depois, se esfarelou.
Tudo começou com os jogos eliminatórios. As quedas nas oitavas nos dois torneios desestabilizaram os atletas. Depois, na goleada, Gabriel Mercado e Carbonero foram às vias de fato após cobranças do argentino e resposta desdenhosa do colombiano. No 1 a 0 para o Tricolor baiano, devido a um pênalti infantil de Bernabei, D’Alessandro discutiu fortemente com o lateral. Os dois tiveram que ser contidos.
Na reta final, há relatos de discussões e cobranças fortes, como a feita pelo capitão Alan Patrick em um treino no CT Parque Gigante. O camisa 10 queria mais comprometimento dos colegas nos trabalhos para que pudessem buscar a recuperação no Brasileirão.
Problemas administrativos
Fecha o pacote uma série de problemas administrativos. Depois de demonstrar eficiência ao recuperar o Beira-Rio e o CT em tempo recorde para voltar a jogar em casa depois da cheia do ano passado, parece que esse esforço esfacelou a capacidade de gestão. O exemplo mais gritante é a chuva de papel picado na partida de volta das oitavas da Libertadores, contra o Flamengo, no Beira-Rio.
O Inter havia perdido no Rio, por 1 a 0, e montou uma operação de guerra para virar o jogo. A torcida compareceu em peso, começou a cantar antes mesmo dos times iniciarem o aquecimento. O clima era todo favorável ao Alvirrubro. Até que, no momento da entrada das equipes, uma chuva de papel picado caiu sobre o gramado.
Um erro de planejamento atrasou a dispersão do material laminado, que deveria ter sido feito no lado contrário da aba superior do estádio. Com isso, todo o papel foi levado pelo vento para dentro do campo, colando na grama, na bola e nas chuteiras. A limpeza levou tempo, esfriou a torcida e, mais ainda, o time. Resultado, nova derrota, 2 a 0, e a eliminação.
Na caça às bruxas, no afã de dar uma resposta à torcida e à imprensa, o clube demitiu dois funcionários de carreira, que apenas executaram o que havia sido ordenado por chefes ligados a uma organizada. Os verdadeiros responsáveis não foram punidos.
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How Vladdy Guerrero and the Blue Jays Got Their Groove Back
SEATTLE – Six ground balls do not make a national crisis, unless you happen to be the recently minted franchise player of Canada’s only Major League Baseball team staring at the eighth level of Dante’s version of Hell, which is to say not quite as low as it gets but just about there. In Dante’s nine levels of Hell, the penultimate level is Fraud. In the American League Championship Series, it is a near-must win in Game 3, having lost the first two games at home.
The Toronto Blue Jays were descending fast, marked most absurdly by going 1-for-42 in the third through ninth innings of the opening two games. Almost as troubling was how their bedrock hitting star, Vlad Guerrero Jr., after terrorizing the Yankees in the ALDS, suddenly had devolved into a ground ball out machine. Guerrero was 0-for-7, including six groundouts.
“Vlad can hit anybody’s fastball,” said Blue Jays bench coach Don Mattingly. “Anybody’s. He’s a great hitter with power, not the other way around. But sometimes, like when the crowd is really loud and the moment gets big, you can see by his body language he wants to do so well he gets out front a little bit. That’s when the pull-side grounders happen.”
Hell apparently hath no fury like the best hitting team in baseball and its $500 million slugger getting shut down at home. The Blue Jays got back into the series with a 13–4 bombardment of the Mariners Wednesday. All Guerrero did was become just the second player in postseason history to get on base in all five plate appearances while racking up three extra-base hits and nine total bases with his team trailing in the series. The other was Babe Ruth in Game 4 of the 1926 World Series with the Yankees trailing St. Louis, two games to one.
Blue Jays make ’em fly—fast
Game 3 was seismic. Toronto walloped Seattle pitches with percussive loudness never seen in the postseason, at least in this decade of recording how hard baseballs get hit. The Jays smashed 11 hits at 100 mph or more, breaking the record of 10 by the 2018 Red Sox and 2020 Dodgers.
Guerrero accounted for four of those hits at more than 102 mph, joining Kerry Carpenter (2025 ALDS Game 5) as the only players to smash four hits so hard in a postseason game. The tally of Guerrero’s night of whistling baseballs throughout T-Mobile Park read like someone fiddling with the FM radio dial looking for a decent tune: 102.8 (single), 104.9 (double), 106.4 (home run), 108.0 (double).
It was a whiplash of a turnaround in this series. It was not, however, any surprise to David Popkins, the Toronto hitting coach who, after getting dumped by the Twins last October, helped transform the Blue Jays from 19th in batting average last year to first this year, as well as from 23rd in runs to fourth.
“I felt good about today,” Popkins said about the Game 3 matchup. “The guys have been resilient all year. Our back was against the wall and that’s when this team plays really well. I always like to compare hitting to fighting. And when guys get a little paralyzed in the ring, sometimes the only thing to do is put your head down and start throwing some haymakers.”
Toronto takes control of the zone
The inside story of how the Jays and Vlad turned it around begins with how Mariners pitchers, who take pride in throwing strikes and controlling counts, shoved with impunity against Toronto in Games 1 and 2. Seattle flooded the strike zone with 57% of their pitches, well above the MLB average of 50.7%. Popkins knew the attack rate would remain high in Game 3 with Seattle starting George Kirby, a fastball-pumping sharpshooter who broke the record for the best strikeout-to-walk rate through a pitcher’s first four seasons that had stood for .
Popkins took inventory of those first two games and came up with a plan to counterpunch. It would mean being even more aggressive on the offensive side than the Mariners had been on the pitching side.
“We talked about trying to scare them out of the zone,” Popkins said.
All 18 hits for Toronto came three or fewer pitches into an at-bat, an amazing display of dictating a game. Mission accomplished.
“Yeah,” Popkins said. “They’ve been attacking us in the zone, trying to induce weak contact. So, they want to fill it up. … The counter to that is to punish 'em when they do that. So that was the goal tonight.
“We were just ready to do damage on something. We knew they were going to fill it up. They do a good job attacking the zone and they were getting really comfortable with filling it up on the halves [of the plate] and not nibbling. We had to make sure that they are a little more careful next time and attack one of the edges and it’ll get us into better counts in the future.
“But yeah, we were just looking to put things in play early and today we were looking to do some damage on something.”
Guerrero’s secret adjustment
Guerrero needed to make his own adjustment. Guerrero has the flattest swing in the game. He comes at the baseball with an attack angle of just 1°. The major league average is 10°, right in the middle of the ideal window espoused by Ted Williams (between 5° and 15°). In ALCS Games 1 and 2 it was down to -6° for his seven outs. He was swinging down on the baseball. Baseball’s second-best hitter against fastballs in the zone (.370; only Aaron Judge was better) went 0-for-4 against 14 heaters in the zone in the first two games.
Moreover, Guerrero’s contact point on his outs was five inches deeper than his regular season average, mostly because the Mariners were getting him out on pitches away. Here are the pitch locations for his seven outs:
Before Game 3, Popkins and Guerrero had to find a way to get the ball off the ground. I asked Popkins if Guerrero made an adjustment.
“Yeah, yeah,” Popkins said. “He made an adjustment, not necessarily with his swing at all. His swing was the same, just kind of some of the stuff he was exposing to himself before the game to give him a little bit … you know, [make it] a little bit easier for him to elevate the ball. And he was able to do that.”
“So, it was a swing adjustment?” I asked him.
“No, it wasn’t,” Popkins said. “It .. you know … the swing is adjusted by that, but he wasn’t thinking about his swing there. It was more so just what he was exposed to before the game. I’ll keep that private. But yeah, it was a good adjustment that he made and it worked today.”
Guerrero’s four hits all came on pitches middle/down and in the zone (two fastballs and two curveballs).
“It feels great, obviously,” Guerrero said about his night, “but for me, it’s just about winning. I’m very happy that we won the game. I never think about myself. I think about the whole thing, and we just win the game, and I’m very happy for it.”
Seattle still searching for penultimate ALCS win
The Mariners, especially after Julio Rodriguez sent the place into a frenzy with a two-run first inning homer, missed an opportunity to get within one game of their first pennant for the first time in franchise history. They have played five ALCS games in franchise history while two wins from the World Series. They have lost them all.
Seattle still leads the series, two games to one, but the ALCS has a whole new look with Guerrero untethered from that two-game groundball festival that caused such national angst. Back in 1992, before World Series Game 2, with the Blue Jays one game down to the Braves, a Marine Corps color guard accidently displayed the Canadian flag upside down, an international symbol of distress. After much uproar and bruised national pride, the Blue Jays restored order by winning that night with a ninth-inning rally. They took the series in six games.
Guerrero’s ground balls may have been an international sign of distress in baseball protocol. But at least for one night, the crisis has passed. And Treachery, the ninth level of Hell, has been averted.
إندبندنت توضح السبب الرئيسي لانقلاب سلوت على محمد صلاح في ليفربول
تحدثت صحيفة ذا إندبندنت اليوم الأحد عن تطورات وضع محمد صلاح مع ليفربول، والتصريحات النارية التي أدلى بها الدولي المصري تجاه النادي الإنجليزي.
محمد صلاح تواجد في آخر ثلاث مباريات لعبها ليفربول في الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز، ولم يشارك في أي دقيقة خلال لقاء الريدز مع ليدز يونايتد بالدوري أمس السبت، حيث تعادل ليفربول 3-3.
وخرج محمد صلاح عن صمته بعد نهاية المباراة، وأكد أنه محبط من وضعه الحالي في ليفربول، مشيرًا إلى أن علاقته مع المدرب آرني سلوت قد تدمرت وأنه لا يشعر بالتقدير من قبل إدارة الريدز.
وذكرت الصحيفة، أن ليفربول من المتوقع أن يكون له رد فعل تجاه ما قاله محمد صلاح، حيث لن تمر هذه التصريحات مرور الكرام على النادي الإنجليزي.
وأضافت أن محمد صلاح قد تفاجأ كثيرًا بما حدث معه حيث اهتز كبرياؤه وأدلى بتصريحات لم يكن للاعب بهذه المكانة أن يدلي بها في إنجلترا، منذ أسطورة مانشستر يونايتد وريال مدريد، كريستيانو رونالدو.
وأوضحت أن مستوى محمد صلاح هبط بشدة خصوصًا على الصعيد البدني، حيث لم يسجل هذا الموسم سوى خمسة أهداف في 19 مباراة بكافة المسابقات.
اقرأ أيضًا.. جيمس بيرس مهاجمًا محمد صلاح: ليفربول يلعب أفضل بدونه.. وتصرفه غير محترم
وأردفت أن محمد صلاح ليس هو اللاعب الوحيد في ليفربول الذي تم إجلاسه كبديل، وإنما هناك فلوريان فيرتز، على الرغم من سعره الكبير البالغ 116 مليون جنيه إسترليني، والذي ضمه الريدز قادمًا من باير ليفركوزن.
لكن فيرتز بات في آخر فترة بديلًا مع ليفربول حيث لم يقدم المستوى المطلوب، قبل أن يعود للعب أساسيًا في آخر مباراتين للريدز.
وأكدت أن محمد صلاح محق في عدم تحميله للمسئولية في كل مباراة يخسر فيها ليفربول هذا الموسم، لكن الدولي المصري بحسب الصحيفة لم يكن محقًا في التصريح عن ضمانه باللعب بشكل أساسي مع الريدز باستمرار.
وأوضحت أن المباراة التي جعلت سلوت يبقي محمد صلاح على دكة بدلاء ليفربول كانت أمام بي إس في آيندهوفن في دوري أبطال أوروبا، والتي خسرها ليفربول 4-1.
وأكملت أن آينهدوفن سجل في مباراة ليفربول من جهة محمد صلاح في الجانب الأيمن، حيث لا يقدم الدولي المصري الدعم الدفاعي كثيرًا، مما جعل سلوت يفكر في التعويل على دومينيك سوبوسلاي في مركز الجناح الأيمن بدلًا من الملك المصري.
وألقت الصحيفة باللوم على سلوت، في ظل تبريره في المقابل لسوء مستوى بعض لاعبي ليفربول، وعلى رأسهم كوناتي وجاكبو.
وواصلت الصحيفة قولها، أن إدارة ليفربول بقيادة ريتشارد هيوز، المدير الرياضي، والرئيس التنفيذي، مايكل إدواردز، قد كسروا سياسة التمهل في التجديد للاعبين كبار السن وجددوا عقد محمد صلاح العام الماضي لمدة سنتين.
وواصلت أن إدارة ليفربول رفضت بيع محمد صلاح إلى الدوري السعودي قبل عامين، حيث رغب اتجاد حدة في ضم اللاعب مقابل 150 مليون جنيه إسترليني، وهو مبلغ يصعب على الريدز الحصول عليه حاليًا إذا أراد بيع الدولي المصري.
واختتمت ذا إندبدنت قولها، أن ليفربول من الممكن أن يقوم بيع محمد صلاح، حيث اقترب عهد الفرعون المصري في آنفيلد من نهايته.
“Elite” England star now Ruben Amorim’s number one target at Man Utd
An “elite” midfielder has now risen to the top of Ruben Amorim’s shortlist, with Manchester United very keen to strengthen in the engine room.
Man Utd eyeing new midfielder amid Mainoo's lack of minutes
Kobbie Mainoo has played just 171 minutes across nine Premier League matches this season, most recently being brought on in stoppage time to help Man United close out a 2-1 victory at Crystal Palace.
Falling down the pecking order is far from ideal for the Englishman, who will have ambitions of going to the World Cup next summer, having played a vital role in the Three Lions reaching the final of Euro 2024.
The Devils’ Advocate co-host Joe McGrath has now claimed United should sanction a loan move this winter, saying: “We had a player worth – and is still worth – £80m or £90m. A young England international. He’s so good. We can’t let his standards drop and we need to let him go on loan.
Should that happen, the Red Devils will need to bring in a replacement, and Nottingham Forest star Elliot Anderson has now emerged as Amorim’s top target, with a report from TEAMtalk revealing the 23-year-old is their ‘clear favourite’.
There are a number of other options on the shortlist namely Adam Wharton, Joao Gomes, Conor Gallagher and Morten Hjulmand, with United clearly determined to bring in a midfielder.
Signing Anderson is now Amorim’s priority, however, even though it could take a huge bid to get a deal over the line, with the Tricky Trees planning to hold out for around £100m.
"Elite" Anderson would be statement signing for Man Utd
A number of top Premier League clubs are now queuing up to sign the England international, including Manchester City and Liverpool, so Man United would be making a real statement if they were able to win the race for his signature.
Man Utd copying Chelsea model as INEOS line up double new signing
INEOS have taken a page out of BlueCo’s book…
ByBen Goodwin Dec 2, 2025
It is no surprise so many teams are eager to sign the Forest star, given the impression he’s made for both club and country, with Thomas Tuchel recently lauding the central midfielder as “elite”.
The former Newcastle United man has also been in top form in the Premier League, completing a total of 736 short passes, the fifth-highest number of any player.
It is the correct decision to pinpoint Anderson as the top target, but United’s ability to compete for his signature will likely depend on whether they qualify for Europe, amid rival interest from some top clubs.
Greg Shipperd: Current era probably toughest environment for young players
The 68-year-old is trying to return New South Wales to former glories while also looking to produce the next generation of Australia players
Alex Malcolm11-Sep-2025What is driving you to keep going with New South Wales at this stage of your coaching career?You have to be careful not to overstay your welcome. But I’m particularly thrilled being involved with Cricket New South Wales. It’s steeped in history, it’s got high expectations, and I like to operate within that framework. We’ve got an exciting opportunity with an emerging group of players to build a foundation that can stand the test of time like previous decades have delivered.The mind still is going at 100 miles an hour, but the body is slowing down. But I’ve got some wonderful support coaches around and the system itself, behind the Blues team that represents New South Wales in the Shield and other competitions, is first-class. There’s a nice balance of city and country involvement in that process and a vibrant premier club competition. We need to put in place that next six or seven Australian players [like those] that have been sitting in the Australian team for many years now. That’s the challenge. We’re chasing it aggressively.Related
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No one has more coaching experience than you in Australian cricket. You have coached senior teams and young teams. You have a young group in New South Wales now. What are you learning about coaching young players now compared to other times in your career?I think right now it’s probably the toughest environment for young players to be in with the continual drag and adaptation from format to format. During those really solid years I had in Victoria, T20 had just been emerging. So, the players were really consistent and focused on two formats, and were very good at those two formats. Now with the introduction of T20 cricket, it’s played in grade cricket as well, so not only the players at our level are having to adapt with that, but also players in club land are experiencing the challenges of what’s the right tempo to play at and what are my foundational skills with bat, ball, and fielding.It’s the individual challenge for the player to slip in and out of those processes. It is about getting the player to understand how to set themselves up for each of those different formats, how they control their mental skills in the game. That’s probably an area of growth for everyone in the industry, coaches as well, to learn more about how to assist our players in those transition moments from game to game.How did you assess last summer with New South Wales and what are you hoping to get out of the group moving forward for this summer?Largely similar to the first season, progress is being made. We had some real challenges in terms of the depth of our squad and our Australian player representation across the course of the year. That took away some of our next level players in Sean Abbott, Ben Dwarshuis, and Tanveer Sangha. For us to be playing off for a grand final spot in the last game of both competitions meant that we’re very, very competitive. I’m really pleased about that. The next step for us is to win those crunch games more often than we did, in particular at the back end of last year.But really pleased with Kurtis Patterson jumping back in as a real presence around our group. We had to deal with Moises Henriques retiring out of the red-ball game basically through the course of the season. But thankfully he’s not lost to us and will participate in our one-day program going forward. I think that’s a great leadership sharing opportunity between he and Jack Edwards, who showed some great signs last year, but it also wore him down across the course of the season, so that balance needs to be struck and found for this season.Liam Hatcher will likely have a greater role to play this season•Getty ImagesYou’ve lost Jackson Bird from the attack. But Jack Nisbet played for Australia A during the off season and you’ve got a group of emerging quicks. What are your hopes with the ball?For us to be playing off in those last two games that I mentioned without Chris Tremain bowling a ball for the season, Hayden Kerr being unavailable for most of the season, and Daniel Hughes not playing at all, I think it was a pretty good effort across the group and we exposed some new players. Jack Nisbet is making steady progress. Ryan Hadley, Liam Hatcher and Charlie Stobo will form the basis of our attack going forward. And hopefully Chris Tremain is back and able to bowl this season.So it will be a young group and we’ll be putting a lot of attention strategically and technically around them in the lead-up to what remains to be a tough challenge for all teams at the start of this season with the Australian team playing and an Australian A team playing internationally that clashes with a couple of rounds of one-day cricket and Shield matches. There is a great opportunity for young players to be exposed early in the season.You will have some Australian players dipping in and out at the start of the season as they prepare for the Ashes. How do you manage that?It’s never a burden to try and fit those players back into your team because the benefit is not only in what they deliver on the field, but it’s in preparation, it’s in dressing room moments that their experience is shared with our younger players. For example, Pat Cummins against Victoria last year playing in the side, young Charlie Anderson played in that game, and Jack Edwards and our young players, and that is priceless.What do you see as the foundation for these young guys to become international three-format players? What are the core things you are trying to help them with or does it just depend on the individual? Each individual has their own roadmap and their own strengths and weaknesses. We try, with them, to identify them and go to work. For some, it’s a technical issue. For others, it’s making good strategic decisions in the game. For others, from a mental point of view, it’s about blocking out the pressures and playing with an open mind and making good, crisp decisions. So we’re on our toes, and the players are as well, in building their foundation that is likely to work in each of those formats and to understand the moments in the game and having the capacity to adjust your game to play team first cricket.Kurtis Patterson’s comeback was one of the stories of last season•Getty ImagesHow do you feel about the Shield pitches at the moment in terms of producing batters for the next level, and giving them confidence to make big scores, given it’s very difficult for domestic batters to average more than 40 given the way the surfaces are playing?It was strongly reported and happily received by batting groups across the country…that there was a desire to tone down the pitches across the country and find that better balance between bat and ball. I think that worked for two thirds of the season until some places identified that a result is necessary, and the nature of the pitch changes quite aggressively. I think for that to be stamped out would be excellent. But it is a delicate balance between bat and ball, and also strategic decisions in games can influence whether a pitch is rated in one fashion or another.There’s perhaps not a great wider understanding of batting averages and how difficult pitches are in Shield cricket. Do you have a sense of what a realistic good marker for a young batter to achieve across one or two or three Shield seasons to develop into an international player?The highest performers are 50 or above. I think a really solid 40 plus across two or three seasons for a batter and somewhere between 25 and 30 with the ball. If you’re at 20, like Jackson Bird last year, less than that, 34 wickets [at 17.20] – he’s a legend of the competition and he had a terrific season – but that’s what the best produce, and your developing players should be, I think, chasing those numbers but also understanding the process to get there.Your skipper Jack Edwards is coming into that age bracket now where he’s going to be at his very best. What’s the next phase for him?It is for him to sort of recognise how he wants to play and approach the game and in red-ball cricket he’s moved the game forward really strongly. To have him and Ollie Davies, two of the same type together, puts a bit of counterpunch into our armoury. I’m very open-minded about Jack still playing anywhere in the list from one to six in white-ball cricket. I think he’s still got a capacity to find that rhythm, and then as he’s become more mature, to lock in a consistency around that.
WPL auction – Deepti, Kerr, Shikha get biggest bids; Healy unsold
Sophie Devine was the first player sold at the WPL mega auction in Delhi on Thursday
ESPNcricinfo staff27-Nov-2025Allrounder Deepti Sharma became the joint second-most expensive player ever sold at the WPL auction when her previous franchise UP Warriorz bid INR 3.2 crore (USD 360,000) and used a right-to-match (RTM) option to buy her back at the mega auction in Delhi on Thursday.New Zealand allrounder Amelia Kerr was the second most expensive player at the auction, going to Mumbai Indians for INR 3 crore (USD 340,000). Allrounder Shikha Pandey, who hasn’t played for India since 2023, was a surprise as the third most expensive buy, with UPW bidding INR 2.4 crore (USD 270,000) for her.The mega auction opened with a surprise – Australian wicketkeeper-batter Alyssa Healy going unsold at her base price of INR 50 lakh; her name did not reappear during multiple accelerated rounds later in the auction. The first player sold was New Zealand’s Sophie Devine, who was bought by Gujarat Giants (GG) for INR 2 crore (USD 220,000).Deepti, the player of the tournament at the recent Women’s ODI World Cup, was the third player on sale from the marquee set and initially attracted no bids at her base price of INR 50 lakh until Delhi Capitals (DC) raised the paddle late. There were no other bids and so UPW were given the option to use their RTM option, which they did. Thereafter, DC had the one-time option to raise their bid, which they did to INR 3.2 crore, a price that was matched by UPW to buy back Deepti. Had Deepti been retained by UPW ahead of the auction, they would have lost INR 3.5 crore from their purse.MI’s first purchase at the mega auction was Kerr, who had played for them previously in the WPL. They had to raise the bid for Kerr as far as INR 3 crore out of their auction purse of INR 5.75 crore because they had no RTM options available at the auction due to them retaining five players. She remained their only buy from the first three sets of players at the auction.Related
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“We were really excited to have the same core back,” MI coach Lisa Keightley said. “We’ve got world-class players in there who can win matches and games of cricket which is most important. Sometimes you can underestimate having the same core back. I’ve seen in a lot of franchises that being consistent with a group can give you advantages since you don’t start a tournament with so many moving parts. As for how much we’d have gone for Amelia, we were pretty much on the limit, most people would’ve known that. She’s worth the money and we’re excited to have her back.Of the other players in the marquee set, Renuka Singh went to GG for INR 60 lakh (USD 70,000), Sophie Ecclestone to UPW for INR 85 lakh (USD 100,000, via RTM), Meg Lanning (USD 210,000) to UPW for INR 1.9 crore, and Laura Wolvaardt to DC for INR 1.1 crore (USD 120,000).Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) were the only team to not buy a player in the marquee set, having bid for Devine, Ecclestone and Wolvaardt. Their first buy came from the second set – the Australian batter Georgia Voll for INR 60 lakh (USD 70,000) – after which they bought allrounders Nadine de Klerk and Radha Yadav from the third set.After buying Deepti and Lanning, UPW further strengthened their batting by picking up 22-year old Australian Phoebe Litchfield for INR 1.2 crore (USD 130,000) and using an RTM option to buy back Kiran Navgire for INR 60 lakh (USD 70,000). UPW used their fourth and last RTM option to buy back fast bowler Kranti Gaud at her base price of INR 50 lakh, after DC had made the first and final bid. However, UPW lost out on promising spinner Sree Charani, who was bought by DC for INR 1.3 crore (USD 150,000).DC picked up the youngest player bought at the auction, 16-year-old Deeya Yadav, a hard-hitting top-order batter from Haryana at her base price of INR 10 lakh. Her stable base, excellent hand-eye coordination and raw hitting power have already prompted comparisons to Shafali Verma, with many touting her as Haryana’s next big batting talent.The most expensive player ever sold at the WPL auction is Smriti Mandhana (INR 3.4 crore), followed by Ashleigh Gardner and Nat-Sciver Brunt (INR 3.2 crore), whose bids in 2023 Deepti matched in 2025.”We had a new coach at the helm and we wanted to give him a clean state based on his vision and we’ll build a squad together,” Kshemal Waingankar, COO of UPW, said. “We had no doubt that we’d bring Deepti back and we’re very delighted to bring her back. To add to that, we’ve also been able to bring Sophie back and bring Meg Lanning in as well. So far it’s played out well. We will discuss that [the captaincy]. It’s too early to say. Will depend on how the squad comes through. We’ll have to have a conversation with Deepti, and understand the dynamics with the leadership. We haven’t thought that through.”DC’s purchase of Wolvaardt gave them a leadership option but they indicated they would prefer an Indian captain. “I think in Laura we’ve got a tremendous player who can fill in those (Lanning’s) shoes. Not only was she the highest run-scorer in the recent World Cup, but she’s also someone who’s got leadership ability as well,” Parth Jindal, DC co-owner, said. “No, no, not at all [whether Wolvaardt will be captain]. I think we are very clear that we would like to have an Indian as the captain. So depending on who else we land, we already have our mind made up, but let’s see what happens. But yeah, Laura will add a lot of leadership into the dressing room, but we are clear that we want to go with an Indian captain.”The 2026 WPL season will begin on January 9 and end on February 5, with the tournament played in Navi Mumbai and Vadodara.
Arsenal have an “agreement in place” to sign their new Bukayo Saka
Since taking the job almost six years ago, Mikel Arteta has got an awful lot right at Arsenal.
He’s completely transformed the culture of the club and shown a level of tactical flexibility that most managers could only dream of.
Something else he perhaps doesn’t get enough credit for, though, is how he has kept the team ticking over and evolving.
Arteta’s first Arsenal XI
Bournemouth vs Arsenal Dec 2019
GK
Bernd Leno
RB
Ainsley Maitland-Niles
CB
Sokratis Papastathopoulos
CB
David Luiz
LB
Bukayo Saka
CM
Lucas Torreira
CM
Granit Xhaka
RW
Reiss Nelson
CAM
Mesut Özil
LW
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang
ST
Alexandre Lacazette
The makeup of his team has changed multiple times since December 2019, and he has pretty consistently found upgrades and replacements for players like Aaron Ramsdale, Granit Xhaka, Kieran Tierney and even Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang.
It now appears that he and the club are planning for the long term as well, with reports suggesting they are closing in on an incredible youngster who could be Bukayo Saka’s eventual heir.
Arsenal close in on Saka heir
Arteta has built a squad full to bursting with international superstars at Arsenal, some of whom people would consider world-class. Yet, when it comes to the club’s most important player, it’s hard to look past Saka.
Transfer Focus
Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.
After all, on top of already having a frankly ridiculous tally of 76 goals and 73 assists in 280 games, the Hale Ender is the talisman of this side and has become the face of the project.
In other words, the club are going to need an extraordinarily special talent to come in and be his long-term heir when Saka does eventually call it a day.
Fortunately, it looks like the North Londoners might have just found that special prospect.
At least, that is according to a recent report from ESPN, which has revealed that Arsenal have agreed a deal in principle for the incredible winger Edwin Quintero and his twin brother Holger.
The two 16-year-olds are reportedly in London at the moment to iron out the details of the move, with an official announcement to come at a later date.
However, due to rules around foreign-born youngsters, the pair won’t actually join up with the squad until August 2027.
Even so, Arsenal fans should be excited about the development as both teenagers are very highly thought of indeed, and Edwin Quintero looks like someone who could become Saka’s successor.
Why Edwin Quintero will be Arsenal's next Saka
Now it should almost go without saying that, due to Saka being the player he is and Quintero still only being 16, there is little to no chance that the youngster would come in to instantly challenge the Englishman in 2027.
However, as the years progress, he could start getting more minutes in the first team, and then, when he’s in his early to mid-20s and the Hale Ender is in his 30s, there could be a real battle there.
That might sound absurd at the moment, and like far too much pressure to be putting on someone so young, but based on what those in the know are saying, Quintero could be something really quite special.
For example, respected analyst-turned-Como scout Ben Mattinson has described the teenager as someone with “the ability to run games and create something out of nothing,” as well as “the vision to pick out runners”, which sounds quite a lot like the Gunners’ talisman.
Moreover, U23 scout Antonio Mango has described the winger as an attacker who “is always looking to make a difference”, who “Likes to play with short pass-and-move principles”, but can still be incredibly “dangerous from distance.”
Then, just to take the hype surrounding the prospect to another level, respected talent scout Jacek Kulig has stated that the 16-year-old is “one of the most exciting prospects I have seen in recent years,” labelling him as a “huge talent” in the process.
Now, while it’s clear that his passing, vision and ability to change games make him appear like a younger Saka, he does also have more of one trait than the Englishman: flair.
In fact, this is something Mattinson has pointed out, claiming he “is so skilful and constantly uses flair to fool defenders”, and Mango has also highlighted his “excellent close-control.”
Ultimately, Saka is and will likely remain Arsenal’s most important attacker for quite some time, but the club look like they have found his long-term heir in Quintero.
Hale End have given Arsenal a future superstar who's like "a young Saka"
The incredible young talent could follow in Saka’s footsteps and become a superstar for Arteta and Arsenal.
ByJack Salveson Holmes Dec 1, 2025
For Nonkululeko Mlaba, cricket was a means to a better life but then she fell in love with it
South Africa’s leading wicket-taker in this World Cup talks about her early years in the game, and why she watches a lot of cricket these days
Firdose Moonda27-Oct-2025Many, if not most, elite sportspeople turn their passion into their profession but occasionally things work the other way. Nonkululeko Mlaba is an example of someone for whom cricket was a job first, and the joy came later.Mlaba grew up in the township of KwaMashu, north-west of Durban, in the province of Kwa-Zulu Natal on South Africa’s east coast. Like many of the areas the apartheid government demarcated for black Africans, KwaMashu was densely populated and severely under-resourced, and residents were deprived of access to good-quality housing, roads or sports facilities. Democracy arrived in 1994, and Mlaba, born in 2000, grew up with a certain level of hardship.As a child, she “didn’t even know there was a sport called cricket”, but once she was introduced to it, she got involved casually. She played at Lindelane Cricket Club in the neighbouring township of Ntuzuma, where she bowled pace until her coach, Sandile Caluza, turned her into a spinner.”I didn’t understand it at first and I was so mad,” Mlaba says, “but I started to enjoy it more because I didn’t have to run to bowl. I could just walk in and bowl.Related
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“But it wasn’t easy. When I first started bowling spin, my fingers were sore. I felt like the webbing was going to split and it was really hard.”In her teens, Mlaba trained at one of Cricket South Africa’s hubs, development facilities established across the country to unearth talent outside the elite schooling system. The one Mlaba was at, the INK hub, which served Inanda, Ntuzuma and KwaMashu, is among the most successful. It was where offspinner Nondumiso Shangase, who is also part of the World Cup squad, and allrounder Andile Simelane, who has played nine T20Is for South Africa’s men’s side, emerged. The hub continues to do its job of talent-spotting, but the more pressing question is what comes next.Mlaba had just completed her schooling when the Kwa-Zulu Natal union expressed an interest in her making the step up to provincial cricket. Though KwaMashu is only 16kms from Kingsmead, the difficulties in using public transport and the dangers of travelling at certain times of the day meant she was unlikely to be able to devote as much time to training as she would have liked. The gap had to close.The board stepped in, and in partnership with corporate sponsors, funded an apartment for Mlaba and Shangase to live in in the upmarket suburb of Musgrave, and also provided them with a monthly stipend. Much closer to Kingsmead, their new base was convenient and secure. It was also a golden ticket to building a career, as they effectively now had jobs. If that hadn’t been offered to her, what else could Mlaba have done?”I don’t know,” she says. “At that phase of my life, there was pressure. I was out of school, I needed to try and get a job, provide for my family. For most people, you study and then you work. Cricket really helped us a lot. It helped us to not really focus on trying to do other things, and money they gave us, we gave to our families to buy groceries. Because you know with black tax…”
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“Black tax” is a term used by South Africans of colour to describe the financial responsibility they have to provide for extended families whose opportunities were limited by the structural inequalities of segregation. “With black tax, you have to help make the family home better than what it was before,” Mlaba says.”Now since we’re playing on TV, you need to make sure that you pay that 1.2 [R1200 or about US$70] for DSTv [Digital Satellite Television, a broadcast service] for your family to be able to watch and support you. As much as you have a future, you still need to think about them as well. You can save but at the same time, if there’s an emergency at home, you’re going to have to take from your savings. It’s just how it works.”Cricket gave Mlaba the opportunity to become a bread-winner. Only then did she really start to enjoy the bread.Not long after making the move to Durban, she was picked for South Africa’s T20I squad on a tour to India in 2019. Shortly after that, she was included in the squad for the 2020 T20 World Cup. South Africa lost narrowly in a rain-affected semi-final to Australia in what was an early indicator of their potential to challenge the best. They didn’t succeed in upsetting the eventual champions but the building blocks of the belief that they could were put in place there.The overall experience had a profound impact on Mlaba, who was 19 then. “I changed after that World Cup,” she says. “I was still young there and I didn’t really know what I was doing. I was just bowling the ball. After that, I started to take my game seriously. I started to work on my skill, I started to work on variations and I actually fell in love with the game.”Mlaba and Shangase: the room-mates who became World Cup team-mates•Alex Davidson/ICC/Getty ImagesIt helped that South Africa did not have another left-arm spinner. Former player and current Under-19 coach Dinesha Devnarain urged Mlaba to fill that gap in the market. “She told me that in South Africa we were struggling to find the left-arm spin bowlers, so I had to take it seriously. She kept telling me that I must keep working and keep pushing.”While turning the ball came naturally to Mlaba, she had to work on things like changes of pace and line. A stint with Paul Adams ahead of and during last year’s T20 World Cup helped her tweak her action and taught her better alignment.”I’m still learning,” Mlaba says. “I’m still young and I still have a lot to fix in my bowling, even in my action, but the more I get the game time, the more I get to understand my game. These days, I try to bowl the quicker one, the one that does not turn and attacks the stumps, so I have both. I already have the turn, and I try to also have the straighter ones. I even watch a lot of cricket now. I never used to watch cricket, but now I watch cricket. And then I can pick up some things that can work for me as a bowler.”In the last year, Mlaba’s hard work has paid off handsomely. She was the second-highest wicket-taker at the 2024 T20 World Cup in the UAE, where South Africa finished as runners-up, became the first South African to take ten wickets in a women’s Test, and is now their leading bowler at the ongoing ODI World Cup.Mlaba: “I’m still young and I still have a lot to fix in my bowling, even in my action, but the more I get the game time, the more I get to understand my game”•Pankaj Nangia/Getty ImagesWhile she has been celebrated at home, where she won the top prize at the CSA’s awards earlier this year, Mlaba has yet to attract any interest from leagues abroad, which would be the next rung on her career ladder.She thinks she knows why it’s out of reach. “I’ve asked a few people, and maybe if I can work on my batting, I’d have a chance of being picked, but not everyone is going to be an allrounder, I’m a bowler and maybe one day I’ll transition into an allrounder but for now my main focus is bowling and doing that as best as I can. I don’t want to put myself under pressure because I want to play for the outside leagues. If they pick me, I’ll be happy but if they don’t, it’s not stopping me from working. I’m still going to work.”The job now is to get South Africa to their first ODI World Cup final. To do that, they will have to beat England, the side they have lost to in the last two semi-finals of this tournament. There’s pressure to perform but also acceptance that South Africa are still a work in progress, a team who have neither a historically well-developed pipeline like Australia and England, nor a massive population and the ability to sink a lot of money into the game like India do. South Africa are building from the ground up and if there was one person who embodies what that looks like, it’s Mlaba.”Because of that [being one of the faces of successful transformation], sometimes I feel like I need to step up but then I also remind myself that cricket is a funny game. Today you might get the results you want, tomorrow you might not. I just want to try and do my best and help the team. I just want to use the chances that I have and showcase my talent.”
Mystery pitch adds to intrigue in Guwahati's Test debut
The best India can hope for is to finish with honours even, while world champions South Africa have a chance to make it a second series defeat for India in their last three
Sidharth Monga21-Nov-20252:46
How can India’s batters cope with tricky conditions?
Big picture: Can India save the series?
Back in 2015-16, when the Test contest between India and South Africa was named Freedom Trophy, or alternatively the Mandela-Gandhi Trophy, both sides committed to treat it as a marquee contest. For the first time since 1992-93, they played four Tests in a series. A major part of such a commitment is to avoid the unsatisfactory two-match series. It was good while it lasted. All of four series. This is the second straight two-match series between these two evenly matched rivals.While India are not responsible for shortening of these series, they are at the receiving end of the series’ brevity. Once again, a series win is impossible for them after 2.67 days of cricket. The best they can do now is level it; the worst will mean a second series defeat at home in the last three after 12 years of winning every home series.Related
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Bavuma and South Africa look to silence every last doubter in Guwahati
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What type of pitch will India want in Guwahati?
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Mystery pitch leaves SA guessing ahead of Guwahati Test
It should come as no surprise that the leaders of the time find themselves under the pump despite all the success in ODIs and T20Is. In fact, it speaks to the health of Test cricket in India that a home defeat, even if it comes against the world champions, draws such sharp reaction.After two fruitless tours of India in the last decade, South Africa would have been glad the depth of their attack was not tested in Kolkata. With Kagiso Rabada missing and Keshav Maharaj off colour, they still managed to take 20 wickets mostly through Simon Harmer and Marco Jansen.With some of the equivocality around their world champions status now dissipated, they will look to find a way once again to take 20 wickets and go away with a series win from the toughest place to tour. India will want to test that depth and make sure their country continues to stay the toughest place to tour, and not get relegated to “formerly the toughest place to tour”.3:30
Botha: New ball should play a role with early start to the Test
Form guide
India LWWWD
South Africa WWLWW
In the spotlight: Ravindra Jadeja and Simon Harmer
The first Test practically came down to a second-innings shootout between the two best spinners in the match. The margin for error was so low that you couldn’t afford even one remotely ordinary spell. Simon Harmer, now as good a spinner as any in the world, took 4 for 21. Ravindra Jadeja, after bowling a near-unplayable spell of 13-3-29-4 on the second evening, went searching a bit on the third morning. This Test will hopefully bring out more aspects of their bowling.2:45
Karim wants India to pick both Sai Sudharsan and Padikkal
Team news: Gill and Rabada ruled out
India will be without their regular captain, Shubman Gill, who faced only three balls in the first Test and retired with a neck injury. With six left-hand batters already in the XI making Harmer an even more potent threat and no reserve right-hand batter in the squad, allrounder Nitish Kumar Reddy might come back in if only for the sake of variety. There are also suggestions that B Sai Sudharsan, who made way for the extra spinner in the last Test, might come back to No. 3. Based on what they did at training a day before the Test, Axar Patel is the spinner likely to miss out. Rishabh Pant will be India’s fourth Test captain in the last 12 months.India (probable): 1 Yashasvi Jaiswal, 2 KL Rahul, 3 B Sai Sudharsan, 4 Dhruv Jurel, 5 Rishabh Pant (capt, wk), 6 Nitish Kumar Reddy, 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 Washington Sundar, 9 Kuldeep Yadav, 10 Jasprit Bumrah, 11 Mohammed SirajRabada is out of the second Test as well, but South Africa are bolstered by Lungi Ngidi’s return. Expect him to replace Corbin Bosch. The one question South Africa will ponder is if Wiaan Mulder, who didn’t have much to do in the first Test, should make way for a spin allrounder in Senuran Muthusamy or a specialist batter in Dewald Brevis. If that change does happen, Tristan Stubbs might have to move up to No. 3.South Africa (probable): 1 Aiden Markram, 2 Ryan Rickelton, 3 Wiaan Mulder/ Dewald Brevis/ Senuran Muthusamy, 4 Tony de Zorzi, 5 Temba Bavuma (capt.), 6 Tristan Stubbs, 7 Kyle Verreynne (wk), 8 Marco Jansen, 9 Simon Harmer, 10 Keshav Maharaj, 11 Lungi Ngidi2:53
Saba Karim: Pant will be unpredictable as captain
Pitch and conditions
This is a big occasion for Guwahati as it becomes the eastern-most Test venue in India. The inadequacy of one time zone in a country as vast as India is apparent from how this Test will need to start at 9am in order to beat the early sunset. The first session break, at 11am, will be tea; lunch will be taken at 1.20pm.It is hardly ideal that all eyes will be on the pitch of a debutant venue but it is what it is after an underprepared surface in Kolkata undid India. There has been high drama around the pitch with coach Gautam Gambhir saying it had been made to his order only for batting coach Sitanshu Kotak to say that Gambhir actually sacrificed himself to prevent throwing the curator under the bus, in the process throwing said curator under said bus.Both the captains expect this pitch to be good for batting in the early exchanges before starting to turn. Which is exactly what they said before Kolkata, except that now they have added that it should play better than Kolkata. So make of it what you will.
Stats and trivia
- Kolkata was the first Test and the first toss that South Africa won in India since 2010.
- Nobody other than Bosch and Muthusamy in the South Africa squad averages over 40 with the bat in Test cricket. None of them averages 50 in first-class cricket overall.
- Before he took over the Test captaincy, Temba Bavuma averaged 34.53. As captain, he averages 57.
Lamine Yamal set for new position at Barcelona? Hansi Flick raves about 'incredible' wonderkid after Real Betis win
Lamine Yamal’s impressive display in a new central role has sparked fresh intrigue at Barcelona after Hansi Flick hailed the teenager’s “incredible” performance in the 5-3 win over Real Betis, raising questions over whether a positional shift could become part of the club’s long-term plans. The wonderkid shone as a No.10 as Barca produced one of their most fluid attacking performances of the season.